| THE CHAIRMAN: Well, thank you very much
for coming. We are finding it a very helpful day. I wonder
since you have got a memory of the whole affair, if you
can open up the discussion for us rather than us questioning
you but first, if you would be so kind as to identify
yourself and your colleague, for the sake of the transcript.
MR GORDON: Thank you very much and from me too, welcome
to Edinburgh. I am Robert Gordon, I am currently the
Chief Executive of the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal
Service and also Head of Legal and Parliamentary Services
in the Scottish Executive.
Your previous two witnesses have been my current main
Ministerial bosses, the Lord Advocate to whom I report
as Chief Executive of the Crown Office and also on civil
legal matters because the Legal and Parliamentary Services
Department is a grouping of the Civil lawyers, Parliamentary
draftsmen and administrators. That part of the Department
that Colin Miller who is with me is in looks after constitutional
and Parliamentary issues - that part of the Department
reports mainly to Patricia Ferguson on relationships
with the Parliament, between the Executive and the Parliament
on the management of the Legislative Programme and on
constitutional issues and the working of the Scotland
Act.
On the 3rd of May, 1997 I was made Head of Constitutional
Group which we set up in the then Scottish Office to
deliver the new Labour Governments commitment
to have a Scottish Parliament up and running very quickly
after the election. In that position I led a very dedicated
team who produced the "Scotlands Parliament"
White Paper by the end of June, published in July, a
hectic task which was greatly helped by the work which
had been done before by the Scottish Constitutional
Convention which had published its Scotlands Parliament,
Scotlands Right report on St Andrews Day in 1995.
After the publication of or in parallel with the preparation
of the White Paper, we were putting through Westminster
a Referendums Bill to provide for the pre- legislative
referendum which the Labour manifesto had promised and
once that was through we made the preparations for and
conducted the referendum in September 1997 and then,
in December 1997, we published the Scotland Bill which
was true to the White Paper which in turn had been true
to the plan in the Constitutional Convention documents.
1998 was spent getting the Scotland Bill through the
Houses at Westminster and in parallel working on the
Standing Orders and the procedures for the Parliament
servicing an all Party group which included representatives
from Civic society, very much on the model of the Constitutional
Convention except this time all four main political
Parties were participating. A Consultative Steering
Group chaired by the then Minister of State, Henry McLeish,
set the ground rules for the Parliament and guided the
preparation of draft standing orders and then in parallel
with that we were making ready a temporary home for
the Parliament and making the preparations for the elections
in May 1999. Immediately after the elections the transformation
from Scottish Office to the Scottish Executive took
place with the establishment of the Scotland Office
and new Secretary of State, Donald Dewar, the previous
Secretary of State having moved to be First Minister.
On the 1st of July 1999 the formal opening of the Scottish
Parliament took place or as some have it the restoration
of the Scottish Parliament after 300 years.
THE CHAIRMAN: Well thats very interesting, thank
you very much. How do you think it is working?
MR GORDON: Pretty well I think. As an administrative
civil servant it is pretty challenging and I think the
contrast with the way that I used to work as a Scottish
Office civil servant, is significant. The business that
I had an interest in then would feature at Westminster
once in a while. Now I am held to account pretty regularly
by the Scottish Parliament; dealing with Parliamentary
questions; dealing with Ministerial correspondence;
even dealing with petitions, which as you may have heard
are taken seriously by the Parliament here. It is quite
a challenge but as a democrat I think it is a splendid
thing.
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: As one of the, so to speak,
fathers of the whole thing, you must be feeling pretty
pleased. What we are trying to find out is how it works
and whether there are parts of it which should be copied
in some way or other and some witnesses said this morning
you dont have to follow us absolutely, you can
pick and choose. That was very good advice but what
would you say are the things you would particularly
commend about the way you do things and secondly, and
I know these are big questions, are there parts that
perhaps were a mistake. I would particularly draw your
attention to the Convention and that background which
has this sort of brave new world, we are going to abolish
politics and original sin in politicians and get our
streak to it which inevitably could not be fully realised
and in practice has not been fully realised so these
are two quite large questions.
MR GORDON: I am interpreting the first question as
why does it work or what are the factors and I think
there are a range of factors. One is I think the way
the ground had been prepared in the Constitutional Convention
and people had worked for many years, Labour and Liberal
Democrats in opposition with the Churches,
the Trade Unions and other components of civic society
just to thrash through what the Parliament would do.
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: But you werent a member
of that?
MR GORDON: We were serving in a Conservative Government
at the time, and we were not party to that at all.
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: You werent allowed
to have somebody to look on...?
MR GORDON: No.
THE CHAIRMAN: Does the Convention produce the White
Paper?
MR GORDON: It produced this publication, Scotlands
Parliament, Scotlands Right in November 1995.
What the Convention decided was that all the powers
and responsibilities of the Secretary of State for Scotland
should transfer to the Scottish Parliament and that
was an advance on the scheme of the 1970s where
there was a much more restricted settlement proposed.
I think from where I sit now one of the successes of
the current settlement is the extent of the powers that
are available to the Scottish Parliament and Scottish
Ministers.
In the preparations for the White Paper and in the
debates around the White Paper there were arguments
about areas where the "settlement" or the
scheme might have gone further in relation to broadcasting,
equal opportunities and the like. I think we found
or rather, the politicians found a formulation
around equal opportunities and diversity where although
the legislative framework is reserved there is an opportunity
for the Scottish Ministers and the Scottish Parliament
to play a role in promoting equality and diversity.
Broadcasting is an issue that continues to come up from
time to time. So, I think it was thought about hard
in advance and a strong settlement was developed which
the UK Government then delivered. Then I suppose there
was a mixture of building on what worked at Westminster
and in Whitehall, a Parliament and an Executive together.
Moving on to the second part of the question...
THE CHAIRMAN: Before you do that can we finish that
because it is an interesting question. In the White
Paper produced by the Convention, the right to pass
primarily legislation that was unquestioned was it,
that it should come to the Assembly?
MR GORDON: To the Parliament, yes. There was absolutely
no question about that. I mean, one area in which the
Constitutional Convention document was fairly silent
was on the composition of the Executive and the role
of the Executive as opposed to the Parliament. That
was developed more in the White Paper but again by the
time of the publication of the White Paper it was clear
that Ministers had in mind a legislature and an Executive.
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: In the Convention report,
the whole emphasis is on a Committee system and inclusivity,
transparency and general lovey dovey is thought to exist
in the United Kingdom Parliament and other European
Parliaments?
MR GORDON: Yes. I think also, and this is what I was
coming on to, in the Consultative Steering Group, there
was certainly a will while recognising that real
politics would still be alive and well to see
if there were ways of using the Committee system to
get people to work together to find Scottish solutions
to Scottish problems.
MR THOMAS: At this time in Parliament in terms of preparation
of the White Paper I imagine you must have been comparing
notes elsewhere with Whitehall in terms doing the preparation
and of course at a parallel point you have the Welsh
White Papers coming along, in fact probably in spirit
closer to the Conventions idea of inclusivity.
I suppose we have now seen the Assembly move away into
the clear Executive Parliament mode but what were the
arguments within Scotland for moving in that direction
as opposed to staying in the more Convention Assembly
mode?
MR GORDON: I dont think that we felt we were
moving but there was a proposition that the responsibilities
of the Secretary of State should be devolved and these
responsibilities would be discharged by ministers and
I think we certainly saw it as just filling in the detail
around how that would work, you had the Parliament which
would legislate and an Executive which would be the
Government of devolved Scotland.
MR PRICE: You refer to the strength and extent of the
powers. When you were talking about strength was this
very much the extent and flexibility of the powers you
were talking about or was this more about durability
and if it wasnt durability can you expand what
you meant by strength and also deal with the issue of
durability?
MR GORDON: I meant principally the extent because as
I said in the settlement in the 1970s a number
of areas that were even then the responsibility of the
Secretary of State for Scotland were to be reserved
to Westminster. In the period between the 70s
and the late 90s there had been a considerable
amount of further administrative devolution so that
for instance responsibility for the Universities had
been devolved or had been de-centralised to the Scottish
Office as had responsibilities in areas of industrial
support and training, indeed I think as had happened
in similar areas with Wales. I suppose, moving on to
the second leg of your question, the extent of the settlement
probably did help with regard to durability. Opposition
Parties and others were not mounting huge arguments
for significantly increased powers for the Scottish
Parliament and in this first period of the Parliament,
these first four years, I cant recall there being
huge pressure for adding to the settlement. As you probably
heard from earlier witnesses there have been marginal
adjustments using the levers, the machinery in the Scotland
Act as well as minor adjustments, to tidy things up
again using other powers in the Scotland Act.
MR JONES: To some extent as you say in one sense had
there been a Scotland Act say ten years previous, 15
years previous, the powers available, the transfer would
have been less and there was a demographic deficit on
the process and the events, issues are still important,
okay, in this four year period there havent been
perhaps an awful lot of new constitutions or new Acts
of Westminster Parliament which Scotland can deal with
in its own way. If there was a change in Government
and a whole new manifesto of organisation and policies
then there would be a difficulty that the settlement
would have been set in a certain way and it would be
more difficult perhaps in the future or would it not
be to get new powers devolved?
MR GORDON: Obviously, it wouldnt be difficult
if there was a different administration that wanted
to organise devolved business in a different way so
issues around NDPBs or not NDPBS or how
policy in particular areas is run would be open to a
new administration with a different outlook to legislate
on or to make policy changes on. The issue would be
if a different administration thought it was absolutely
crucial to the working of the devolved arrangements
to have responsibility for a significant area of policy
or legislative competence which is currently reserved
to Westminster .
MR ROWLANDS: We have been told that before 1999 getting
the odd Scottish Act or two through the Westminster
system and suddenly in four years you have got 60 Acts.
What was the estimate at the time of, in 1999, of what
was going to be the cost of staffing and implementing
the legislative powers, draftsmen and all the rest of
it. How did that compare pre and post 1999 and what
was, what has been the outcome as opposed to the original
estimate?
MR GORDON: I dont have the precise figures at
my finger-tips. Before 1999 we were aware that there
were legislative proposals that were queued up and couldnt
be found time at Westminster and we assumed that there
would be a reasonable legislative programme. I dont
know if Colin can remember if we thought in terms of
say the back of envelope 8 or 10 in the year, something
of that kind. It is obviously quite difficult to measure
because Bills come in different sizes so the global
number of Bills may not necessarily be a clear indicator.
MR ROWLANDS: How many had you got in 1999 and how many
have you got now for example?
MR GORDON: In 1999 we transferred from London almost
all the Parliamentary draftsmen that we had there at
the time and from memory that was six and we now have
eleven. Of course Parliamentary drafting is quite skilled
and we were concerned at that stage about the time it
would take to build up capacity but we have been pleasantly
surprised by how quickly people we have recruited from
outside and who have transferred from our Legal Department,
have picked up drafting skills. The draftsmen have had
to work very very hard for the four years and one of
the things we are trying to do is to build up reserves
in the expectation we will have a fairly full legislative
programme in the next Parliament as well.
MR ROWLANDS: The reason I was asking you is one of
our remits is that we have to put a cost to any recommendation
we make and I know from my own Westminster days taking
a Bill through the House at various stages is very expensive,
quite costly in time, energy and resources and this
leap that you have done would give us some kind of indicator
of the cost implications of transferring powers of primary
legislation, thats why I am interested if you
can give us some ball park figures
MR GORDON: Certainly, in fact the Permanent Secretary
who you will be seeing tomorrow, will be armed with
more figures but I can tell you we have significantly
increased the number of lawyers because we had to split
our legal department and set up the office of the Solicitor
to the Advocate General supporting the UK Scottish law
officer, the Advocate General, so some of the lawyers
who were previously in the Solicitors Office here went
off to that. We will get you the precise figure afterwards.
We also had to add to the capacity within the Solicitors
Office serving the devolved administration because we
now had many other things: a written constitution, so
more issues of whether matters were within devolved
competence or not had to be addressed as well as coping
with the incorporation of the ECHR. We were very fortunate
in recruiting a lot of very able lawyers. I think you
were referring to taking Bills through. We have had
relatively junior lawyers finding themselves instructing
Bills quite early in their careers. We have also found
a lot of people, administrators, acting as Bill team
leaders at a slightly lower level than it would have
been done in the old days when we had relatively few.
Indeed not that many people had the experience of taking
a Bill through Westminster but we now have (and of course
this is setting things up quite well for the next four
years) a lot of people who have had experience at taking
a Bill through the Scottish Parliament. I can get you
the precise figures afterwards.
MS McALLISTER Are there time-tabling constraints in
terms of the number of Bills and possibly complexity
issues as well given the role of the Committees and
the legislation process as well?
MR GORDON: There is quite a long lead time and part
of the task that Colin and his team perform is to try
and manage pro-actively the legislative programming
and persuade colleagues in other departments who have
ideas for legislation that there is a long lead time.
The pre-legislative consultation has to be undertaken,
then the various processes of preparation of the Bill
and then taking it through the Parliament. Of course
because unlike Westminster we have a set term the expectation
is we will get through our programme.
MR THOMAS: To weigh up are your resources sufficient
to actually juggle a number of really complex Bills
at the same time?
MR GORDON: Yes.
MS McALLISTER: You can cope with that?
MR GORDON: Yes. Its an art, not a science, I
think Colin and his team and the Minister for Parliamentary
Business and her deputy and their Private Secretaries
play a very crucial role. We started off without a Cabinet
sub-committee on legislation but we quickly established
one really to keep the processes under control and of
course in addition to Executive Bills we are seeing
more Committee Bills emerging. Indeed in the next Parliament
I think the expectation is there will be more pressure
for more Committee Bills as well as Members Bills and
of course private Bills are beginning to come through
because the private legislation procedure modelled
on Westminster are now beginning to be used.
MS SUGAR: Can you just expand on that about Committee
Bills and private Bills and how are your staff involved
in advising or preparing or doing whatever?
MR GORDON: Colin might want to comment on Committee
Bills but as far as Members Bills, the involvement is
quite akin to involvement with Private Members Bills
in Westminster. You are familiar with that. We want
to make sure that the Members Bill which is securing
support is going to be workable, is going to fit into
the legislative structure and that can be quite labour
intensive. Some of the Members Bills have actually gone
through with Executive blessing quite often (again as
at Westminster) to tidy up areas of the law and in those
cases Members have had support from Civil Servants in
the way that we were familiar with in Westminster itself.
Could Colin say something?
MR MILLER: In a way this is one of the quite definitive
features in the Scottish system, the fact that the Committees
do have power to introduce and pilot through legislation
themselves. Two Committee Bills have gone through in
their entirety and a third which is to establish a statutory
childrens commissioner is on its way through and
should complete its passage before dissolution. One
of the others was to establish a Scottish Parliamentary
Standards Commissioner so these are quite substantial
pieces of legislation and the process there is that
the Committee will itself take evidence, produce a report
and then on the basis of that report the Committee effectively
will instruct the Parliaments Non-Executive Bills
Unit to draft the Bill. Now obviously the Executive
retains a strong interest in Committee legislation and
the Executive has an opportunity to discuss it with
the Committee to submit evidence and bring forward amendments
during the Parliamentary passage of the Bill but at
every stage of the process from inception to passing
it through, the Committee is actually in charge of the
Bill, not the Executive Minister.
THE CHAIRMAN: Can I ask a factual question. What is
the Parliaments Non-Executive Bill Unit?
MR MILLER: Its basically a drafting resource
within the Parliament itself but the Members of that
Unit are all staff of the Parliament not staff of the
Executive and they also incidentally draft Members Bills
so it is quite distinct from the Office of the Scottish
Parliamentary Counsel.
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: My two points are, on the
Committee Bills isnt there a fear that, because
the Committee goes through hearing evidence committed
to the cause that it underlies the Bill that they lose
an element of dis-passion or rationality of thought
or whatever you would like to call it, when they are
going through the Bill and amending it. How is that
guarded, thats my first point, and my second point
is, the whole Committee of Process on legislation, would
you suggest where we are told works pretty well, in
fact it makes it more difficult and more time consuming
for the Executive to see legislation through on to the
Statute Books because you are scrutinised more, if you
ask people who know about the subject to tell you what
they think in the way that the MP in the Standing Committee
is totally excluded from doing he just has to sit and
obey the Whip and signs his letters to constituents?
MR MILLER: The answer to your first question which
is the Committee having decided for example to establish
a Standards Commissioner or a Childrens Commissioner
does it then becomes effective by parti pris. The Committee
will itself take evidence at Stage 1 in exactly the
same way as it does for an Executive Bill. It will then
produce a report in response to the draft Bill but at
stage 2 a separate ad hoc Committee is formed and that
provides, that is intended to provide a kind of fresh
eye.
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: And that has new Members
on it?
COLIN MILLER: Yes, so for example with the Childrens
Commissioner, two Members of the Education Committee
came on to the ad hoc Committee but all the others drawn
from all the Parties had no previous involvement with
it so this is intended to provide a second look as it
were as the Bill goes through stage 2. On the consultation
process in relation to both Executive and Committee
Bills, our process is deliberately quite front loaded
but that in very large part is of course because we
dont have a revising chamber so there is much
more emphasis on trying to get the Bill right even before
it is introduced into Parliament.
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: And so far do you think
you have, I mean is there a single Act of the Scottish
Parliament that you think is bound to be amended reasonably
quickly?
MR GORDON: I think the answer to that is no. One of
the reasons of course is because of all the questions
we have to be very careful of before a Bill is introduced
it doesnt trespass on reserved issues or
is in contravention of the ECHR so there is much
more of an emphasis on getting the Bill right before
it is introduced; and of course a two-stage consultation
process by the Executive before the Bill is introduced
into the Parliament in the first place.
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: And a last supplementary,
the Constitution Committee in the Lords has drawn attention
to the fact that the Scottish Office under the Secretary
of State has grown enormously while the Welsh Office
has not. Now why is that?
MR GORDON: I think it is probably a timing issue because
at the point of the creation of the Scottish Executive
the Scotland Office was very small indeed. A significant
number of the staff in the Scotland Office are the lawyers
that I referred to earlier who support the Advocate
General and help the Whitehall Departments on Scots
law issues. I think beyond that the Scotland Office
has three divisions: one looking after constitutional
issues where there are continuing responsibilities in
relation to the Scotland Act and the elections and so
on; another division looking after social issues and
the third one looking after economic issues so that
in terms of support for the role that the Secretary
of State continues to play it is not actually a very
large department. MRS DAVIES: What is the size of the
non-Executive Bills Unit?
MR GORDON: I think you are hearing from Sir David Steel
and Paul Grice tomorrow and they will be able to tell
you precisely, I think it is quite small and it is made
up of a panel of people not all of whom are employed
full-time as I understand it but I think the better
person to ask is the Presiding Officer.
MR PRICE: You talked about the changes at the time
of devolution. To what extent has that affected the
relationship of civil servants in Edinburgh with civil
servants in London. Is there a sense that you cease
to be part of the whole Civil Servants attitude,
that you are now something different, for example that
information doesnt flow as easily and secondly
to what extent is the policy thinking where there is
development of new ideas through research shared between
the Civil Servants of both ends?
MR GORDON: I think the relationships have to be worked
at and indeed that was the position before devolution
when one had to make an effort to keep in touch with
Whitehall opposite numbers. I think those of us who
were at the centre of the devolution project working
with devolution co-ordinators in all other departments,
had very close relationships. Deliberately the various
bits of machinery the memorandum of understanding,
the concordats will which I think you are familiar with;
built on that. There has been a strong emphasis on keeping
in touch and trying to avoid surprises so that, looking
across the water front, there are many examples of good
bilateral relationships between departments north and
south and indeed involving Wales and Northern Ireland,
examples being the Agricultural Departments getting
together on a regular basis on issues of common concern,
the Health Department similarly. I think the Departments
at the centre that Colin works with; linking with other
similar units in Cardiff and Belfast as well as in London,
can take an overview of how things are working and try
to spot areas where difficulties may be arising, and
to work through solutions so far that have proved very
beneficial. In addition Ministers have tended to develop
bilateral relationships with opposite numbers and there
is a fair amount of access to thinking on policy development
which was indeed a two way street, with the devolved
administration sharing thinking on policy developments
for the most part to avoid unwelcome surprises.
MR PRICE: Avoiding surprises is an expression implying
something that is politically driven to avoid bad publicity
and such like. Coming at it from a different angle,
the policy development based on research and new ideas
and so on, to what extent is there that driver in the
relationship?
MR GORDON: I think there are some areas where again
the thinking may be politically driven in terms of commitment
to delivery, for instance, which is a common theme in
London and here. Different ways of achieving delivery
from policy development right through to the delivery
of a service on the ground offers scope for lots of
sharing of ways of doing things. I dont know if
Colin wants to comment on examples in other areas and
I think on the health front there is a lot of sharing
of thinking north and south.
MR MILLER: One of the reasons the Joint Ministerial
Committees were established was to share ideas and to
develop policy and so on. For example we have a JMC
on poverty which has met from time to time, also a JMC
on the knowledge economy. They provide a forum for essential
policy ideas to be shared and to some extent common
policy threads to be developed across the administrations.
It obviously in the end remains the responsibility of
our Ministers exactly how to take this forward in devolved
areas and similarly the UK in reserved areas but I think
it has been quite interesting, the extent to which people
come together on both official and Ministerial levels.
There is a separate set of relationships around the
British Irish Council as you know and Ministers meet
both in plenary and also in specific areas under the
auspices of the British Irish Council. Scotland and
Wales share responsibility for social inclusion and
recently headed a joint summit on social inclusion in
November last year.
THE CHAIRMAN: I wonder if I can ask a more general
question. How has it turned out differently from what
you would have expected?
MR GORDON: Having lived through it, it is pretty much
as I expected it. I think there has probably been more
of everything than we expected, more Parliamentary questions
and more Ministerial correspondence. We hadnt
expected there to be quite as many Ministers and we
certainly didnt expect there to be as many Parliamentary
Committees as there are. Everyone is still pretty busy,
I think in the early days it was about getting up to
speed, learning the new ways of doing things and I think
we are still finding we are pretty busy because there
is a fairly full policy agenda. I think there is an
amount of energy that has to go into the proactive development
of policy and the work, as we were observing earlier,
in taking legislation through the Parliament and so
on. There is also a fair amount of effort because so
many issues are opened up and looked at and Committees
are scrutinising issues and Ministers and officials
have to have a position and be able to account for what
they are doing so there is just certainly a sense that
there is more of everything than we might have expected.
THE CHAIRMAN: Can I just put the question round the
other way. If you sit down with a blank sheet of paper
and were producing a constitution for a devolved Government
in Scotland, how different would it be from what you
have got?
MR GORDON: Really not very much at all actually.
THE CHAIRMAN: Just tidy up the ragged edges and thats
enough?
MR GORDON: Well indeed, I think one of the successes
of the Scotland Act was schedule 5 that sets out what
is reserved and the various devices that there are.
I think we have talked earlier about section 30 orders
and section 63 orders and the minor tidying up orders
towards the end of the Act so where there is political
and administrative agreement over a ragged edge, which
needs treatment, there are ways of doing it there which
are short of having to amend the primary legislation.
MR THOMAS: And you dont see any major powers
which you feel ought to come down to tidying up, you
started from what the Secretary of State had , that
pre-supposes that was right at that stage?
MR GORDON: Well that position had been arrived at after
more than 100 years of incremental de-centralisation.
Again maybe thats a question for the politicians
rather than for a Civil Servant. I think what we have
got works and it works pretty well but I think as your
colleague was suggesting, an administration with a radically
different outlook might have some problems.
MR THOMAS: One of the things I am having difficulty
from the picture you are painting is that my experience
of working in Whitehall Departments is you end up some
days banging your heads against the wall because of
the lack of understanding some of them have about devolution
issues whereas the picture I get from you is that it
seems to be, in fact the scene looks pretty stable in
relation to Whitehall, is that really the case?
MR GORDON: Yes, I think you have to bear in mind that
where we started from with the Scottish Office and its
relationship with big Whitehall Departments was sometimes
quite a scratchy relationship for instance in
getting a point of view taken into account. I think
in some ways we are in a stronger position in that,
we have got legislative competence in some areas so
we, and our Ministers, dont have to agree a uniform
GB or Scotland and England position on something. This
is how it is going to be done in Scotland so in that
area there is strength. I think we have to keep working
on the relationships but as Colin was saying, we have
the Joint Ministerial Committees and the top level Joint
Ministerial Committee chaired by the Prime Minister
which meets annually. On that occasion the senior Ministers
commit themselves to working together and to take stock
of how things have been so I think there is that signal
from the top that in current political circumstances
there is every wish to work well together and from there
on down it is about developing and maintaining relationships
at both ministerial and official level.
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: But what has been the effect
on the Scottish Civil Service. The implication of what
you are saying is there is far more work, there are
new policies, it is exciting but there has been an increase
in staff and an increase of workload. Is that right?
Have I got the right impression?
MR GORDON: Yes.
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: And can you go on so to
speak doing the sort of rocket going up in the air for
ever?
MR GORDON: We had a step change in 1999, obviously
from 1997 onwards, we had a big project to make devolution
happen and we were staffing up for 1999 in the knowledge
that we would have to be more expert in many more policy
areas and have far less scope for piggy backing on a
policy made in Whitehall. That allowed us to take in
a lot of people, bright 30 something policy analyst
types from a variety of different backgrounds which
was very healthy for the organisation. We also took
in people at other levels too.
I think we dont expect to continue growing exponentially.
The Permanent Secretary will have more to say about
this tomorrow. We have to learn to get smarter at what
we do. I think we do spend a lot of time on the reactive
side of the business dealing with the increased number
of Parliamentary questions and so on and we need to
get better and quicker at doing things of that kind
and freeing up the time and energy for the proactive
things.
MS McALLISTER: Can I ask a question about how much
time do you think is saved by using the Sewel device
or to put it another way, if the Sewel device wasnt
available how many more draftsmen and lawyers would
you need?
MR GORDON: It is difficult to quantify it but Colin
is the expert on Sewel and I will hand over to him in
a minute but Sewel operates in those areas where a Westminster
Bill will be predominantly reserved and there will be
some things that are devolved and if we were to have
to legislate for the devolved bit on its own it would
produce a very odd little piece of legislation and in
those circumstances we have tended to see the Sewel
motion as a very useful bit of housekeeping. There are
other areas where there is no difference in policy intention
but there is perhaps a timing issue makes sense and
particularly where it wouldnt make sense for the
law to be out of step for an extended period. I think
the topic of tobacco advertising is a good example of
that.
MR JONES: But sometimes duplication, overload and overwork
results in confusion with the people, we heard this
morning about the Fisheries issue being non-devolved
because it was a European situation but obviously something
like that will affect Scotland much more than anywhere
else within the UK and simply from a Civil Servants
point of view there is a big responsibility to be seen
to be delivering, to having to deliver much of that
through Westminster. Also separate channels into Europe
themselves but from a public point of view or an officials
point of view it must have some extremely confusing
questions that you couldnt get straight answers
and that seems to happen more in Wales because the less
the Parliament is devolved anyway. You mentioned broadcasting
earlier on?
MR GORDON: If we stick with European issues we think
that the arrangement we have got there is the best of
both worlds because it would have been feasible to say
everything European is reserved but we have got this
position that we participate in the negotiation of the
UK line then we are part of the formulation of the UK
line in Europe and then are responsible for implementation
within Scotland for devolved matters.
THE CHAIRMAN: Yes only because you have got the same
party in Government in Edinburgh and London. I can imagine
a situation if London were different, I can imagine
a situation in which London would not go anywhere near
a negotiation with Brussels
MR GORDON: It has been a Liberal Democrat Minister
in Agriculture, Fisheries and the Environment.
THE CHAIRMAN: Can I thank you very much indeed for
coming. Its interesting I think the way things
are emerging in the course of the day, I think you have
helped us greatly by telling us a lot about the way
it is actually done as opposed to the way in which it
is supposed to be done so thank you very much indeed.
|