Tartan Connection – Samaritartan launched by Samaritans Scotland ahead of Burns Night

A brand-new tartan has been created by Samaritans Scotland to raise awareness of suicide prevention and the charity’s services in Scotland. Named the ‘Samaritartan’, the new tartan was chosen by Samaritans volunteers across Scotland.

A preview of the tartan took place at the Scottish Parliament this week ahead of Burns Night, a time where people all over the world are connected through Scotland’s iconic music, poetry, cuisine, and tartan as they celebrate the National Bard. MSPs from across political parties joined together to support suicide prevention and Samaritans Scotland’s commitment to a world where fewer lives are lost to suicide, including the Minister for Health, Social Care, and Sport, Maree Todd.

As a charity dedicated to reducing feelings of isolation and disconnection that can lead to suicide, the new tartan is a symbol of connection and weaves together the volunteers, branches, communities, and the wider organisation in Scotland.

Samaritans Scotland Head of Policy and Communications, Danielle Rowley, said: “The first Samaritans branch in Scotland opened in 1959, and we’ve been connecting with people ever since. We want the tartan to be a way to connect with the communities we work with, and a way for people to proudly show their support and passion for suicide prevention.

“The symbolism of the lines in the tartan crossing over and the weave of the tartan highlights the importance of connection, and how our lives touch the lives of others. 

“Something as simple as saying ‘hello’, or having a coffee with someone can be enough to make a difference. We hope that the Samaritartan, as something bright and visual, will act as a conversation starter and help to address the stigma surrounding suicide and mental health.”

The officially registered Samaritartan was designed in partnership with International Tartans’ Retweed, tartan weavers House of Edgar, and was brought to life through the creation of Samaritartan kilts, ties, and scarves by local business, Kinloch Anderson, close to the charity’s central hub in Leith.

Angela Merola, Marketing Coordinator at Kinloch Anderson, said: “We were delighted to be involved in the creation of this brand-new tartan for Samaritans Scotland. We know how valuable the work of the charity is, with volunteers across the country supporting people in some of their most difficult times.

To help bring this bright and vibrant tartan into the world and connect the groups that help so many people every day was special for us.”

Award-wiining Scottish poet and current Edinburgh Makar, Michael Pedersen, has also written a beautiful and unique poem around the tartan and the meaning of connection.

Speaking about Samaritans Scotland and his involvement with the charity’s new tartan creation, Pederson said: ‘I’m in admirative awe of all the vital, life-altering, and deeply courageous work Samaritans do.

“The people they reach, the lives bolstered, the minds fortified, and the connections nurtured, forged and fostered because of their compassionate and mettlesome presence is, quite frankly, astounding.

“Suffice to say, Scotland, and the world, is a better, less lonely, more sentient place because of them. To have written a poem to champion them and help celebrate the arrival of their stunning new Samaritartan range is a supreme privilege. Long live the Samaritans (and Samaritartan).’

The poem can be heard as part of a new video unveiling the tartan, which will be released on Burns Day this weekend.

The tartan is expected to feature at this year’s Tartan Parade in Edinburgh on the 10th May, and it is hoped that the tartan will soon be available through a variety of merchandise for people to buy.

The preview event was held at the Scottish Parliament on the 22nd January, alongside an event highlighting the latest research undertaken by Samaritans in partnership with Strathclyde University, ‘Paid Yesterday, Broke Today’.

The report highlights the impact of employment and financial insecurity on suicidal thoughts and behaviour. Participants shared their experiences of feeling the pressure of insufficient pay and poverty, of the stigma placed on them when reaching out for financial support, and of the sense of being trapped in debt.

Since the first Samaritans branch in Scotland answered its first call for help in 1959, there are now 19 branches and nearly 1,000 volunteers stretching from the Borders to the Highlands & Islands.

Volunteers are available every day and night through the helpline, with the charity also providing community outreach support in Scottish prisons, schools, hospitals, and on the rail network.

Anyone can contact Samaritans for free any time from any phone on 116 123, even on a mobile without credit. Or you can email jo@samaritans.org

‘Paid Yesterday, Broke Today’ research can be found here.

Delivering a world-class skills system?

Reform of national education bodies

The funding system which covers universities, colleges and apprenticeships, as well as student support, will change in Scotland.

Under plans published today, responsibility for providing national training programmes, including apprenticeships, will move from Skills Development Scotland (SDS) to the Scottish Funding Council (SFC).

SFC’s responsibilities for funding further education student support will move to the Student Awards Agency Scotland (SAAS), bringing this together with SAAS’s existing responsibilities for higher education student support.

The plans are being taken forward following extensive consultation across the sector and legislation will be published in the coming weeks with the intention of making these changes in autumn 2026.

Higher and Further Education Minister Graeme Dey said: “We want to ensure that Scotland has a world-class skills system to meet the demands of the changing economy and that our £3 billon of investment in the tertiary skills system delivers the greatest impact for learners.

“The need for this change is now clear, with consultation responses and other evidence supporting reform to arrangements for post-school funding. These changes will help to reduce complexities and provide greater clarity around the roles and responsibilities of each funding body.

“We will now look to press ahead with the next stage in taking forward these changes, through legislation and other preparations.  We also will work closely with SAAS, SDS and the SFC to reassure staff and ensure continuity of services.”

Scottish Hindu Foundation Parliamentary Reception

The Scottish Hindu Foundation, in partnership with Bob Doris MSP, successfully hosted a landmark Parliamentary Reception on Hinduphobia at the Scottish Parliament on Tuesday, 21st January 2025.

The event chaired by Bob Doris MSP, held in Committee Room 5, brought together policymakers, community leaders, and members of the public to address the critical issue of Hinduphobia. 

Through insightful discussions and keynote speeches, the reception aimed to foster understanding and promote solutions to combat prejudice against the Hindu community in Scotland and beyond.

The First Minister John Swinney had congratulated The SHF on this achievement and had sent his apologies. However prominent Members of the Scottish Parliament, including Bob Doris MSP, Foysol Choudhury MBE MSP, Pam Gosal MBE MSP, Dr. Sandesh Gulhane MSP, Pam Duncan-Glancy MSP and former MP Martyn Day attended the event, lending their support to this vital cause.

Their presence underscored the cross-party commitment to addressing Hinduphobia and fostering an inclusive society.

In addition to MSPs, distinguished speakers and guests included Lt Cdr Robert Swift [Royal Navy], Else Kek, Operations Manager; for Interfaith Scotland, Harry Dunlop, Programme Manager for Interfaith Glasgow; and Sergeant Valerie Gray from Police Scotland. Each provided valuable insights, emphasizing the importance of collaborative efforts across sectors and communities to combat discrimination and promote mutual understanding.

Bob Doris MSP, a vocal advocate for inclusivity, highlighted the need for collective action to build a harmonious society. The event featured expert perspectives, personal testimonies, and opportunities for meaningful dialogue, inspiring attendees to take proactive steps toward inclusivity and respect. Guests praised the reception as a critical step in raising awareness and building bridges between communities. 

 The Scottish Hindu Foundation extends its heartfelt gratitude to all participants and supporters of this important initiative. Together, the event underscored a shared commitment to fostering a society that values respect and dignity for all”. 

Scottish Graduate Visa proposed

First Minister outlines plans to help grow Scotland’s economy

A dedicated visa for international graduates from Scottish universities or colleges who want to stay in Scotland after their studies has been proposed by First Minister John Swinney.

Speaking at JP Morgan Chase & Co in Glasgow, the First Minister set out how a tailored visa route for students who have completed their studies could help to tackle population challenges in Scotland and grow the economy.

The ‘Scottish Graduate Visa’ would be linked to a Scottish tax code and be based on a requirement to live and work in Scotland. It would be granted for up to two years and would act as a bridge between Study and Graduate visas and the Skilled Worker Visa, giving international students an additional two years to gain the professional experience required to qualify for roles on the Skilled Worker Visa route.

As migration is a reserved issue, developing and delivering the Scottish Graduate Visa would require the cooperation of the UK Government ahead of it coming into force.

During the speech the First Minister also stressed the urgency of Scotland rejoining the European Union, ensuring access to the Single Market and reinstating freedom of movement, to help tackle Scotland’s distinct demographic challenges which would benefit from inward migration. 

First Minister John Swinney said: “I have set out the areas where I believe urgent action, clarity of purpose, and collective endeavour are necessary if we are to truly prosper as a nation.

“Maximising the economic and community benefit from our massive energy wealth, acting now to address our looming population crisis, and committing ourselves once again to Europe and its single market is essential for the wellbeing of our society and the future success of our economy.

“The pragmatic approach I am setting out today when it comes to migration is an attractive proposition for international students and will ensure they can gain experience as they work towards the high salary threshold for a Skilled Worker Visa.

“I urge the UK Government to work with us – not dismiss this proposal out of hand – to ensure that we can attract and retain those students and graduates to Scotland, so that they can continue to contribute to our economy and society.”

Migration – Meeting Scotland’s Needs – gov.scot

Prime Minister clears path to ‘get Britain building’

Nuclear plants, trainlines and windfarms will be built quicker thanks to changes to the rules to stop blockers getting in the way of the government’s Plan for Change

  • Major infrastructure needed for growth and clean energy to no longer be held up in the courts, as government scraps excessive three attempts to challenge decisions in the courts
  • Households set to benefit from reduced energy bills in the long term and faster commutes through quicker construction of renewable energy and transport projects
  • Latest step to drive economic growth – the number one priority in the Plan for Change – sending positive message to business looking to build

Nuclear plants, trainlines and windfarms will be built quicker thanks to changes to the rules to stop blockers getting in the way of the government’s Plan for Change.

Current excessive rules mean unarguable cases can be brought back to the courts three times – causing years of delay and hundreds of millions of cost to projects that have been approved by democratically elected ministers, while also clogging up the courts.

Data shows that over half – 58% – of all decisions on major infrastructure were taken to court, getting in the way of the government’s central mission to grow the economy, and put more money in hardworking people’s pockets.

The government today confirms this will be overhauled, with just one attempt at legal challenge for cynical cases lodged purely to cause delay rather than three. 

This approach will strike the right balance between ensuring ongoing access to justice and protections against genuine issues of propriety, while pushing back against a challenge culture where small pressure groups use the courts to obstruct decisions taken in the national interest.

On average, each legal challenge takes around a year and a half to be resolved – with many delayed for two years or more – and the courts have spent over 10,000 working days handling these cases. This is holding back working people and is getting in the way of our progress as a nation. Examples include:

  • East Anglia wind farms were delayed by a group which dragged the case through the courts and lost at every turn – delaying it for over two years. 
  • Sizewell C, which was taken to court by a small group of activists, with the High Court dismissing it and describing aspects as “utterly hopeless” – despite this, work was left uncertain for two years and legal costs increased 
  • The A47 National Highway Project, which is improving our roads, was dragged to court by a former Green Councillor – his case was eventually dismissed as having ‘no logical basis’, after delaying the project by two years.

These cases put a hold on people’s lives – harming our efforts to drive down energy bills with clean energy, getting in the way of road improvements which will help people get to work on time, strangling the dream of homeownership and – importantly – scaring away business from building in the UK.

It also wastes tax money, with major road projects paying up to £121 million per scheme being dragged through the courts. 

These changes will send a strong signal to global firms looking to do business – that the UK is a great place to invest. 

Prime Minister Keir Starmer said: “For too long, blockers have had the upper hand in legal challenges – using our court processes to frustrate growth.

“We’re putting an end to this challenge culture by taking on the NIMBYs and a broken system that has slowed down our progress as a nation.”

“This is the government’s Plan for Change in action – taking the brakes off Britain by reforming the planning system so it is pro-growth and pro-infrastructure.

The current first attempt – known as the paper permission stage – will be scrapped. And primary legislation will be changed so that where a judge in an oral hearing at the High Court deems the case Totally Without Merit, it will not be possible to ask the Court of Appeal to reconsider. To ensure ongoing access to justice, a request to appeal second attempt will be allowed for other cases.

This announcement marks another victory for the ‘builders over the blockers’, with the government proving – with actions – that it is set on kickstarting growth and putting more money back in people’s pockets.

It follows a series of interventions from the Prime Minister – dating back to the State Opening of Parliament where he outlined plans to introduce the Planning and Infrastructure Bill to expedite the delivery of high-quality infrastructure. 

Since then, the government is speeding up 150 major economic infrastructure projects, including railways and roads – doubling the record of the previous government, unlocking growth, and taking the brakes off Britain. 

The government has also set out major reforms to end the block and delay to building homes and infrastructure from current environmental obligations. 

A new Nature Restoration Fund would enable developers to meet their environmental obligations more quickly and with greater impact – accelerating the building of homes and improving the environment.

The new common-sense approach doesn’t allow newts or bats to be more important than the homes hardworking people need, or the roads and hospital this country needs.

Growth is the number one Mission of this government. That is why the Prime Minister’s Plan for Change is focused on boosting growth to put more money in working people’s pockets and improving living standards across the country.

Since the election, real wages have grown at the fastest rate in three years, worth an extra £20 a week after inflation, and the average two-year fixed mortgage rate is now about half a percentage point lower than it was at the election.  

This UK says it will government will not relent in its determination to deliver economic growth and fight for working people, which is why the Chancellor hosted regulators in No11 last week to discuss how they can support growth going forward. She will give a speech on economic growth next week to drive home this determination.

Lord Banner KC, author of the Independent review into legal challenges against Nationally Significant Infrastructure Projects, said: “My review concluded that there is a clear case for streamlining judicial reviews on consenting decisions for nationally significant infrastructure projects, given that delays to these projects cause real detriment to the public interest. 

“In the course of my review, I saw broad consensus from claimants to scheme promoters that a quicker system of justice would be in their interests, provided that cases can still be tried fairly.

“I am therefore pleased to see the government acting on the back of my review. In particular, reducing the number of permission attempts to one for truly hopeless cases should weed out the worst offenders, without risking inadvertent delays because judges choose to err on the side of caution.

“I look forward to seeing these changes help to deliver a step change in the pace of infrastructure delivery in the months and years ahead.”

WEATHER WARNING: Travel Advice issued in advance of Storm Eowyn

The Met Office has issued an AMBER Weather warning for WIND. As such, there may be a HIGH RISK OF DISRUPTION for road users in the following areas:

• Central, Tayside & Fife (Angus, Clackmannanshire, Dundee,
Falkirk, Fife, Perth & Kinross, Stirling)
• Grampian (Aberdeenshire)
• Highlands & Eilean Siar (Highland)
• SW Scotland, Lothian Borders (Dumfries & Galloway, East
Lothian, Edinburgh, Midlothian Council, Scottish Borders, West Lothian
• Strathclyde (Argyll & Bute, Eat Ayrshire, East Dunbartonshire,
East Renfrewshire, Glasgow, Inverclyde, North Ayrshire, North
Lanarkshire, Renfrewshire, South Ayrshire, South Lanarkshire,
West Dunbartonshire).

The AMBER warning is effective from 0600 hours on Friday 24th to 2100 on Friday 24th January 2025.

This runs in conjunction with a YELLOW weather warning for WIND which is effective from 0000 hours on Friday 24th to 1500 hours on Saturday 25th January in the following areas:

• Central, Tayside & Fife (Angus, Clackmannanshire, Dundee,
Falkirk, Fife, Perth & Kinross, Stirling)
• Grampian (Aberdeenshire, Moray)
• Highlands & Eilean Siar (Na h-Eileanan Siar, Highland)
• SW Scotland, Lothian Borders (Dumfries & Galloway, East
Lothian, Edinburgh, Midlothian Council, Scottish Borders, West
Lothian
• Strathclyde (Argyll & Bute, East Ayrshire, East Dunbartonshire,
East Renfrewshire, Glasgow, Inverclyde, North Ayrshire, North
Lanarkshire, Renfrewshire, South Ayrshire, South Lanarkshire,
West Dunbartonshire)
And a further YELLOW weather warning for SNOW which is effective
from 0300 hours on Friday 24th to 1200 hours on Friday 24th January in
the following areas:
• Central, Tayside & Fife (Angus, Clackmannanshire, Dundee,
Falkirk, Fife, Perth & Kinross, Stirling)
• Grampian (Aberdeenshire, Moray)
• Highlands & Eilean Siar (Na h-Eileanan Siar, Highland)
• SW Scotland, Lothian Borders (Dumfries & Galloway, East
Lothian, Edinburgh, Midlothian Council, Scottish Borders, West
Lothian
• Strathclyde (Argyll & Bute, East Ayrshire, East Dunbartonshire,
East Renfrewshire, Glasgow, Inverclyde, North Ayrshire, North
Lanarkshire, Renfrewshire, South Ayrshire, South Lanarkshire,
West Dunbartonshire)

The full Met Office warning can be accessed via this link UK weather warnings – Met Office 

Details on Amber weather warning:

Storm Éowyn will move across the northwest of the UK on Friday, clearing to the northeast on Friday night.

This will bring a spell of very strong west to southwesterly winds, with peak gusts of 60-70 mph fairly widely inland, 70-80 mph in some areas, and 80-90 mph along more
exposed coasts and hills (perhaps even higher in a few locations).

It should be noted that there may be a slight reduction in wind strength for a time as the centre of Storm Éowyn passes overhead, this most likely in parts of Northern Ireland and western Scotland, before winds rapidly increase again.

Winds will gradually ease later on Friday.

General advice for road users:

• Plan ahead and avoid unnecessary travel
• All road users should consider if they really need to travel during adverse
weather
• Consider delaying travel until conditions improve
• If you are travelling on the roads, prepare yourself and your vehicle for the
conditions
• Ensure your mobile phone is charged and plan your journey, including an
alternative route
• Have sufficient fuel, warm clothing, food and water in case you’re delayed
• Do not ignore road closure signs – they are for your safety
• Congestion caused by vehicles may restrict emergency services and
recovery vehicles from providing essential assistance
• Listen to media broadcasts, including radio, for updates Traffic Scotland radio player | Traffic Scotland |Traffic Scotland radio player | Traffic Scotland  or visit 
Traffic Scotland | Trunk road traffic updates & route planner
• Follow your local authority for the latest updates in your area via Facebook,
Twitter/X or their website
• Other information can be found on the Met Office and Ready Scotland websites. For public transport information visit https://www.traveline.info. 
• Follow @policescotland and @trafficscotland on Twitter/X for up-to-date
travel information.

Wind

HGV and bus drivers should drive with extreme caution and be aware you may be asked to park at a suitable position by the police.

Drivers of vehicles vulnerable to being blown over should plan their route to avoid exposed areas or consider cancelling your journey until conditions improve.

Cyclists, motorcyclists and pedestrians should consider the risk of being blown over or into the path of other road users.

Snow/Ice

Keep well back from the road user in front. Stopping distances can be up to 10x greater than on dry roads.

Check your windscreen washer levels and effectiveness of wiper blades.

Check your vehicle’s lights.You must ensure your lights are clean and number plates are clearly visible.

Ensure your windows are completely clear before driving. Failure to do so can result in a fine.