Covid cases rising, but no change to passport scheme … yet

Statement given by the First Minister Nicola Sturgeon to the Scottish Parliament on Tuesday 16 November 2021:

Presiding Officer,

I will give an update today on the latest Covid situation and also provide an assessment of the current course of the pandemic.

First, though, today’s statistics. 2,771 positive cases were reported yesterday – 12.8% of all the tests that were carried out. 779 people are currently in hospital with Covid – which is 8 more than yesterday.

And 57 people are receiving intensive care, which is the same number as yesterday. Sadly, a further 17 deaths have been reported over the past 24 hours and that takes the total number of deaths registered under this daily definition, to 9,406. And again, I want to send my condolences to everyone who has lost a loved one.

More positively, the vaccination programme continues to make very good progress.

I can confirm that 4,331,574 people have received a first dose and 3,930,317 have now had both doses.

In total, 88% of all those over 18 are now fully vaccinated with two doses.

In addition, 76% of 16 & 17 year olds, and 56% of 12 to 15 year olds, have had a first dose. Until now, of course only a single dose has been recommended for these age groups.

But, following yesterday’s updated advice from the JCVI, we are now preparing to offer second doses to 16 & 17 year olds.

I will say a bit more about the progress of the booster programme later.

However, it is worth pointing out that on first, second and booster and third doses, Scotland is currently the most vaccinated part of the UK.

That is down of course to the incredible hard work of everyone involved in organising and delivering the programme and I want to record my thanks to each and every one of them.

Today’s weekly update of course coincides with the latest three-week review point for the remaining Covid regulations.

And so I can confirm that at our meeting earlier today the Cabinet agreed to keep the current regulations in place, with no immediate changes.

However, we also considered – though we have not yet reached final decisions on – the possibility of future changes to the Covid certification scheme and I will say more about that shortly as well.

The numbers reported in recent days here in Scotland – which I’ll come on to talk about in more detail – illustrate the need for continued precautions.

So too does the challenging situation being experienced again across Europe.

Several European countries are currently dealing with a sharp increase in cases.

Infection rates in Germany have reached their highest level since the pandemic started. The Netherlands reintroduced some Covid measures last week. Ireland has done so today. And Austria has just introduced extremely tough restrictions on people who are not fully vaccinated.

All of this is a reminder that governments everywhere are grappling with the same issues and dilemmas that we are.

The threats posed by Covid are very much still with us – even though they have been mitigated by vaccination – and the race between the virus and the vaccines has not yet been won. The situation here in Scotland also bears that out.

However, before I give an update on the overall trends in Scotland, I want to say a few words about the impact of recent events in Glasgow.

I will reflect more generally on COP26 in a further statement to parliament later this afternoon..

However, while we can’t yet draw final conclusions, I can confirm now that there is no sign so far of any significant spike in cases associated with COP26.

Rigorous measures were put in place to minimise the risks of transmission.

For example anyone entering the main summit site – the Blue Zone – had to provide evidence of a negative lateral flow test result.

Information published earlier today by Public Health Scotland suggests that of the people officially affiliated with COP26, approximately 4 in every 1,000 tested positive for Covid through routine lateral flow testing.

This contrasts with survey data for the Scottish population as a whole which suggests that last week 12 people in every 1,000 had Covid.

And in total, since 15 October, 291 people with Covid across Scotland reported attending a COP-related event – that includes satellite meetings and demonstrations, as well as the main summit itself. That represents less than half of one per cent of all those who tested positive for Covid over the past month and reported through Test and Protect.

All of this at this stage, Presiding Officer, suggests that the mitigations that were put in place for COP were effective.

And I want to put on record my thanks to delegates for their compliance and indeed to everyone who worked so hard in the run up to and during COP 26 to secure the safest possible environment.

More generally across Scotland, we have seen a gradual increase in cases over the past two weeks – from just over 2,500 new cases a day, to approximately 3,000 cases a day as this stage.

It is important to note though that this headline figure masks some distinct variations between different age groups.

For example, cases amongst under 60s increased by 14% during the past week.

And much of this increase was in people under the age of 20.

By contrast, cases in the over 60 age group fell over the past week – by 11%.

Now this is likely to be due, at least in part, to the success of the booster programme, which of course is prioritised amongst the older population and I’ll say more about that shortly.

The decline in cases amongst older people may also explain why – despite the overall increase in cases – the numbers in hospital with Covid have reduced slightly in recent weeks.

Three weeks ago, 917 patients were in hospital with Covid. Today, there are 779.  And the number of people in intensive care has fallen although very slightly during that time – from 59 to 57.

However all of that said the number of patients in hospital with Covid is still extremely high. If cases continue to increase then, notwithstanding the age profile, we are likely to see hospital admissions and occupancy start to rise again.

In addition, the NHS is currently treating people who are in hospital for care which had to be delayed by earlier Covid countermeasures.

And of course as we go further into winter, we can expect other seasonal pressures – for example, flu – to increase.

All of this means that the NHS is under extreme pressure. And we continue to work closely with health boards to address and mitigate these pressures as far as we can.

The vaccination programme, of course, continues to be critical in reducing the direct health harm caused by the virus.

I mentioned a moment ago that the decline in Covid rates in older age groups – and the fall in hospital admissions – may well reflect the impact of the vaccine booster campaign.

I can confirm that more than one million booster jags have now been administered.

And over 70% of the over 70s have now had a booster.

We know that a booster jag significantly increases the effectiveness of the vaccine – so this high level of uptake is extremely important, and we will continue to push it up as far as possible.

The programme took a further step forward yesterday with the launch of the online booking portal.

Everyone aged 50 to 59 – together with unpaid carers and household contacts of the immunosuppressed and anyone eligible for a vaccine who has not yet had an appointment – can now book online at NHS Inform.

Since yesterday morning, more than 54,000 people have made online bookings. 

And more than 8,000 people have made bookings through the national helpline, which can be called on 0800 030 8013. That’s 0800 030 8013.

It is of course important to remember that boosters can only be given 24 weeks after someone’s 2nd jab.

Therefore, for many in the 50 to 59 age group, appointments will only be possible from December onwards.  

It is also worth pointing out that people living in Orkney, Shetland, the Western Isles and the NHS Highland health board areas will not use the online booking system, but instead receive information direct from their health board about local appointment arrangements.

As I mentioned earlier, the JCVI updated its advice yesterday.

In addition to recommending second doses for 16 & 17 year olds, it also recommended booster jags for people in their 40s.

I very much welcome this and the Scottish Government will now move to implement this new advice as quickly as we can. And we continue to work with health boards to ensure that the overall programme is delivered as rapidly as possible.

However it is worth taking stock of the situation as of now.

This winter vaccination programme is the largest and the most complex ever undertaken in Scotland.

However, since the first week in September more than 3 million flu and booster jags have been administered.

Take up rates have been encouraging. And this is providing vital protection as we head into winter. So, once again, I am hugely grateful to everyone helping get jags into people’s arms as quickly as possible.

And I also want to take this opportunity again to urge every single person who is eligible for vaccination – whether for a first or second jag, or a booster or 3rd jag – to take up the offer without delay. And get the flu jag too if you are eligible.

Getting vaccinated remains the single most important thing any of us can do to protect ourselves, our loved ones and our communities.

It is impossible to overstate how important it is to get vaccinated – so if you haven’t already, please do so now.

You could be saving your own life or the lives of your loved ones.

You will be reassuring others, including those most at risk – some of whom have clinical conditions that mean that they cannot get vaccinated themselves.

You will be helping those working in the NHS.

And you will be maximising our collective chances of getting through this winter without the need to re-introduce any restrictions.

Presiding Officer, in my view, choosing, without good reason, not to be vaccinated is deeply irresponsible. Getting vaccinated, on the other hand, is a civic duty and it is the most precious gift we can give to others at this time.

The vaccine programme is and will continue to be the bedrock of our efforts to control Covid.

However, other baseline mitigations remain in place and they are also important.

Lateral flow testing, as I mentioned earlier, appears to have been effective in limiting transmission during COP.

That should remind all of us that these tests are a really important way of detecting infection particularly in those without symptoms and therefore preventing onward spread.

So I would again encourage everyone to do a lateral flow test at least twice a week – and especially if you are attending events or mixing with people in other households.

The tests can be ordered free through NHS Inform, or collected from test sites and local pharmacies. 

Face coverings also continue to be a simple and important mitigation – and remain a legal requirement on public transport, in shops and when moving around in hospitality settings.

Please also continue to work from home when that is practical.

I am today asking all employers to look again at whether more workers could be supported to do more work from home over the winter period.

Lastly, good ventilation is vital.

If any of us are having people visit our homes, we should open a window, even slightly, to let some air flow through the room.

Within the public sector we have taken significant steps to improve ventilation – for example funding for carbon dioxide monitors in schools.

And in September we announced the establishment of a £25million fund to help businesses improve ventilation.

This fund opens for applications next week. Businesses such as restaurants, bars and gyms will be able to claim back costs of up to £2,500 for measures like the installation of carbon dioxide monitors or improvements to windows and vents.

More information on eligibility has been published today on the Find Business Support website.

All of these basic mitigation measures are really important at this stage.

But of course, some of them are also valuable long-term investments.

For example, better ventilation won’t just reduce the spread of Covid – it will also help reduce the spread of other airborne viruses, now and in the future.

And there’s an important point here which is worth stressing.

When we talk – as many do these days – about ‘living with COVID’, it is important that we don’t think of this as simply giving in to the virus.

Instead, it is about making sensible changes that allow us to return both to greater normality and to better health.

Presiding Officer,

The final mitigation measure I want to talk about today is the Covid certification scheme.

It is the strong view of the Scottish Government that this – together with the other measures still in place – makes an important and proportionate contribution to stemming Covid transmission.

The value of certification is also recognised in other countries, many of which require certification for access to a much wider range of services than is currently the case in Scotland. 

Wales, for example, expanded the scope of its own scheme yesterday. It now applies to theatres, cinemas and concert halls, in addition to the same range of venues as in Scotland.

The Cabinet discussed possible changes to the current certification scheme at our meeting this morning. We intend to take a final decision next Tuesday in light of the most up to date data.

In the meantime, later this week, we will publish an evidence paper and consult businesses on the practicalities of implementation should changes be made.

However, while final decisions have not yet been reached, I want to provide an update on the issues under consideration.

I should also say that we would provisionally intend for any changes we do decide to make to the scheme to take effect from December 6.

When the scheme launched on 1 October, we judged that it was not appropriate at that time – given the imperative to drive up vaccination rates – to include testing as an alternative to proof of vaccination. But we indicated that this would be kept under review.

So we will be assessing in the coming days whether, on the basis of current and projected vaccination uptake rates, we are now in a position to amend the scheme so that in addition to showing evidence of vaccination to access a venue, there will also be the option of providing evidence of a recent negative test result.

That is already a feature of many other countries’ certification schemes.

We are also considering whether an expansion of the scheme to cover more settings would be justified and prudent given the current state of the pandemic. Again let me stress that we have not at this stage taken a decision to extend the reach of the scheme.

However, to allow us to engage openly with businesses in the coming days about the pros, cons and practicalities, I can confirm that the kinds of settings that might be in scope would be indoor cinemas, theatres, and some other licensed and hospitality premises.

We would, of course, retain exemptions for those under 18; for those who cannot be vaccinated or tested for medical reasons; for people on clinical trials; and for those who work at events or in venues subject to the scheme. Exceptions would also be retained for worship, weddings, funerals and related gatherings.

I will give a further update on this in next week’s statement. And if we decide to propose any amendments to the regulations on certification, Parliament will have the opportunity to discuss and debate these amendments.

Presiding Officer,

I am acutely aware that many businesses want us to remove mitigations – including certification – not extend or tighten them.

I understand that. But all of our decisions are and must be motivated by a desire to keep people safe but also to get through what will be a challenging winter without having to re-introduce any restrictions on trade. We want if possible businesses to stay fully open over Christmas and through the winter, while also keeping Covid under control.

If an expansion of Covid certification can help us do that, it would be irresponsible not to consider it.

Presiding Officer

As the detail of this statement makes clear – and as the situation across Europe also shows – the need to carefully manage this pandemic still deprives us of any easy options.

While we hope very much to get through winter without re-introducing any further restrictions, as some other countries are now starting to do, we do have a duty to keep proportionate options under review and we will do so.

To assist with and give an insight into the factors guiding our considerations, we are also publishing an updated strategic framework today.

This covers in more detail many of the issues I have already summarized.

One of the points it reiterates is that all of us across society – individuals, businesses and other organisations – must continue to play our part in helping curb the spread of the virus.

For that reason, Cabinet Secretaries are continuing to work with COSLA, individual local authorities and businesses on the actions we need to take to reduce transmission – preferably without additional restrictions.

And I will close again by reiterating what we can all do to protect ourselves and each other.

So firstly, please do get vaccinated if you are eligible and haven’t yet done so. As I mentioned earlier, that includes going for a booster jag when you are invited.

It is never too late to get vaccinated. And it remains the single most important thing any of us can do right now.

Second, please test regularly with lateral flow devices. These, of course, can be ordered through the NHS Inform website, or collected from a local test site or pharmacies.

If you test positive, or are identified as a close contact, or have symptoms of the virus, please self-isolate and book a PCR test.

And third, please comply with the mitigations still in place.

Work from home when that is possible, wear face coverings in indoor public places – shops and public transport and when moving about in hospitality.

Wash hands and surfaces thoroughly.

And meet outdoors if that is possible. That obviously gets harder through the winter – but it is the case that outdoor environments are safer than indoors.  

And when you are meeting indoors, try to open windows – anything to improve ventilation will help.

All of these precautions do still make a difference. They will protect us and those around us, and they will help to ease the burden on our NHS.

So I ask everyone to continue to stick with them and thank everyone for doing so.

Celebrate! Edinburgh writers featured in Scottish Book Trust’s free book

  • Edinburgh Writers featured in Scottish Book Trust’s free Celebration book
  • A collection of true stories written by people from all over Scotland

Scottish Book Trust has released a free new publication entitled Celebration, in honour of the tenth annual Book Week Scotland. A writer and two writing groups from Edinburgh will have their stories and poems featured in the book.

Book Week Scotland is the country’s biggest celebration of reading and writing and it returns for its tenth year on Monday 15 November to Sunday 21 November.

During Book Week, people of all ages and walks of life come together to share the joy of reading. They are joined in this celebration by Scotland’s authors, poets, playwrights, storytellers and illustrators to bring a packed programme of events and projects to life.

Due to the programme’s special anniversary, this year’s free publication takes on the subject of celebration. 50,000 free copies of the Celebration book, which includes real life stories from people around the country, will be available from libraries, schools and other community venues.

Hundreds of stories from across the country were collected, but only 22 were selected by a panel for inclusion in the Celebration book.

Edinburgh will be represented in the book, with two group poems and a story written by Edinburgh-based writers: How I Celebrate by the Edinburgh Syrian Women’s Group, Revelry by the Open Book Creative Writing Group and A Life Well Lived by Julie Drybrough.

Published authors such as Courtney Stoddart and A Kind of Spark’s Elle McNicoll were also commissioned to write stories about what celebration means to them.

All stories can be read on Scottish Book Trust’s website:

https://www.scottishbooktrust.com/your-stories.

A downloadable version of the book will also be available during Book Week Scotland.

Working in partnership with the Royal National Institute of Blind People, writers included in the book also had the opportunity to record their story for an audiobook version.

Julie Drybrough, author of A Life Well Lived, from Edinburgh said: “It’s meant such a lot to be involved in the Celebration project and be supported by Scottish Book Trust.

“First, to have the piece published on the website felt like recognition and encouragement, but then to be selected for being published in the anthology was an incredible boost for my confidence as a writer. I’m so proud to be involved in this project and very grateful to Scottish Book Trust for the opportunities they create. What a joy.”

The Celebration book includes a selection of stories about what celebration means to the writers included, with the book featuring stories from many different backgrounds and cultures.

The stories included are:

·       Celebration: A Definition by Abiy Orr, from Strichen
·       Mon the Rovers by Alan Gillespie, from Glasgow
·       Bloom by Ali MacDougall, from East Linton
·       Celebrating is as easy as ABC by Alison Coyle, from Clarkston
·       Mum’s Shoes by Britta Benson, from Cumbernauld
·       How I Celebrate, Group Poem by Edinburgh Syrian Women’s Group
·       Gordon’s Waddin by Harry, from Newton Mearns
·       Stories and Self by Jacqueline Boland, from Dundee
·       Blowing Kisses by Jan McKay, from Newcraighall
·       A Celebration of Life by Jane Swanson, from Peterculter
·       An Ordinary Day by Marriane Berghuis, from Cupar
·       A Life Well Lived by Julie Drybrough, from Edinburgh
·       4 Cubed by Kathryn Byre, from St. Andrews
·       Another Step Along the Road by Kirsty Hammond, from Darvel
·       Painted Nails by Lisa C, from Glasgow
·       Running For It by Louise Baillie, from Stewarton
·       Fifty by Lynn Blair, from Kilmarnock
·       Hello, Hello, Hello! What do we have here, Sir? by Mary Topp, from Connel
·       Celebration in Recovery by Matthew Gallacher, from Glasgow
·       Revelry, Group Poem by Open Book Creative Writing Group, from Edinburgh
·       A Sealabration by Rachael Crofts, from Musselburgh
·       Friday Night Treat by Simon Lamb, from Prestwick.

The commissioned stories included are:

  • Celebrate by Courtney Stoddart
  • Celebrate by Elle McNicoll
  • Aisig dhomh gàirdeachas do shlàinte by Eoghan Stewart
  • Armàda by Morag Law
  • ​Wales by Ross Sayers 

Initiated by the Scottish Government and supported by National Lottery funds through Creative Scotland Targeted Funding, Book Week Scotland is delivered by Scottish Book Trust and its partners fromMonday 15 November to Sunday 21 November.

There are free events taking place across many different local authorities and online, funded by Scottish Library and Information Council (SLIC).

For more information about Book Week Scotland 2021 and how you can get involved, visit http://www.bookweekscotland.com where you can find information about all the events taking place in your local area.

£1 million lifeline for libraries

Innovative projects to reopen some of the libraries that closed during the pandemic, set up wellbeing cafes or provide home library services have received more than £1 million in funding.

The Scottish Government’s £1.25 million Public Library COVID Relief Fund will support 23 projects around the country to re-connect communities with their libraries.

Applications were made through the Scottish Library and Information Council (SLIC) and allocations will also support reading and STEM education programmes.

While priority was given to applications which support deprived areas and communities, all library services across Scotland were invited to apply for the fund.

Culture Minister Jenny Gilruth said: “These funding allocations will support public libraries across Scotland. Libraries that closed because of the pandemic will re-open and others will be able to widen the services that they offer their local communities.

“Libraries are so much more than a place to borrow books. This fund will see the provision of community-centred projects aimed at, among other things, reducing social isolation, promoting mental wellbeing and reducing the poverty-related attainment gap.

“This funding is part of the Government’s wider aspiration to drive a cultural recovery for our communities. I look forward to seeing how libraries use this support to benefit their local area and to working with the library sector on our future recovery plans”.

Scottish Library and Information Council Chair Ian Ruthven said: “Public libraries are an essential part of Scotland’s social fabric, supporting and inspiring people to fulfil their potential for over 150 years.

“Improving mental wellbeing, tackling social isolation and closing the digital divide are some of the key aims of public libraries. The Public Library COVID Relief Fund will allow local public libraries to reconnect with their communities and offer these much-valued services.”

The Public Library COVID Relief Fund was announced as part of the Programme for Government and all local authority library services were able to apply for funding.

Edinburgh receives £33,100 for a co-creation project with young adults in collaboration with a number of key stakeholders. Activities will focus on STEM and digital projects but will be driven by the young people themselves within the 20% most deprived Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation (SIMD) areas.

Clan Gordon voted Best Letting Agent in Scotland

Edinburgh Letting Agency Clan Gordon receives nationwide recognition at 2021 allAgents Awards  

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At the 12 November allAgents Awards black tie event at the Queen’s Hotel in Leeds, Edinburgh letting agency Clan Gordon was named as ‘Best Lettings Agent in Edinburgh’, ‘Best Lettings Agent in Scotland’ and ‘Best Overall Agent in Edinburgh and Scotland’. 

The allAgents Awards are the UK’s Top Customer Property Review Awards and each winner is chosen through customer votes.

Amanda Lamb, property expert and allAgents Awards host said: “Coming from an estate agency background I know and appreciate just how important customer reviews are in this competitive industry and what receiving recognition from the industry’s very own ‘Tripadvisor’ will mean to the winning agencies.”

Clan Gordon’s Managing Director Jonathan Gordon said: “All awards are important but ones that are voted for by customers are the most valuable because they are a firm assurance that we’re getting things right.

“To beat all other estate and letting agents in the Edinburgh and Scotland categories to the overall title is an amazing achievement and the Clan Gordon team should be proud of the contribution they have made at an extremely difficult time.

“The pandemic posed huge problems for the property sector, but we met them head-on, quickly adapting to home working for our employees and installing a high-tech new telephone system to ensure customers were not adversely impacted.

“We also switched to virtual viewings and made sure our services continued safely within the guidelines issued by the government. This investment has been recognised with these awards and we are extremely proud of the achievement.” 

To find out more about Clan Gordon or to schedule a call visit:  

www.clangordon.co.uk

Eyes on the Pies: Morrisons Christmas Pie Shop range launches in store

– New products include a Pig in Duvet Croissant, a Festive Turkey Slice and a Christmas Dinner Pasty with a whole pig in blanket hidden in the middle –

– Prices start from just £1.25 – 

– Available in store now on Morrisons Market Street –

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Morrisons has revealed our much-anticipated festive menu at our Market Street Pie Counter.  

Available now, new additions on offer this year are a Pig in Duvet Croissant, a Christmas Dinner Pasty and a Festive Turkey Slice.  We’re also bringing back our customer favourites: Pork and Bramley Apple Sausage Rolls, Pork and Black Pudding Rolls and Brie and Cranberry Rolls.

Prices for our festive Market Street Pie Shop menu start at just £1.25 – cheaper than other similar options available in high-street bakery chains. 

Our foodmakers have been busy ensuring that there are no soggy bottoms, getting the perfect ratio of sauce to filling to pastry and hand-crimping each product.

Highlight products include:

  • Morrisons Market Street Christmas Dinner Pasty (£2): British turkey breast, Cornish potatoes, Brussels sprouts, cranberries, sage and onion stuffing, a whole hidden pig in blanket and rich turkey gravy are all packed into flaky pastry – making it the ultimate Christmas dinner on the go.
  • Morrisons Market Street Pig in Duvet Croissant (£1.50): British pork sausage, wrapped in bacon, topped with cranberry sauce and nestled in a delicious pastry duvet. This twist on a Christmas classic is the perfect breakfast pick-me-up. 
  • Morrisons Market Street Festive Christmas Slice (£1.25 each or two for £2): British turkey, sage and onion stuffing, cranberry sauce, and potato and encased in a golden pastry. 

Mark Pearson, Buying Manager at Morrisons, said: “We believe it’s never too early to get into the festive spirit. We’ve listened to customer feedback on the products we offered last year and have spent the last 12 months developing these exciting additions to our pie shop menu which we hope our customers will love.

“The range is great for purchasing on the go, or as a treat to share with friends and family to spread some Christmas cheer.”

Our Pie Shop Festive Christmas range is available nationwide in all Morrisons stores with a Market Street.

Morrisons Market Street is what helps make us unique. On Market Street, customers can find products freshly prepared in store, butchers who will cut their meat just how they like it, fish fresh from the boat and bread baked from scratch.

From bakers, to butchers, to fishmongers and florists, we consider our foodmakers and shopkeepers to be the best in the business and they are happy to offer customers lots of tips and advice on how to prepare and cook the ingredients they’re buying. 

For more information visit www.morrisons.co.uk

House prices rise by 13.2% to record high in Scotland

✓ 30 of the 32 local authority areas continue to see prices rise over the year  

✓ Monthly growth rates are softening  

✓ Top 5 local authority areas by value all set new record average price levels  

Produced by Acadata on behalf of  

Alan Penman, Business Development Manager at Walker Fraser Steele,  comments: “At the end of August we reported that the average Scottish house price stood at £211,029 – at that  point a new record high.

“This September we have seen the upward momentum continue. Scotland’s  average house price at the end of September stands at £212,832, which sets yet another record,  having risen by some £2,200 – or 1.0% – in the month.

“Five local authority areas in September were  responsible for 58% of the positive movement in Scotland’s average house price. The five areas  concerned, in order of influence, were South Lanarkshire, the City of Edinburgh, Glasgow City, East  Dunbartonshire and Highland. 

“More generally prices rose in 19 of the 32 Local Authority areas in Scotland. The largest increase in  average prices, of 6.3%, was in Inverclyde. In second place on the mainland was East Dunbartonshire,  with an increase in prices of 5.2%.

“There were plenty of high-value sales in East Dunbartonshire, with  a number of detached sales taking place in Bearsden – located approximately six miles to the North  West of Glasgow – the most expensive being on the Roman Road, priced at £1.3 million.  

“This underlines how property at the top-end continues to underpin this growth as people opt for  more space and continue to embrace working from home. September often provides momentum to  the market too as it is not untypical for families to reassess their needs as the new school year gets  underway.”

Commentary: John Tindale, Acadata Senior Housing Analyst  

The September housing market  

Scotland’s average house price at the end of September stood at £212,832, which sets yet another record, having risen by some £2,200 – or 1.0% – in the month. The 1.0% growth rate represents a slight softening from the 1.7% seen in August.  

On an annual basis, average house prices have increased by close to £25,000 – or 13.2% – over the last  twelve months. This is the highest rate of all four nations, and nine regions in the United Kingdom. 

It doesn’t come as too much of a surprise to learn that house prices rose in September. Looking at the  last seventeen years, house prices in Scotland have increased on thirteen occasions in September.  Estate Agents frequently mention that housing activity picks up towards the end of the school  holidays, as families potentially reassess their housing needs at the start of the new school year. 

In addition, this year we also have the added impetus of the lifestyle changes associated with the  pandemic and “working from home”, which has brought about a shift in housing preferences for  larger properties, with space for home-working becoming a prime requirement. 

The demand for larger premises has continued throughout September, and for some includes moving  to Scotland from London, or from other major cities in the UK and beyond. However, the supply of  larger homes coming to the market currently remains relatively low, which results in strong  competition for those properties that do become available, hence keeping prices high.  

We can see that prices  reached a mini-peak in March 2021, immediately prior to the ending of the LBTT tax holiday on 1 April  2021. Average prices then started to fall, as buyers of high-value properties reduced in number (see  Table 2). However, the reduction in high-value sales only continued through April and May, with June, July and August seeing a return of the higher-value transactions.  

In July, August and September 2021, we can see that prices once again regained their earlier  momentum seen during the second half of 2020, despite the savings arising from the LBTT tax holiday  no longer being available.  

Figure 1. The average house price in Scotland, for the period September 2019 to September 2021

Transactions analysis  

Monthly transaction counts  

The fall in the number of transactions for the period  March 2020 to August 2020 is clearly visible. However, what is also clearly demonstrated is that the  number of sales for each month from September 2020 to March 2021 has surpassed that of the same  month in the previous six years.  

In addition, the spike in sales that took place in March 2021 – as the tax holiday expiry date  approached – is plain, although this total was exceeded by the volume of sales in October and  November 2020, when monthly sales during the pandemic reached their peak.

Also clear is the fall in  sales in April 2021, to levels below those in all previous years except for 2016 and 2020, indicating the  extent to which buyers had managed to bring forward their purchases into March 2021 to take  advantage of the tax holiday. 

For the record, the peak in sales in March 2016 was also tax-related, and came one month ahead of  the introduction of the then 3% LBTT surcharge (now 4%) on second homes and buy-to-let properties,  which tax was pre-announced to commence from April 2016.  

Sales volumes in April and May 2021 remained lower than the equivalent months in 2017 and 2019, and appear to have been roughly on a par with the levels seen in 2018. However, in July 2021 the  number of properties sold once again appears to have been higher than the same months in the  previous six years, although sales in August 2021 returned to 2017 levels. 

Comparing total sales in 2020 with those of 2019, there was a 14% fall in the overall size of the  market. However, looking at the number of transactions for the first eight months of 2021, and  comparing with the same period in 2019 (2020 figures are distorted by the lockdown in the early  stages of the pandemic), sales are up by 11%, although this does include the spike in March 2021,  which will have enhanced the 2021 figures. 

Delayed hospital handovers: RCEM calls for system-wide action

The Association of Ambulance Chief Executives (AACE) has published a report following a structured clinical review of handover delays at hospital emergency departments across England.

This reveals for the first time the extent of potential harm that is being caused to patients when they must wait in the back of ambulances or in corridors before they are accepted into the care of their local hospital.

The review found that the proportion of patients who could be experiencing unacceptable levels of preventable harm is significant. Over eight in ten of those whose ‘handover’ (from ambulance clinician to hospital clinician) was delayed beyond 60 minutes were assessed as having potentially experienced some level of harm; 53% low harm, 23% moderate harm and 9% (one patient in ten) could have been said to have experienced severe harm.

The impact assessment was coordinated by AACE and was undertaken in all ten English NHS ambulance services who reviewed a sample of cases from one single day in January 2021, where handovers exceeded one hour.

Experienced clinicians assessed the range and severity of potential harm experienced by those patients who were already seriously ill, frail or elderly and who waited for sixty minutes or more before being accepted into the care of the hospital from the ambulance crews in attendance.


The nationally defined target for hospitals included in the NHS Standard Contract states that all handovers between ambulance and A&E must take place within 15 minutes, with none waiting more than 30 minutes.

Since April 2018, an average of 190,000 handovers have missed this target every month (accounting for around half of all handovers) while in September 2021 over 208,000 exceeded the 15-minute target.


You can read the report here.

Responding to the latest report ‘Delayed hospital handovers: Impact assessment of patient harm’ published yesterday by the Association of Ambulance Chief Executives, Dr Katherine Henderson, President of the Royal College of Emergency Medicine, said: “This report makes for stark reading but will come as no surprise to Emergency Department staff.

“Patients should never be delayed in the backs of ambulances. Patient safety is being compromised. When there is simultaneously no space in the Emergency Department and ambulances queuing outside the Emergency Department, we are no longer delivering effective urgent and emergency care to the community.

“We support our paramedic colleagues and will continue to work with them to tackle these handover delays and keep patients safe. But these pressures must not be addressed in isolation. The answer does not lie with the ambulance services nor in the Emergency Department. This is a system-wide problem that requires system-wide action and solutions. In particular, the answer is not just to increase physical space in the Emergency department with no additional staff.

“Trusts and Boards must focus on increasing flow throughout the hospital to reduce exit block and ensure patients are moved through the system. In the immediate term, Trusts and Boards must safely expand capacity throughout the hospital where possible to stop patients being delayed in ambulances. Social care must be resourced to ensure patients can be discharged when they have completed their treatment to prevent long hospital stays.

“We entered the pandemic with too few beds in the system and have continually struggled to manage with reduced capacity, now this is unsustainable. It is vital that the government restore bed capacity to pre-pandemic levels to achieve a desirable ratio of emergency admissions to beds. Currently 7,170 beds are required across UK Trusts and Boards.

“Patient safety is at risk and without urgent action avoidable harm will continue to fall upon patients while urgent and emergency care will fall deeper into crisis.”

Tell Us Your Story!

North Edinburgh – Tell us your Story!

Do you have a story to tell or a memory to share about North Edinburgh Arts or the local area? We’re collecting local stories before North Edinburgh Arts closes for refurbishment.

Join writers Eleanor Thom and Luke Winter in the Story Wagon, a beautiful, purpose-built storytelling and writing caravan, situated in the North Edinburgh Arts Garden tomorrow – Wednesday 17 November, drop-in between 10am and 2pm.

No writing required!

Part of the Edinburgh International Book Festival Citizen programme. Part of Book Week Scotland.

Citizen is supported by players of People’s Postcode Lottery and funded through the PLACE Programme, a partnership between the Scottish Government— through Creative Scotland — the City of Edinburgh Council and the Edinburgh Festivals.

Find out more about Citizen here: https://ontheroad.edbookfest.co.uk/

Police Scotland: Sextortion advice

What is sextortion?

Sextortion is a type of cyber extortion. It involves the threat of having sexual information, images or clips shared.

This is done to get money from you. It doesn’t always matter if the images actually exist or not.

The extortion often takes place when a victim is asked to take off their clothes in front of a webcam. They can also be asked to perform sexual acts.

The victim believes this to be a private act but it is not. The victim doesn’t know that they are being recorded. 

The offender will then threaten the victim. They may demand money. They may threaten to share the images or videos on social media or share publicly. 

What can you do to reduce the likelihood of it happening?

Here are some tips:

Be sensible when using the internet. Only activate your camera when you want to. Make sure it is ‘off’ at all times when not required. Never allow yourself to be duped into activity that you will later regret.

If using video chat apps, be alert to the fact that ‘contacts’ are not always who they say they are. If you allow a relationship to develop be guarded if unusual requests are made of you.

If you use online chat rooms looking for a person to chat with be careful. Be careful about any getting into a relationship and if you are asked to move to a different chat platform.

Some online chat rooms have a visual contact facility. If you are looking for a person to chat with and get into a relationship be guarded on what you say and do.

Relationships are quick to develop. End any that you are not comfortable with. Stay in control of what you do.

You may make mistakes, have doubts or need support or advice. If so, contact the police or a support agency immediately.

Remember, what goes on the internet stays on the internet, forever.

What to do if you’re a victim of sextortion

Here are a few points to follow if you are a victim.

Do not panic. The police will take your case seriously. They will deal with it in confidence. You will not be judged.

Do not pay. Some victims who have paid hear no more about it, others pay and are asked for more money. In some cases, even when money is paid the offenders posts the videos or images anyway

Do not talk any further to the offenders. Take screen shots of any communication. Keep it as evidence.

Make a note of all details provided by the offenders. For example; the Skype name (particularly the Skype ID), the Facebook URL; the Western Union or MoneyGram Money Transfer Control Number (MTCN); any photos/videos that were sent, etc. 

Deactivate your social media account. Report the matter to the platform to have any video blocked. Set up an alert in case the video resurfaces. Deactivating the Facebook account rather than shutting it down will mean data is kept. This helps the police to gather evidence. The account can also be reactivated at any time. This means your online memories are not lost forever.

Report the matter to the police and your online service provider. 

Be aware that the scammer’s Skype name is different to their Skype ID. It’s the ID details that police will need. To get that, right click on their profile, select ‘View Profile’.

Then look for the name shown in blue rather than the one above it in black. It’ll be next to the word ’Skype’ and will have no spaces in it.

Remember that you’re the victim of organised criminals. You’re not alone and confidential support is available. You can get through this.

Advice for parents and carers

Parents looking for more advice on keeping children safe chatting online will find plenty of information. They’ll find it from the National Crime Agency at the following websites:

Video chatting – a guide for protecting primary school age children

Video chatting – a guide for protecting secondary school age children.

Related links

CEOP professionals who can help you

CEOP website.

PAPYRUS gives confidential advice and support. They work to stop young suicide in the UK,

Samaritans to talk any time you like in your own way and off the record.

Get Safe Online

Revenge Porn Helpline

Thinkuknow  support for young people, teenagers, parents & carers.

Sextortion Self Help Guide

Sextortion emails: how to protect yourself guide from NCSC

Video conferencing services: using them securely guide from NCSC.

HMRC warns customers about Self Assessment tricksters

As HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) prepares to issue emails and SMS to Self Assessment customers, the department is reminding them to be on their guard after nearly 800,000 tax-related scams were reported in the last year.

Fraudsters use Self Assessment to try and steal money or personal information from unsuspecting individuals. In the last year alone, HMRC has received nearly 360,000 bogus tax rebate referrals.

The Self Assessment deadline is 31 January 2022 and customers may expect to hear from HMRC at this time of year. More than 4 million emails and SMS will be issued this week to Self Assessment customers pointing them to guidance and support, prompting them to think about how they intend to pay their tax bill, and to seek support if they are unable to pay in full by 31 January.

However, the department is also warning customers to not be taken in by malicious emails, phone calls or texts, thinking that these are genuine HMRC communications referring to their Self Assessment tax return.

Myrtle Lloyd, HMRC’s Director General for Customer Services, said: “Never let yourself be rushed. If someone contacts you saying they’re from HMRC, wanting you to urgently transfer money or give personal information, be on your guard.

“HMRC will also never ring up threatening arrest. Only criminals do that.

“Scams come in many forms. Some threaten immediate arrest for tax evasion, others offer a tax rebate. Contacts like these should set alarm bells ringing, so if you are in any doubt whether the email, phone call or text is genuine, you can check the ‘HMRC scams’ advice on GOV.UK and find out how to report them to us.”

Criminals use emails, phone calls and text messages to try and dupe individuals, and often mimic government messages to make them appear authentic. They want to trick their victims into handing over money or personal or financial information.

Customers can report suspicious phone calls using a form on GOV.UK; customers can also forward suspicious emails claiming to be from HMRC to phishing@hmrc.gov.uk and texts to 60599.

HMRC has a dedicated team working on cyber and phone crimes. They use innovative technologies to prevent misleading and malicious communications from ever reaching the customer.

Since 2017 these technical controls have prevented 500 million emails from reaching HMRC’s customers. More recently, new controls have prevented 90% of the most convincing SMS messages from reaching the public and controls have been applied to prevent spoofing of most HMRC helpline numbers.  

HMRC is also reminding Self Assessment customers to double check websites and online forms before using them to complete their 2020/21 tax return.

People can be taken in by misleading websites designed to make them pay for help in submitting tax returns or charging to connect them to HMRC phone lines.

Customers who are in any doubt about whether a website is genuine should visit GOV.UK for more information about Self Assessment and use the free signposted tax return forms.