Results 581–600 of 3000 for speaker:Rebecca Evans

QNR: Questions to the Minister for Finance and Trefnydd ( 6 Mar 2019)

Rebecca Evans: Welsh Government issues consistent procurement guidance across the public sector and will be providing additional support in key sectors such as social care and construction to drive up consistency and capability in these important areas.

1. Questions to the Minister for Finance and Trefnydd: The Health and Social Services Portfolio ( 6 Mar 2019)

Rebecca Evans: Thank you. The 2019 budget, approved by the Assembly in January, provides £7.4 billion for core NHS funding, representing record levels of investment in the NHS in Wales.

1. Questions to the Minister for Finance and Trefnydd: The Health and Social Services Portfolio ( 6 Mar 2019)

Rebecca Evans: Thank you very much for raising this, and for your interest in the way in which we are making the future generations Act come to life through the budgetary decisions that we make here in Wales. I've had a recent meeting with the future generations commissioner to explore how we can better incorporate the Act within our budgetary decision making at the earliest possible opportunity. And it's...

1. Questions to the Minister for Finance and Trefnydd: Regenerating Welsh High Streets ( 6 Mar 2019)

Rebecca Evans: We're investing in our high streets through a range of measures, including up to £100 million over three years through the targeted regeneration investment programme, £26 million next year to provide further business rates relief for businesses across Wales, and £31.5 million for a town-centre loans scheme.

1. Questions to the Minister for Finance and Trefnydd: Regenerating Welsh High Streets ( 6 Mar 2019)

Rebecca Evans: Thank you very much for that question. It is really important that we work very hard to increase the footfall in our town centres across Wales, and there are various ways in which we can do that, including through the investment that we are making in active travel, but also making sure that we have better interconnectivity between our various towns and communities. So, I think that the answer...

1. Questions to the Minister for Finance and Trefnydd: Regenerating Welsh High Streets ( 6 Mar 2019)

Rebecca Evans: Thank you very much. I share your enthusiasm for business improvement districts as being a mechanism which brings local businesses and other stakeholders together with the aim of improving their trading environment and, again, making shopping a much more pleasant experience for the people who use those business areas and to attract more footfall to those areas. And that's one of the reasons...

1. Questions to the Minister for Finance and Trefnydd: Regenerating Welsh High Streets ( 6 Mar 2019)

Rebecca Evans: Thank you for raising the issue of Swansea High Street. Certainly, it's an area I'm very familiar with, and I have seen the major improvements that have started to take place there over the past couple of years in particular, and I know that Swansea Council has particularly ambitious plans for the city as a whole. I'm quite excited by the housing-led regeneration that is taking place on...

1. Questions to the Minister for Finance and Trefnydd: Questions Without Notice from Party Spokespeople ( 6 Mar 2019)

Rebecca Evans: Thank you very much. This announcement came out of nowhere to us and we're still trying to work through with the UK Government to what extent the funding is new money. I understand that around £1 billion of that is potentially new money. So, I think we would be looking at  consequentials of around the region of £50 million, if our understanding is confirmed to be true. The other £600...

1. Questions to the Minister for Finance and Trefnydd: Questions Without Notice from Party Spokespeople ( 6 Mar 2019)

Rebecca Evans: Yes, with regard to the ports funding, our understanding is that that funding isn't new money; it's just reannounced money. So, there'll be no consequentials coming to Welsh Government as a result of that.  With regard to the £140 million that has been provided to the Northern Ireland budget in 2019-20, that is a matter of huge concern to Welsh Government because we have a quite clear...

1. Questions to the Minister for Finance and Trefnydd: Questions Without Notice from Party Spokespeople ( 6 Mar 2019)

Rebecca Evans: I would reject any suggestion that Welsh Government hasn't been working at pace and with real energy on this particular issue for a long time now. There are numerous meetings between the First Minister, the Prime Minister, the Brexit Minister and his counterparts, and between me and my counterparts, and all Ministers with a particular portfolio interest in this area.  During the finance...

1. Questions to the Minister for Finance and Trefnydd: Questions Without Notice from Party Spokespeople ( 6 Mar 2019)

Rebecca Evans: Yes, certainly. You'll have heard the First Minister's statement when he was in the finance portfolio back in September, which outlined the fact that we're taking a new approach to procurement in Wales, and that we'll be operating a smaller unit that will be much more focused, reducing the number of large contracts from around 60 to around 30 in order to have a more focused approach, and an...

1. Questions to the Minister for Finance and Trefnydd: Questions Without Notice from Party Spokespeople ( 6 Mar 2019)

Rebecca Evans: Thank you very much. So, as we move to transitioning the NPS and Value Wales teams into new functions, we'll certainly be taking into consideration the recent Public Accounts Committee inquiry into procurement, which concluded in February. We'll be considering the observations that PAC has to make in terms of helping us shape our way forward. But we have engaged with the support of the Centre...

1. Questions to the Minister for Finance and Trefnydd: Questions Without Notice from Party Spokespeople ( 6 Mar 2019)

Rebecca Evans: Thank you very much for that, and I'm sure that the work that we're doing in terms of improving and increasing the community benefits as a result of our investment is one way in which we can ensure that local firms and local people do benefit. So, as of the end of December, 519 projects have created 2,465 job opportunities, with over 102,000 weeks of training also provided. So, there's...

1. Questions to the Minister for Finance and Trefnydd: Questions Without Notice from Party Spokespeople ( 6 Mar 2019)

Rebecca Evans: I would disagree with the characterisation of the way in which Welsh Government provides support for business, but this is an area that I've taken an interest in since coming into portfolio, and I'm exploring what more we might do in order to satisfy ourselves when grants are being made and, indeed, when business loans are being made, that we can be sure that we're investing in the right...

1. Questions to the Minister for Finance and Trefnydd: Questions Without Notice from Party Spokespeople ( 6 Mar 2019)

Rebecca Evans: Thank you. So, when Welsh Government does make an investment or offer a grant or a loan over a certain amount of money, then I oversee and I have a view to take on each and every one of those decisions that are made by my colleagues. And I provide challenge to my colleagues, asking about affordability, about payment profiles, about value for money and efficient spending, and exploring to what...

1. Questions to the Minister for Finance and Trefnydd: Questions Without Notice from Party Spokespeople ( 6 Mar 2019)

Rebecca Evans: Thank you for raising that, and I'll certainly give further thought to what action might be able to be taken in terms of increasing transparency, but within the confines, obviously, of the commercial sensitivities for those businesses involved and also within the context of the auditor general's report.

1. Questions to the Minister for Finance and Trefnydd: Local Government Funding ( 6 Mar 2019)

Rebecca Evans: Thank you. I understand, Presiding Officer, that you've given your permission for questions 3 and 4 to be grouped together. Together, the Minister for Housing and Local Government and I met representatives of local government at the finance sub-group on 23 January, where we discussed a range of matters, including the funding challenges facing local government.

1. Questions to the Minister for Finance and Trefnydd: Local Government Funding ( 6 Mar 2019)

Rebecca Evans: Thank you for raising this, and I do find it quite staggering to hear the shouts of 'good question' and 'hear, hear' from the Conservative benches when, as a result of austerity, funding per head of the population for day-to-day devolved public services, such as schools in Wales, will be 7 per cent lower next year than it was a decade ago. Between 2010-11 and 2019-20, the Welsh budget will...

1. Questions to the Minister for Finance and Trefnydd: Local Government Funding ( 6 Mar 2019)

Rebecca Evans: Thank you very much, and I know that you raised this particular issue in the Chamber with me a week or so ago, and I've certainly had some further opportunity to explore the issue further. I think that what we have to remember is that all non-domestic rates revenue received in Wales is distributed to local authorities to help fund local services. So, the vast majority of local authorities in...

1. Questions to the Minister for Finance and Trefnydd: Local Government Funding ( 6 Mar 2019)

Rebecca Evans: I think the brass neck on the Conservative benches is quite incredible this afternoon. If public spending had kept pace with growth in the economy, we would have an extra £4 billion to spend next year, and imagine how generous we could be to local authorities then. But I do have to say to the Conservatives, if the Conservatives want more money for any area of Welsh life, be it local...


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