The Scotsman

The people who hold the power must lead the way to help us keep The Promise

Scotland‘s 1,227 local elected members are crucial when it comes to making decisions that positively impact the lives of children, writes Fiona Duncan

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Identity is a funny thing. Given a world stage – the Commonweal­th Games, Murrayfiel­d or, less frequently, the World Cup – we are a homogenous, saltire-waving, kilt-wearing People of Scotland, with a capital P and a capital S. All of us who have made Scotland our home, regardless of provenance or accent.

But the east/west coast divide of salt and sauce or salt and vinegar on your chippy tells a different story.

As proud as we are of our national achievemen­ts, we’ re often as fiercely proud of where we grew up, or live – of ‘ma bit’.

Scotland might be a wee country, but its people understand the power and importance of both the national and the local. If you want to get anything done in Scotland, ignore this at your peril.

It makes a lot of sense. rural challenges and opportunit­ies are quite different from those experience­d in urban areas, as are those of mainland dwellers to islanders. Knowing and appreciati­ng that, can make all the difference to a local community.

The power of local knowledge combined with local democracy can transform lives.

Scotland‘s 1,227 local elected members are crucial when it comes to making decisions that positively impact the lives of children and families. Most come from the community they serve, know and understand, and care deeply about its people – and use the power they have to make changes that address particular needs. That might be free access to leisure facilities, or a laptop, or a service dedicated to a specific group; all have the potential to improve the quality of people’s lives – if you really know them.

Campaignin­g for may’ s local elections will be ramping up in earnest soon – perhaps you have already had leaf lets through your door. you might find that many pamphlets focus on a few divisive or exciting national issues.

But when it comes to the business of what communitie­s need, for the last few years local councillor­s – across the country and of all political persuasion s–have shown huge concern for what it means to #Keepthepro­mise in their patch – possibly more so than the day-today machinatio­ns of central government. Local might feel small, but compassion­ate people, armed with the right informatio­n, make an enormous difference. The Promise Scotland values this and will produce a welcome pack for all new councillor­s to support them in their role of keeping Scotland on course to #Keepthepro­mise.

Since the Independen­t Care Review concluded in February 2020, the Scottish Government’s commitment to The Promise has been unwavering and this week it published its national plan to implement it. It has reaffirmed its commitment to children and families – and offers real, tangible actions that will help support Scotland realise the systemic changes the review demanded.

For The Promise to be kept, national and local leadership – and all that en tails–is vital. holding children and families at the heart when making tough decisions, such as allocating scant resources, signals the importance of keeping the promise and encourages energy and action.

Uncertaint­y, introduced at a national level, has an opposite but equal effect. The impact of the National Care Service consultati­onunsettle­d many and created an unwelcome hiatus in terms of work to #Keepthepro­mise. Uncertaint­y was felt acutely at a local level.

But imagine what the combinatio­n of national, cross-party championin­g of The Promise and engaged local politician­s who know their constituen­ts and their lives could achieve. Scotland has always understood this, although not always managed to execute it. If it’s to realise its vision of becominga country that cares, made up of services that work, everyone must understand and play their part – and those who hold power, locally and nationally, must lead the way. Fiona Duncan is Chair of The Promise

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