 Welcome to the 21st meeting of session 6 of the Delegated Powers and Law Reform Committee. Before we move to the first item on the agenda, I would like to remind everyone present to switch their mobile phones to silent. Under the first agenda item, we are considering an instrument subject to the affirmative procedure. No points have been raised on the following draft instrument. The advice and assistance summary criminal proceedings, Missile and Ace Amendment Scotland regulations 2022, is committee content with this instrument. Under agenda item number 2, we are considering six instruments subject to the negative procedure. Issues have been raised on three of those instruments for failure to lay them in accordance with the requirements under section 28.2 of the interpretation and legislative reform at Scotland Act 2010. The 2010 act requires that the instruments subject to the negative procedure be laid at least 28 days before they come into force, not counting recess periods of more than four days. The first instrument is SSI 2022-212, the Public Health Accident Scotland Act 2008, Notifiable Diseases and Notifiable Organisms, amendment regulations 2022. The instrument amends the Public Health Accident Scotland Act to add monkeypox to the list of notifiable diseases and to add the monkeypox virus to the list of notifiable organisms. That will trigger duties on registered medical practitioners and laboratories to share specific information with health boards where they have reasonable grounds to suspect that a person that they are attending to has monkeypox or where the virus is detected during testing. The information will also be shared to the common services agency and Public Health Scotland. The instrument was laid on 16 June 2022 and come into force later that day. In correspondence with the Presiding Officer, the Scottish Government explained that a breach of the lane requirement had been necessary to ensure that registered medical practitioners and diagnostic laboratories will be placed under the duty to report incidences of the disease so that health boards can consider whether they need to use any of the powers under the 2008 act. The second instrument is SSI 2022-213, the National Health Service, Charges to Overseas Visitors Scotland amendment 2, regulations 2022. The instrument amends the NHS Charges to Overseas Visitors Scotland regulations 1989 by adding monkeypox to the list of diseases so that overseas visitors can be diagnosed and provided treatment for monkeypox without charge. The regulations also correct one of the names already on the list of diseases. The instrument was also laid on 16 June 2022 and come into force later that day. In correspondence with the Presiding Officer, the Scottish Government explained that a breach of the lane requirements had been necessary to ensure that there is no financial barrier to receiving treatment for monkeypox so that overseas visitors are not deterred from seeking treatment and thus reducing the risk to public health from symptomatic visitors. The Scottish Government also explained that the provisions will provide clarity to those who are responsible for making and recovering chargers. The last instrument that breaches the 2018 rule is SSI 2022-214, the share of court fees amendment order 2022. The instrument corrects errors identified by the Scottish Government in SSI 2022-181, the share of court fees order 2022, which was considered by the committee at its meeting on 14 June 2022 as part of a package of instruments that made provision in respect of court fees. The order amendments some of the prescribed fees by increasing them by between £1 and £33. It also corrects a more significant error which would have resulted in a person paying a fee of more than £100 or any actions for payment of money over £200. That was not the intention of the instrument, so the amendment increases that figure to £300 and therefore those actions for payment of money up to £300 will pay an associated fee of around £20. The instrument was laid on Tuesday 21 June 2022 or community force on Friday 1 July. In correspondence with Presiding Officer, the Scottish Government explained that a breach of the line requirements had been necessary to correct errors identified in SSI 2022-181. In relation to SSIs 2022-212, 213 and 214, does the committee wish to draw the instrument to the attention of the Parliament on the reporting ground J for failure to comply with the line requirements? At the same time, does the committee content for the Scottish Government's explanations provided for the breach of the line requirements for 212 and 213? For 214, does the committee wish to ask a minister for parliamentary business for more details regarding the errors that were identified at the time? Also, under the agenda item, no points have been raised on SSIs 2022-206, 209 and 210. Is the committee content with those instruments? In relation to SSIs 2022-206, those regulations correct a minor error in the Rural Support Controls Coronavirus at Scotland regulations 2022-207 following questions by the committee. The error highlighted by the committee has been resolved by the regulations before us this morning. Under agenda item number 3, we are considering instruments not subject to any parliamentary procedure. No points have been raised on SSIs 2022-208 and 211. Is the committee content with those instruments? The next meeting of the committee will take place on Tuesday 6 September, until then, I thank members for their commitment and diligence over the past year. I hope that you managed to get something to break over the summer recess. With that, I will formally close the meeting.