Scottish Parliamentary Commissions and Commissioners etc. Act 2010

The Scottish Parliamentary Standards Commissioner

This section has no associated Explanatory Notes

8(1)The person who, immediately before this schedule comes into force, holds office as the Scottish Parliamentary Standards Commissioner is, by operation of this sub-paragraph (and not section 1), appointed as the Public Standards Commissioner for Scotland on the coming into force of this schedule.

(2)An appointment under sub-paragraph (1) is for a period equal to that for which the person was appointed, or (in the case of an appointment for a second period) last appointed, as the Scottish Parliamentary Standards Commissioner reduced by the time for which the person held that office (or in the case of a second appointment, the time for which that person held that office under that second appointment).

(3)But—

(a)sub-paragraph (1) does not operate so as to appoint a person as Public Standards Commissioner for Scotland if that person’s previous term of office exceeds eight years, and

(b)where an appointment under that sub-paragraph would, but for this provision, be for a period which, combined with that person’s previous term of office, would exceed eight years, that appointment is to be for a period which, when so combined, is eight years.

(4)In sub-paragraph (3), a person’s “previous term of office” is the period for which the person held office as Scottish Parliamentary Standards Commissioner or, where the person was appointed for a second period, the aggregate of the periods for which the person held that office.

(5)Despite section 2 and the repeal of section 1 of the Parliamentary Standards Act, a person may, after the coming into force of this schedule, be appointed under that section of that Act as the Parliamentary Standards Commissioner for Scotland for a further period.

(6)An appointment by virtue of sub-paragraph (5) has effect as if made before the coming into force of this schedule; and the period for which the person is appointed, so far as extending beyond then, has effect only for the purposes of sub-paragraph (2).