NICOLA Sturgeon will include plans for free wraparound childcare for the lowest income families as she seeks to build a “brighter and fairer” Scotland in the wake of the coronavirus crisis.

Following the “dark and difficult months” of the pandemic, the First Minister will set out her government’s plans today for the coming year.

The Programme for Government announcement comes after a power-sharing deal was agreed with the Scottish Greens, giving the party two junior ministers in the administration.

And as Scotland seeks to rebuild from coronavirus, Sturgeon said that ministers would “work to secure an economic recovery which is green and fair, and which delivers our ambition to become a net-zero nation”.

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A “new vision” for health and social care will also be included in the programme, with the Scottish Government already consulting on plans to establish a new National Care Service.

To help families with the lowest incomes, children will receive free childcare before and after school and over the holidays, making it easier for their parents to work, take part in training or study.

Speaking at a visit to the Indigo out-of-school care centre in Castlemilk in Glasgow, the First Minister said: “Over the last 18 months, the world, and our own individual places within it, have changed immeasurably.

“While the pandemic may have defined our lives for those dark and difficult months, our Programme for Government looks to secure a brighter and fairer future for Scotland.

“That means prioritising the recovery of our precious health and social care services – rebuilding capacity, and establishing a new form of care which people can access in a way, place and time which works for them.”

Sturgeon, who will announce her plans in detail in a statement to Holyrood on this afternoon, continued: “We know that children and young people have been negatively impacted by the pandemic and we are more determined than ever to help them flourish and reach their full potential.

“Our new system of wraparound childcare – providing children with access to a wide range of activities while enabling parents to have secure and stable employment – is just one example of how we’re making this happen.”

She vowed the Scottish Government would “redouble efforts to tackle the inequalities that continue to blight our society – eradicating poverty and discrimination, and ensuring opportunity is never limited by economic or social circumstance”.

The First Minister added that her government would “work to secure an economic recovery which is green and fair, and which delivers our ambition to become a net-zero nation”.

She stated: “As we rebuild our society, we will ensure the sacrifices we have all made will find purpose in the fairer, more just, prosperous, and equal Scotland that we create in response.”

Her programme for government is also expected to set out plans for a second independence referendum.

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The First Minister published a draft bill for a new vote shortly before May’s Holyrood election and the commitment to hold a referendum before 2026 – so long as the pandemic has passed – was a centrepiece in the SNP’s manifesto.

The shared policy programme agreed by the SNP and the Greens backs a new vote in the first half of the parliament on the condition the coronavirus crisis is over.

Reform of the Gender Recognition Act is likely to be on the agenda as it was also contained in the SNP-Greens co-operation deal.

Both parties agreed to introduce a bill in the first year of the parliamentary session to “ensure the process by which a trans person can obtain legal recognition is simplified, reducing the trauma associated with that process”.