THE mother of murdered businesswoman Moira Jones has welcomed funding for the creation of a new service to help the families of homicide victims.

Bea Jones told how she hopes the seven-figure cash injection will end a “hit and miss” system which previously saw some bereaved relatives fall through “gaps” in the services available in Scotland.

The Scottish Government has announced funding of £13.8 million for Victim Support Scotland (VSS) over three years.

Of that total, £1.2 million will go towards the new homicide service led by VSS, giving the families of those murdered or killed access to a dedicated case worker.

Mrs Jones, 76, whose 40-year-old daughter Moira was raped and murdered yards from her home, in Glasgow’s Queen’s Park in May 2008, said she is pleased that the new service will be set up.

Mrs Jones, who established the charity The Moira Fund, has been campaigning for such a service over the last few years.

She said: “We are absolutely delighted and we’d been hoping for news like that for quite some time.

“It’s all culminated in this fantastic news that Scotland is going to have a homicide support service.”

Mrs Jones said she believes Scotland has previously lagged behind England and Wales, where a homicide support service was set up several years ago.

The Scottish service will offer grieving families a single point of contact, a dedicated caseworker who can liaise with schools, employers, social services, medical and legal services on their behalf.

It is expected to reduce the need for families to have to retell their story to many different organisations.

Mrs Jones said of the English system: “Having a dedicated worker for each family means that there’s not a ‘hit and miss’ system as there appeared to be in Scotland. In Scotland, there were a number of very good health agencies, but there were gaps betwaeen them and it was worrying that families were sometimes not getting into the system at all.

“Our hopes are that there will be huge improvements with this new service.”

Mrs Jones said she and her immediate family were “lucky” to have the support of relatives, friends and the police in the period following Moira’s death, but there were no specific homicide services.