Written Answers to Questions
Wednesday 9 December 2009
Wales
Departmental Written Questions
28 named day questions were received within the last 12 months, 25 were answered on the specified date.
Olympics
Siemens
Neither the Government Olympic Executive nor the Olympic Delivery Authority have entered into any contracts with Siemens or its subsidiaries.
Cabinet Office
Civil Service Compensation Scheme
On 31 July we published our proposals to reform the Civil Service Compensation scheme. Correspondence has been received from over 200 Members and the Cabinet Office has received over 18,000 emails and letters in response to the consultation. Officials have had numerous meetings with the civil service unions since July 2008, and Ministers met the unions on 22 September to listen to their views. In the light of representations significant changes which provide better outcomes for the lowest paid civil servants, while still delivering the savings committed to. Overall, the new package—announced last Friday—provides fairer outcomes to civil servants and to taxpayers.
Third Sector
Latest figures show levels of employment in the third sector have been sustained throughout 2008-09, with over 500,000 employees—a significant achievement in light of the recession. We are committed to creating a further 25,000 jobs in the third sector through involvement in public services. The Cabinet Office is working closely with the Department for Work and Pensions to support third sector involvement in the creation of 150,000 jobs through the Future Jobs Fund.
Charities: Regulation
The changes we have made to charity law and accounting and reporting thresholds have resulted in savings for up to 50,000 charities and up to £5 million per year. The new Charitable Incorporated Organisation, planned for next year, will give charities the advantages of incorporation without the burden of dual regulation by both the Charity Commission and Companies House. Departments are also cutting red tape for third sector organisations and will be reporting on further progress later this month. The Government and National Audit Office (NAO) have produced guidance to reduce red tape associated with the £12 billion a year the sector gets from Government. The Government have introduced further measures to facilitate the use of Gift Aid, with particular support for smaller charities, including reforms to simplify the record keeping and auditing process.
Christmas
Since 2006, the Cabinet Office has predominantly used an on-line e-card at no cost to the Department. The cost of any Christmas cards sent by the Department is not held centrally and could be obtained only at disproportionate cost. No departmental funds have been used for staff Christmas parties.
Christmas trees are situated at certain points on the Cabinet Office estate, such as in the reception of the main buildings. The cost which includes the purchase, decoration and environmentally friendly disposal of the trees in 2008 was £5,757.
Civil Servants: Hearing Impaired
The Cabinet Office does not hold this information.
Departmental Security
The Cabinet Office takes great care regarding access to its buildings and its access control policies are in line with the HMG Security Policy Framework, Mandatory Requirements 56, 57 and 58
The Department issues security passes to all those who are visiting and have business on its estate. Non-staff employed by the Department (including temporary staff, short-term work placements, contractors and consultants) may be issued with either a temporary pass, an escorted visitor pass or an unescorted visitor pass, depending on the length of time they are working for the Department and their level of security clearance.
Separately identifying those who may be visiting the Department to provide consultancy services from those who are visiting for other reasons could be undertaken only at disproportionate cost.
Freedom of Information
I have been asked to reply as the Minister responsible for Freedom of Information policy.
On 16 July 2009, the Government published the response to their consultation on extending the Freedom of Information Act by means of a section 5 order. It noted that they were not minded to include in an initial order companies providing, under a contract made with a public authority, any service whose provision is a function of that, authority. However, the Government have made clear that they intend to keep the extension of the Act under review.
Scientists
No current Cabinet Office Minister has met with the Government chief scientific adviser within the last 12 months.
Women and Equality
Equality and Human Rights Commission: Public Relations
The Equality and Human Rights Commission has not made any payments to (a) Postif Politics and (b) APCO Worldwide in the last 12 months.
International Development
Departmental Written Questions
The number of named day parliamentary questions tabled for answer by the Department for International Development (DFID) and answered on the day named is provided in the table.
Month Number of named day questions tabled Number of answered on the day named December 2008 4 4 January 2009 16 15 February 2009 16 16 March 2009 54 52 April 2009 15 14 May 2009 10 9 June 2009 17 16 July 2009 16 15 August 2009 0 0 September 2009 10 9 October 2009 24 19 November 2009 24 22
Palestinians: Education
The Department for International Development (DFID) supports both the Palestinian Authority (PA) and the UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) to provide education in Gaza.
Our budget support to the PA was £50 million in 2008 and £18.5 million so far in 2009. This funding contributes to the salaries of public sector workers, including teachers and the provision of basic services such as education. Approximately 50 per cent. of PA spending goes to Gaza.
UNRWA schools in Gaza are attended by over 200,000 children. Through our core funding to UNRWA, DFID has contributed £100 million over five years (2007 to 2012) towards teacher salaries.
DFID continues to press Israel to allow reconstruction materials into Gaza so that schools destroyed and damaged in Operation Cast Lead can be repaired, and to lift all restrictions on the imports of stationery, textbooks and school furniture.
Palestinians: Overseas Aid
Medical assistance to Palestinian refugees in Gaza and elsewhere in the region is the responsibility of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA). The Department for International Development is providing £100 million to UNRWA in core funding over five years (2007-12) which the Agency can allocate to areas of most urgent need: this year we gave UNRWA nearly £20 million. About 5 per cent. of UNRWA's overall budget is allocated to healthcare in Gaza.
South East Asia: Tuberculosis
The Department for International Development (DFID) contributes to tuberculosis (TB) control through a variety of channels including support for national programmes, multi donor initiatives and research.
In China, DFID has provided £28 million to the National TB Control Programme. This programme has increased national case detection rates from 30 per cent. in 2000 to over 70 per cent. in 2007 in 16 provinces, covering half of China's population. Furthermore 1.8 million patients have successfully been treated and cure rates are now well above 85 per cent.
DFID will provide £30.1 million by 2011 to the multi-donor funded Three Diseases Fund (3DF) which aims to tackle TB, malaria and HIV/AIDS. The 3DF provides grants to UN agencies and NGOs to support delivery of the National TB Strategy in Burma. DFID is also the donor representative on the Country Coordinating Mechanism which oversees the implementation of the National TB Strategy in Burma.
Sri Lanka
The Government of Sri Lanka announced that freedom of movement would be allowed for all the remaining displaced people held in camps by 1 December 2009. Since this date figures for the number of people returning to their home areas have been changing rapidly and are hard to follow accurately on a day by day basis. However at the end of last week, the United Nations estimated that more than 150,000 people had returned to their home areas.
Sri Lanka: Overseas Aid
The Department for International Development (DFID) has already provided considerable support to returning displaced people since September, including de-mining programmes, transport, shelter materials, water and sanitation, and seeds for restarting agricultural activities. Future support will be determined on the basis of the evolving situation on the ground and taken forward with the most appropriate delivery partners.
Foreign and Commonwealth Office
Afghanistan: Armed Conflict
We estimate the population of Britain’s area of responsibility in Helmand province to be 750,000 to 800,000. According to 2003 Central Statistical Office/UN Population Fund Socio-Economic and Demographic Profile, the estimated population of each district in Helmand are:
Number Baghran 129,947 Dishu 29,005 Garmsir 107,153 Gereshk/Nahr-e Saraj 166,827 Kajaki 119,023 Khanashin 17,333 Lashkar Gah 201,546 Musa Qal'eh 138,896 Nad-e Ali 235,590 Nawa 89,814 Nawzad 108,258 Sangin 66,901 Washir 31,476
Afghanistan: Politics and Government
In the run up to and following Afghanistan’s 2009 presidential elections, we met with a range of presidential candidates and continue to encourage all parties to work together for the good of Afghanistan. It is not for the UK to dictate to Afghanistan’s political leadership the makeup of any future Government, or prescribe the degree to which the Afghan Government should formally work with its opposition. What is important is that with UK and international community support, the Afghan Government and other key Afghan partners reach out across the political spectrum in order to deliver progress on the key issues President Karzai outlined in his inauguration speech: security, governance, peace and reintegration, economic development and regional relations.
Following President Karzai’s inauguration speech on 19 November 2009 and President Obama’s statement on 1 December 2009, the international community are reinvigorating their efforts to deliver and co-ordinate coherent and effective support for the Government of Afghanistan and its people. Work is progressing on a number of fronts. NATO Foreign Ministers discussed Afghanistan on 3 and 4 December 2009 and a NATO force generation conference on 7 December 2009 focused on increasing the Allied military effort. It is important that this enhanced International Security Assistance Force military effort is matched by a stronger, more-effective civil effort. We are discussing with our international partners how best to achieve this. The London Conference will offer a timely focus to taking forward international agreement on delivering a more coherent civilian effort.
Afghanistan: Reconstruction
The effort in Afghanistan is cross-departmental, with the bulk of the UK's efforts supporting the economy coming from the Department for International Development (DFID). However, one of the greatest needs for the Afghan economy is stability. Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) efforts across Afghanistan and wider region, supporting stability will therefore have the greatest indirect impact on the Afghan economy, although it is not possible to measure this contribution.
There are a number of projects, procurement and salaries in the local economy which have a direct impact on the local economy. Local purchases amounted to £6.8 million in 2008, much of which will have fed directly back to the Afghan economy. Local staff salaries were an additional £549,000. Spending in 2009 is likely to be similar. In addition, the FCO supports numerous programmes which support activity in Afghanistan. This financial year (2009-10) the total budget for non-DFID civilian programmes in Afghanistan is £88.4 million. Of this, it is predicted that £54.1 million is administered with the promotion of economic development and welfare—officially Overseas Development Authority—spend. This does not include DFID spending.
Aminatou Haidar
Officials from our embassy in Rabat, the Foreign and Commonwealth Office in London and the United Kingdom’s Mission to the United Nations have discussed the case of Aminatou Haidar with the Moroccan authorities. Article 12(4) of the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights has not been raised during these discussions. We have however made it clear that we believe the issue should be resolved swiftly and fairly.
We have also made it clear to the Moroccan authorities that recent events risk impeding the UN-led negotiation process. The UK remains fully committed to this process, and will continue to support the UN Secretary-General’s Personal Envoy, Christopher Ross, in his efforts to bring the parties together to find a mutually acceptable political agreement that provides for the self-determination of the people of Western Sahara.
British Indian Ocean Territory: Environment Protection
No decision has yet been taken on whether a Marine Protected Area will be established in the British Indian Ocean Territory (BIOT). A decision will be taken following the public consultation which is at present underway.
The UK is responsible for enforcing protection of the BIOT Fisheries and Conservation Management Zone/Environmental Preservation and Protection Zone and this would also be the case for any proposed Marine Protected Area. Surveillance and monitoring of the fisheries is, at present, carried out by a Senior Fisheries Protection Officer based on board the BIOT Patrol Vessel—the Pacific Marlin, and the Marine Resources Assessment Group's monitoring centre in London.
Departmental Information Officers
The White Book, published by the Central Office of Information (COI) every six months, contains details of the Foreign and Commonwealth Office's press team in London.
Ilois: Resettlement
Following the Law Lords judgment of 22 October 2008 in the Judicial Review of the 2004 British Indian Ocean Territory Orders in Council, Government policy remains that no-one has a right of abode in the Territory or the right to enter the Territory unless authorised. The Government have no plans to resettle the Chagos Islanders in the Territory and is not therefore undertaking research on the viability of the return of the Chagos Islanders to the British Indian Ocean Territory.
India: Religious Freedom
My right hon. Friend the Foreign Secretary has not discussed this with his Indian counterpart. On 10-11 November 2009 our High Commissioner to India visited Orissa and enquired with the local state authorities, including the Chief Minister, about the status of Christians still affected by the violence in Orissa in 2008, living conditions, compensation and the prosecution of those responsible. The local authorities advised that the state run camps had been closed, affected Christians had now returned to their homes, compensation had been provided and perpetrators had been convicted. However, resettlement of those displaced and the reconstruction of churches was still ongoing.
Israel: Prisoners
We are concerned by Mr. Othman’s treatment and long detention without charge. Foreign and Commonwealth Office Minister of State, Ivan Lewis, raised UK concerns over Othman’s case with the deputy Israeli Foreign Minister, Danny Ayalon on 27 October 2009. Our embassy in Tel Aviv, and our consulate-general in Jerusalem, continue to follow his case closely.
More generally, we continue to monitor the situation with regard to all Palestinian prisoners in Israeli prisons. We are very concerned about cases of administrative detention: we call on the Israeli Government to take immediate action to ensure that all cases are reviewed by a court in accordance with fair procedures, and that detainees’ rights are upheld.
Middle East: Armed Conflict
The Government have made clear their view that in light of the control that Israel continues to exercise over Gaza, Israel remains bound by obligations under the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949 in respect of Gaza. Those obligations include article 23 of that convention. We are deeply concerned about the situation in Gaza and continue, bilaterally and with our EU partners, to urge Israel to allow reconstruction and humanitarian supplies into Gaza.
The Government were deeply concerned by reports of incidents involving UN property/personnel during the Gaza conflict. UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon set up the UN Board of Inquiry to investigate certain incidents involving UN property/personnel during the Gaza Conflict. The Board reported back on 5 May.
The UN Secretariat are taking this forward—including the issue of compensation—directly with the Israeli Government.
Our embassy in Tel Aviv raised concerns over this incident directly with the Israeli Government on the day it took place.
We have been clear from the beginning of the Gaza conflict that all allegations of breaches of international humanitarian law committed by both sides must be properly investigated.
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon set up the UN Board of Inquiry to investigate certain incidents involving UN property/personnel during the Gaza Conflict. The Board reported back on 5 May 2009. The UN Secretariat are now taking this forward with the Israeli Government.
Morocco: Mining
I refer my hon. Friend to the answer of my hon. Friend the Member for Harlow (Bill Rammell) of 23 March 2009, Official Report, column 32W.
The UK continues to maintain its position that Morocco, as the de facto administering power of Western Sahara, is obliged under international law to ensure that economic activities under administration—including the extraction and exportation of phosphates—do not adversely affect the interests of the people in Western Sahara.
I refer my hon. Friend to the answer of my hon. Friend the Member for Harlow (Bill Rammell) of 5 May 2009, Official Report, column 47W, Western Sahara: Politics and Government:
We have not discussed the movement of population between Morocco and Western Sahara, or the application of article 49 of the fourth Geneva convention, and have no current plans to discuss either matter with the Moroccan Government.
The Government see the status of Western Sahara as undetermined and continue to believe that progress towards a negotiated solution to the dispute, providing for the self-determination of the people of Western Sahara, is best achieved under the auspices of the UN. To this end the UK fully supports the efforts of the UN Secretary-General and his Personal Envoy, Christopher Ross.
Proliferation: Nuclear Weapons
The Government have led international efforts to re-energise the consensus underpinning the non-proliferation treaty over the last three years. There are clear indications that the international mood is changing.
Building on the “Road to 2010” policy document launched by my right hon. Friend the Prime Minister in July 2009, and available at:
http://www.cabinetoffice.gov.uk/reports/roadto2010.aspx
The Government will continue to work hard with nuclear weapon states partners and the great mainstream of the non-aligned movement to build critical momentum and ensure a successful review conference next May.
Religious Freedom
The UK condemns all instances of persecution and discrimination against individuals and groups because of their faith or belief, wherever they occur and whatever the religion of the individual or group concerned.
All the Foreign and Commonwealth Office’s (FCO) overseas missions have a responsibility to monitor and raise human rights in their host countries. Our embassies raise freedom of religion or belief in a variety of different contexts. We take action on individual cases where persecution or discrimination has occurred; lobby for changes in discriminatory practices and laws; raise freedom of religion or belief in bilateral and EU human rights dialogues; and work in the UN and other international organisations to uphold universal standards. The FCO does not keep statistics on our lobbying on religious persecution or indeed on broader human rights issues.
Sudan: Politics and Government
We regularly discuss UN peacekeeping in Darfur with the UN, the Government of Sudan and other parties in Darfur, emphasising the importance of the African Union-United Nations Hybrid operation (UNAMID) in Darfur being able to exercise its full mandate in accordance with the Statement of Forces Agreement. On 30 November 2009 the UN Security Council reiterated its full support for UNAMID and emphasised the need for all parties in Darfur to unconditionally guarantee full access to UNAMID patrols in Darfur. On 12 November 2009 we participated in a demarche setting out to the UN and African Union our strong concern at the Government of Sudan's non-compliance with the Status of Forces Agreement and urging them to take all necessary measures to ensure that Sudan complies with its terms.
Taliban
The UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) released the report Addiction, Crime and Insurgency: The Transnational Threat of Afghan Opium on 21 October 2009. In it the UNODC estimates that the Taliban in Afghanistan now derive between $90-160 million per year from taxing opium production. There are no accurate assessments of what proportion of the Taliban's income comes from the drugs trade. However, the UK assesses that the opium trade represents a significant proportion of the Taliban's income.
USA: Anti-semitism
I have not received any recent reports of anti-Semitism in the US. For a more detailed explanation of ongoing discussions between the UK and US on the issue of anti-Semitism, I refer the hon. Member to my answer of 3 December 2009, in which I said that we continue to work closely with the US Administration and other partners to combat anti-Semitism wherever it occurs.
Western Sahara: Human Rights
The EU and Morocco held positive and open discussions in the meeting of the Sub-Committee on Human Rights, Democratisation and Governance on 24 July 2009. A wide range of human rights-related issues were discussed, including women’s rights, freedom of expression and the rights of detainees. Whilst there was no discussion relating specifically to the issue of Western Sahara, Morocco has a responsibility towards the people living there and therefore the discussions that took place did not exclude Western Sahara.
The UK and European partners regularly engage in discussions with the Moroccan authorities on issues related to human rights and Western Sahara, and raise individual cases where appropriate.
Defence
Afghanistan: Peacekeeping Operations
I have been asked to reply.
We are fully aware of the Afghan Public Protection Force project being piloted in Wardak province with the help of the US. We welcome the principle of empowering individual communities to take a greater role in providing their own security. We will remain in close contact with the Afghan Government and the US on its progress and look forward to discussing the results of this pilot with them in due course. Only once the pilot has been rigorously evaluated will any decisions on expansion, including to Helmand, be taken.
All of the protective personal equipment provided to armed forces personnel is constantly under review. The Osprey body armour systems have long been considered to be among the best in the world, and the survival rates are testimony to that; however, a direct by-product of that is that personnel are now surviving with other associated and sometimes life-changing injuries. We are continually seeking ways to further protect our personnel, and work is well under way to research ways of providing additional protection including for the whole groin area.
(2) what the average monthly cost to his Department was of Jet A1 and diesel fuel delivered to Camp Bastion in support of UK operations since 2005.
[holding answer 7 December 2009]: Fuel for both Bastion and Kandahar Airbase is paid for from the same budget. During the last 12 calendar months £85,669,000 was paid for aviation fuel; and £43,058,000 for ground fuel for both locations. Based upon information from FY 2008-09 onwards the average monthly cost of aviation fuel was £6,070,000; and £2,891,000 for ground fuel for both Bastion and Kandahar Airbase. The information for fuel costs prior to FY 2008-09 is not held centrally.
Over the Christmas period, the British Forces Post Office (BFPO) employs extra staff to ensure that all HM Forces mail to all world-wide destinations including Afghanistan is dispatched promptly.
The Enduring Free Mail Service which operates all year round is bolstered by the Christmas Free Mail Service (CFMS) for one month before Christmas, where the Free Post is extended to cover not only Operations and their supporting ships, but all destinations where HM Forces are deployed.
The CFMS is advertised along with Last Dates of Posting via a Defence Information Notice and the BFPO and MOD websites. This information is also available on the Royal Mail website.
MOD undertook press and media campaigns in the run up to Christmas to promote the reduction in volume of Unsolicited Mail, which places a considerable burden on the Supply Chain, which, left unchecked, can seriously delay personal mail.
Finally, over the Christmas period, Royal Mail occasionally delivers directly to BFPO to shorten transport time, rather than BFPO staff collecting mail from the Royal Mail Depot at Greenford.
Armed Forces: Equipment
The current required and actual number of night vision equipment, body armour and small arms specifically held for pre-deployment training are provided in the following table.
Requirement Holdings Night vision systems Helmet Mounted Night Vision System 7,168 4,477 Light Weight Thermal Image sights (VIPIR 2 and 2+) 971 762 Body armour Osprey 2,901 4,697 Osprey Assault 6,146 0 Small arms Light Machine Gun 922 922 Shotgun 198 70 Sig Pistol 3,007 1,162
Where there is a shortfall against the pre-deployment training requirement, this reflects the newness of equipment, or the growth in forces deployed. We are making further progress in closing the gap and should meet the full requirement for each equipment type identified (except the Sig Pistol) by July 2010, and in some cases earlier than July. All pistols (some 25,000) are due to be replaced as part of the Soldier System Lethality programme.
Equipment availability for pre-deployment training is carefully managed and prioritised to ensure that operators are safe, qualified and competent on the equipment prior to deployment.
In addition to the equipment allocated specifically for pre-deployment training, further equipment is held by units themselves; these items are not included in the figures as they are not specifically held for pre-deployment training.
Armed Forces: Injuries
The Armed Forces and Reserve Forces (Compensation Scheme) Order 2005 makes provision of compensation for all members and former members of the regular armed forces or reserve forces should they be injured, become ill or die as a result of service. Awards are tariff based depending upon the nature and severity of the injury. There is no standard provision for particular types of injury or theatre of operation.
The following table reflects the current Armed Forces and Reserve Forces (Compensation Scheme) Order 2005 tariff covering injury to the genitalia.
Tariff Descriptor Compensation award (£) Either 14 Traumatic injury to genitalia requiring treatment resulting in moderate permanent damage 2,888 Or 12 Traumatic injury to genitalia requiring treatment resulting in severe permanent damage or loss 9,075
In addition, where appropriate, the following tariff may be awarded:
Tariff Descriptor Compensation award 8 Infertility—this level will also attract a guaranteed income payment (GIP) which is a tax-free index linked payment that is paid monthly for life after leaving the armed forces. The GIP is determined by the individual's salary at time of discharge from service, multiplied by a relevant factor. Lump sum £48,875 + GIP
These provisions are included within the review of the AFCS, being led by Lord Boyce.
Armoured Fighting Vehicles
This information is not held centrally, or in the format requested, and could be provided only at disproportionate cost.
Armoured vehicles are used by a number of corps and units across the armed forces. Units are required to train using a ratio of 1.5 crew operators (drivers) per vehicle against their peacetime establishment. This ratio is different for operational requirements, which is usually set at two crew operators per vehicle.
These ratios may vary depending on the vehicle, however all requirements are currently being met.
AWE Aldermaston
Work to prepare the site commenced in 2007, and includes site investigation, the removal of redundant services, preparatory ground works and services diversion works. This work is allowable prior to planning consent being received, and is currently planned to complete by the end of 2010.
The replacement enriched uranium handling facility at the Atomic Weapons Establishment is due on current plans to become operational in 2018. The materiel outputs of the facility are for use in the Defence nuclear programme. I am not prepared to disclose further details of usage as this would, or would be likely to, prejudice national security and defence in the UK.
The Ministry of Defence owns the Atomic Weapons Establishment (AWE) sites and all radioactive waste stored on those sites. The cost of storing radioactive waste at AWE is covered in the management and operation contract between AWE Management Ltd and the Department.
Departmental Buildings
During the last 10 years this Department has entered into a number of temporary lease back arrangements in the course of estate disposals, for example to allow time for facilities to be reprovided.
The details requested are not held centrally and could be provided only at disproportionate cost.
So far as the disposal of other surplus Ministry of Defence assets (such as ships, tanks, aircraft, plant, IT and other equipment) is concerned, no lease backs are entered into.
Departmental Compensation
This information is not held centrally and could be provided only at disproportionate cost.
Departmental Official Hospitality
I refer the hon. Member to the answer I gave on 12 October 2009, Official Report, columns 422-33. The provision of alcohol at public expense must be in moderation and is subject to both financial and quantity restrictions.
Departmental Public Expenditure
I am placing a copy of the requested information in the Library of the House, which breaks down the MOD’s 2009-10 winter supplementary estimate in the same format as we have supplied before.
Departmental Public Relations
The following payments have been made in each of the last three financial years:
Politics International Cavendish Communications 2006-07 61,671 0 2007-08 54,362 0 2008-09 11,669 16,000
Payments relate principally to training and support for Met Office events. The contracts between the Met Office and Cavendish Communications and Politics International are confidential.
Departmental Telephone Services
The use of 0800, 0845 and 0870 numbers is determined at local level in accordance with individual business requirements and obtained directly from the supplier. Records of such numbers are not held centrally and could be provided only at disproportionate cost.
Departmental Written Questions
The MOD received 643 named day questions during the past 12 months and answered 482 (75 per cent.) on the day named. The MOD aims to answer all named day questions on the day named, but where this is not possible, we aim to provide a substantive reply at the earliest opportunity.
The following table shows the number of questions which were due for answer in each month and the number answered on the day named:
Month Number of named day Questions for answer Number of questions answered on the day named December 2008 53 39 January 2009 61 40 February 2009 47 36 March 2009 58 37 April 2009 22 17 May 2009 54 39 June 2009 56 43 July 2009 51 43 September 2009 74 72 October 2009 79 53 November 2009 88 63 Total 643 482
HMS Endurance
Options for restoring our Ice Patrol capability are presently being examined and no final decisions on whether to repair or replace HMS Endurance have yet been taken. Therefore, no tenders have yet been sought. The cost to the Department of returning her to the United Kingdom was approximately £4.3 million.
Kentigern House
The decision to sell and lease back Kentigern House in Glasgow was taken as part of the planning round that concluded in spring 2009.
Sale and leaseback is a commercially accepted practice ensuring the MOD maintains use of the facility while releasing useful capital.
I refer the hon. Member to the answer I gave my hon. Friend the Member for North Ayrshire and Arran (Ms Clark), on 26 November 2009, Official Report, column 294W.
Rescue Services: Helicopters
I am placing data showing the number of helicopter call outs of each type from each search and rescue (SAR) station in each of the last 10 years in the Library of the House.
Information on the actual daytime and night-time hours off-station for each call out is not held centrally and could be provided only at disproportionate cost.
Further data on military SAR activities is published by Defence Analytical Services and Advice at the following link;
http://www.dasa.mod.uk/applications/newWeb/www/index.php?page=66&pubType=0
All UK SAR helicopter units are able to provide overlapping cover when an adjacent unit is either already committed to a SAR operation or operating at a reduced capability for any reason, or during periods of temporary closure. The provision of adjacent SAR cover is standard practice and occurs routinely when a SAR helicopter is already airborne on a search and rescue sortie or is unserviceable.
St. Kilda: Radar
(2) what measures are in place to prevent the leakage of oil into seawater from his Department’s facilities in the vicinity of St. Kilda.
No oil leakages from Ministry of Defence facilities on or in the vicinity of St. Kilda has been recorded during the last three years.
The Bulk Fuel Installation (BFI) located on St. Kilda, in support of activity at the MOD Hebrides Range, is compliant with the current legal standard, the Water Environment (Oil Storage) (Scotland) Regulations 2006.
Ship-to-shore replenishment of the BFI is undertaken in compliance with the Maritime and Coastguard Agency approved “St Kilda Oil Spillage Response Plan”, prepared in accordance with the merchant Shipping (Oil Pollution Preparedness, Response and Co-operation Convention) Regulations 1998.
A number of measures are in place to protect the environment from spills and leakage. The oil tanks and associated equipment are enclosed within a physical containment barrier, known as a bund. As an additional precaution, the fuel connection points, pipe-work, valves, vent points, sight glass, rainwater sump, oil-water interceptors, and spillage kits are protected against the effects of ice.
Vehicle refuelling on the island is undertaken within the containment area. The refuelling pump is only operated by authorised personnel, and is locked when not in use.
Culture, Media and Sport
Betting Shops: Horseracing
The Government have not made such an estimate. However, the Horserace Betting Levy Board informs me that the levy payable by betting exchanges is equivalent to 10 per cent. of their gross profits, defined as gross commission on British Horserace Betting Business deducted from winnings paid out to bettors and bet-takers. In the year ended 31 March 2009, Betfair also made a voluntary contribution to the Levy Board in respect of British Horserace Betting Business conducted by their off-shore website in Malta.
Betting exchanges operate a business model that does not deliver product through shops. When bookmakers accept risk on bets and do so in shops, liability to levy and gross profits tax is calculated without the deduction of overheads. This leads to a proportionately larger contribution to the levy than would be the case for a betting exchange.
Broadband: East Midlands
I have been asked to reply.
The Next Generation Fund will help to bring fast broadband to at least 90 per cent. of households in the UK by 2017. The fund will promote the roll out of infrastructure that meets the needs of businesses and households in regions the market would not otherwise deliver to. It will work alongside the Government's Universal Service Commitment, a parallel infrastructure investment programme to ensure virtually every community has access to a broadband connection capable of providing at least 2Mbps.
Departmental Buildings
The Department has not refurbished or carried out any works to offices allocated to Ministers in the last 12 months.
Departmental Electronic Equipment
Since 2001 my Department has purchased one plasma television screen at a cost of £2,715.31 inc VAT. The cost covered purchase and installation in June 2007.
Departmental Freedom of Information
The information is published regularly by Government, and can be found on the Ministry of Justice website at:
http://www.justice.gov.uk/publications/freedomofinformationquarterly.htm
Departmental Public Relations
The information requested is not held centrally and is an operational matter for the Heritage Lottery Fund, who have been unable to provide the information requested to the timescales dictated by parliamentary convention.
Accordingly, I have asked the chief executive to write to the hon. Member for Ruislip-Northwood. Copies of the reply will be placed in the Libraries of both Houses.
The information the hon. Member has requested is not held centrally and is a matter for the Gambling Commission.
Accordingly, I have asked the responsible director to write to the hon. Member. Copies of the reply will be placed in the Libraries of both Houses.
Departmental Scientists
DCMS has one chief scientific adviser who is a Senior Civil Servant, Director, and Board member. The chief scientific adviser leads a team of 15 civil servants working in a variety of scientific or research posts across the disciplines of economics, statistics, social or operational research.
Departmental Travel
26 November and 8 November respectively.
Edelman UK: Public Relations
No direct payments have been made to Edelman by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport in the last 12 months. However, Edelman was engaged through Central Office of Information to provide brand and event development support to the Creativity and Business International Network.
Fishburn Hedges: Public Relations
The BBC is responsible for administering the Digital Switchover Help Scheme.
Accordingly I have asked the chief executive of the scheme to write to the hon. Member for Ruislip-Northwood. Copies of the reply will be placed in the Libraries of both Houses.
Gambling Commission: Birmingham
The Gambling Commission completed its move to Birmingham in July 2006. The total operating costs of the Commission were £6.645 million in 2007-08 falling to £5.027 million in 2008-09.
Gambling Commission: Finance
The Gambling Commission’s performance is primarily assessed through a funding agreement with the Department which includes their agreed strategic objectives, together with funding and performance indicators/targets. They were set a target of achieving 3 per cent. value for money efficiency savings, year on year, over the period of the funding agreement 2008-09 to 2010-11.
Gambling Commission: Reviews
The Gambling Commission was the subject of a Hampton Implementation Review earlier this year which suggested that, if the Commission’s plans were implemented, it would be in a strong position to demonstrate the Hampton principles throughout its work. The implementation of those plans is a strategic objective in the Commission’s 2009 business plan and my officials and I meet the Commission on a regular basis to consider progress against all of the objectives in that plan. The Commission is making good progress on these measures.
Hotels
All travel is conducted in accordance with rules set out in the Department’s staff guide under travel and subsistence and is consistent with the civil service management code. Travel by Ministers is made in pursuance of their ministerial duties and complies with guidance set out in the Ministerial Code.
Expenditure on hotels is included within travel and subsistence claims made by Ministers and officials. The information is not held separately or analysed by the categories requested in the Department’s accounting system. It can be obtained by retrieving and manually analysing a large number of travel, subsistence and incidental expense claims only at disproportionate cost.
Licensed Premises: Statistics
Responses received to the licensing questionnaire which formed the basis for the Licensing Statistical Bulletin 2009 are available on the DCMS website:
http://www.culture.gov.uk/reference_library/publications/6387.aspx
National Lottery: Grants
DCMS does not forecast future Lottery income, but we do issue projections of what income might be if total sales stay at approximately the last year’s level. The latest income projection issued to non-Olympic Lottery distributors in September 2009 was as follows:
Total income Transfer to Olympics 2009-10 1,386 292 2010-11 1,391 292 2011-12 1,392 292 2012-13 1,453 136 2013-14 1,488 — 2014-15 1,492 —
The total income column is gross income, i.e. before the Olympic transfers are taken into account.
The Big Lottery Fund has distributed funding to statutory bodies where they are best placed to deliver outcomes for communities and people most in need. The Big Lottery Fund does not fund statutory bodies’ core work nor does it substitute or replace statutory funding. Where BIG distributes funding to statutory bodies it is often on the precondition that they work in partnership with voluntary and community sector organisations.
The following table shows the amount awarded to statutory bodies across the UK by the Big Lottery Fund each full financial year since its inception on 1 June 2004.
Financial year ending 31 March Number of awards Total awarded (£) 2006 1,664 59,210,398 2007 1,619 38,144,003 2008 2,612 173,326,762 2009 2,073 41,420,649
Funding made through statutory bodies as third party award partners where the voluntary and community sector organisations are the direct beneficiary have not been included in these figures.
Amounts retained by the statutory third party award partner for administrative costs have been included.
Scotland
Departmental Contracts
Other than minor purchases, the Scotland Office does not undertake discrete procurement or tendering projects. It utilises existing service contracts between suppliers and the Scottish Executive or the Ministry of Justice. These awarding authorities would take the lead in such matters and would determine the criteria for the award of contract. The Office has not incurred any direct spend on the advertisement of tenders.
Northern Ireland
Northern Ireland Equality Commission: Public Relations
The sponsorship of the Equality Commission for Northern Ireland is a matter for the devolved Administration.
Police Service of Northern Ireland
The 2007 comprehensive spending review period (CSR07) runs to 31 March 2011. Based on current plans, the PSNI has not budgeted for the introduction of PCSOs in this period. This was agreed by the Chief Constable and the NI Policing Board in allocating resources for the CSR07 period. The budgeted cost of one police officer in Northern Ireland in 2009-10 is £45,000.
The 2007 comprehensive spending review period (CSR07) runs to 31 March 2011. Based on current plans, the PSNI has not budgeted for the introduction of PCSOs in this period. This was agreed by the Chief Constable and the NI Policing Board in allocating resources for the CSR07 period. The estimated cost of one police community support officer in Northern Ireland is £27,000 per annum but the actual cost would depend on how they were introduced. Decisions on the introduction of PCSOs would be for the Chief Constable and Policing Board.
Weapons: Explosives
The Independent International Commission on Decommissioning has worked, and continues to work, to put the armaments of republican and loyalist terrorist groups beyond use. By their nature estimates of illegally held weaponry would be speculative and it is not Government practice to provide information on this basis.
Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
Capita
The core-Department does not hold centrally information on how many occasions Capita Group plc tendered for contracts let in each of the last five years and how many such tenders were successful. The information could be provided only at disproportionate cost. From information held centrally the expenditure with the Capita Group since 2005-06 is as follows:
2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 (April-October) Capita Business Services Ltd. 91,672.75 653,407.60 201,571.59 203,859.69 72,598.59 Capita Health Solutions Ltd. 11,414,84 9,527.35 124,278.15 6,184.56 2,284.39 Capita Resourcing Ltd. 408,611.15 273,835.10 354,072.03 479,800.64 315,128.28 Capita Symonds Ltd. 374,023.15 329,480.73 37,461.58 — — Capita Communications — 6,184.57 — — — Capita Trust Company Ltd. — — — 8,781.25 —
From information held centrally the core-Department has no contracts which terminate after 2010. It is not possible to calculate the monetary value of all outstanding contracts between the core-Department and Capita Group plc because the contracts may vary in terms, length, services, costs and in the demands made upon them.
Climate Change: Antarctic
I have been asked to reply.
The Government welcome this comprehensive and timely report from the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR) which has been circulated to all delegations ahead of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change meeting in Copenhagen for their consideration. Antarctica is an important barometer for global climate change and changes there will have far reaching impacts including on the UK. I congratulate all those involved in the SCAR report in particular those UK scientists, most notably from the British Antarctic Survey, who played a leading role. The Government are committed to the protection of the Antarctic environment and strongly support the Antarctic treaty and its environmental protocol. I recently launched for consultation the draft Antarctic Bill which will add to the protection we give to Antarctica. The report will be discussed in detail at the Antarctic treaty meeting of experts on climate change in April 2010 and also at the Antarctic treaty consultative meeting in Uruguay in May.
Departmental Internet
Staff costs for the central team with responsibility for updating and maintaining DEFRA’s websites are estimated to be around £340,000 in the 2008-09 financial year, and the same in 2009-10. This central team is also responsible for the DEFRA intranet, and the staff costs for the external DEFRA website alone cannot be readily disaggregated.
Additional costs in 2009-10 of £71,149 have been incurred for specialist web design, audience research and web accessibility auditing relating to the relaunch of the DEFRA website in September 2009. This relaunch was the first significant investment in the DEFRA website since the creation of the Department in 2001, and work on it spanned two financial years. There are no such expenses currently planned for 2010-11.
Website hosting services—as well as a range of IT applications—are provided as part of DEFRA’s overall IT service provision and the costs of this aspect of website maintenance cannot be readily disaggregated.
Departmental Taxis
The core-Department has no contracts with private hire taxi companies. Paragraph 8.2 of the civil service management code requires staff use the most efficient and economic means of travel in the circumstances, taking into account any management benefit or the needs of staff with disabilities.
On expenditure, I refer my hon. Friend to the answer I gave to the hon. Member for North Southwark and Bermondsey (Simon Hughes) of 21 October 2009, Official Report, columns 1455-56W.
Flood Control: Expenditure
The following table provides an analysis of Government funding to the Environment Agency for flood risk management between 2000-01 and 2008-09.
The figures are based upon the annual report and accounts of the Environment Agency.
Until 2004-05 the flood risk management function of the Environment Agency was funded primarily through a combination of grants from DEFRA for specific projects and levies on local authorities.
Both forms of funding were largely replaced by grant in aid from DEFRA from 2004-05 onwards.
Total England (£ million) 2000-01 248.9 2001-02 285.6 2002-03 309.8 2003-04 331.3 2004-05 355.6 2005-06 420.6 2006-07 419.2 2007-08 438.9 2008-09 513.9
The following table shows the total expenditure of the Yorkshire Regional Flood Defence Committee in total and specifically on the City of York.
City of York Yorkshire Regional Flood Defence Committee1 Capital Revenue 2000-01 28,578 0 2582 2001-02 30,715 0 2675 2002-03 41,548 56 2768 2003-04 37,330 130 780 2004-05 33,421 0 750 2005-06 40,684 120 830 2006-07 34,015 110 650 2007-08 35,174 24 663 2008-09 41,791 56 676 1 Total spend for Yorkshire and north bank of Humber (including York) 2 Estimates proportioned from Ouse revenue spend
Marine Management Organisation
An initial equality impact assessment (EqIA) was published on the Marine and Fisheries Agency's (MFA's) intranet pages prior to the decision on the future headquarters of the Marine Management Organisation being made.
This was done in the form of an initial assessment on the relocation project generally taking into account all the shortlisted locations. The finalised ‘full’ version of the EqIA—which takes account of the more recently known building location in Newcastle—was published on 2 November 2009 (having first been discussed with the departmental trade union, including MFA representation).
Oils: Waste
The Environment Agency is responsible for recording the transfrontier shipment of waste oils for England and Wales. The following table sets out the quantities of waste oils exported from England and Wales from 2001 to 2008.
Tonnes 2001 0 2002 0 2003 1,981 2004 9,015 2005 20 2006 0 2007 7,705 2008 9,298
These data are reported to the secretariat of the Basel convention.
Organic Farming
We do not hold this information for years prior to 2002.
Hectares 2002 184,045 2003 220,197 2004 229,626 2005 238,355 2006 229,861 2007 258,744 2008 283,993
We do not hold specific data for North Yorkshire and York, but we have data for Yorkshire and Humberside, as follows.
Hectares 2002 6,968 2003 8,079 2004 8,560 2005 8,978 2006 9,032 2007 9,625 2008 10,899
Rights of Way
The area of land opened to the public under the Countryside and Rights of Way (CROW) Act 2000 to date in England, North Yorkshire and York is shown in the following table.
England North Yorkshire county City of York CROW Access1 865,119 174,025 188 CROW Section 162 153,466 14 ,570 112 1 CROW Access land includes conclusive open country and registered common land mapped in accordance with Section 4 of The CROW Act 2000, with areas of excepted land (military byelaw, racecourse and aerodromes) and CROW Section 28 restrictions (military and National Security) removed. 2 CROW Section 16 is land which has been dedicated for the purposes of open access in accordance with Section 16 of The CROW Act 2000. Notes: 1. All figures are in Hectares (calculated using Cartesian area in MapInfo). 2. The figure for CROW Access land together with the figure for CROW Section 16 gives the total access land for a given area.
Transport
Departmental Electronic Equipment
As previously advised the Department for Transport has spent £55 on DVD players.
The DVD players were purchased by the Highways Agency and the Vehicle Certification Agency. They are used for delivering in-house training with video content, and for test engineers to show short videos of vehicle tests.
Departmental Information Officers
The number of full-time equivalent staff (FTE) employed on press officer activities on 1 April 2009 by the Department for Transport both directly and, where identifiable, indirectly is set out in the following table.
DFT employees Other workers1 DFT(C) 13 Nil DSA 62 0 DVLA 5 Nil GCDA Nil Nil HA 11 3 MCA 2 Nil VCA Nil Nil VOSA 1 1 1 Other workers include temporary employment agency staff. 2 DSA figure includes fixed term employment
The staff resource deployed by the Central Office of Information in providing their regional News and PR services to parts of the Department can be provided only at disproportionate cost.
The Highways Agency (HA) has seven regional press officers to support its new Traffic Officer service and seven regional control centres. These press officers are employed to raise awareness of the Traffic Officers and the agency's role as network operator for England's motorways and major A roads.
Departmental Public Relations
In the 12 months to 31 October 2009, the Northern Lighthouse Board paid Grayling Political Strategy £30,606.74. The Northern Lighthouse Board has a contract with Grayling Political Strategy to provide parliamentary and media monitoring services to highlight issues directly or indirectly affecting the Board’s activities.
The contract between the Northern Lighthouse Board and Grayling Political Strategy is a private contract containing commercially sensitive information and therefore it would be inappropriate to place a copy of the contract in the Library.
Departmental Taxis
The Department for Transport (DFT) and its agencies do not record the mileage of taxi journeys, and so this information could be provided only at disproportionate cost.
Available figures for the cost are included in the following table. Four agencies do not record taxi fares separately from other travel costs, and could provide the information only at disproportionate cost. For DFT(c), Driving Standards Agency (DSA), Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency (DVLA) and the Vehicle Certification Agency (VCA) information for years earlier than those shown could be provided only at disproportionate cost.
2002-03 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 DFT(c) — 87,163 98,299 138,401 130,764 143,968 137,968 DSA — — — — 11,256 19,839 24,119 DVLA 23,359 36,807 42,276 54,458 64,236 47,195 52,041 VCA — — 1,589 2,581 2,416 2,078 3,562
Departmental Theft
The Department for Transport has had no employees that have been reprimanded, had their contract of employment terminated nor been prosecuted for theft of departmental property over the last three years.
Six out of the seven Department's agencies have also had no employees that have been reprimanded, had their contract of employment terminated nor been prosecuted for theft of department property over the last three years. However, the seventh agency, The Driver Vehicle and Licensing Agency, is unable to provide the information requested as it would involve disproportionate costs.
Departmental Working Hours
Information relating to flexible working in the Department for Transport can be found at the following links in the Department's website:
http://www.dft.gov.uk/pgr/sustainable/travelplans/dfttravelplan/departmentfortransporttravelplan?page=3#a1025
flexible working arrangements.
http://www.dft.gov.uk/about/diversity/esmr/equality/equalitymonitoring0809/pdf/equailtyreport0809.pdf
information on the number of part-time staff.
http://www.dft.gov.uk/about/diversity/talent1/diversitystratplan.pdf
diversity strategy and delivery plan.
http://www.dft.gov.uk/about/diversity/networks/flexibleworkingnetworkgroup
flexible working network group.
http://www.civilservice.gov.uk/news/2009/june/job-share.aspx
information relating to the civil service job share notice board.
Driving
The Department for Transport has a departmental Driving at Work policy that includes the requirement for every driver or rider to hold a valid driving licence. If drivers or riders use their own vehicles they must also have appropriate insurance provision. Further detailed arrangements vary according to the exact business need in each agency and the central Department.
All staff who drive or ride on departmental business have their driving licences and insurance provision checked by line management or in the case of DVLA by a dedicated team. Usually this is by visual inspection but in some parts of the Department it is done by self-certification supported by management checks. There are regular reviews of the appropriate documentation that vary between six months to a year or whenever there is a change of circumstances.
Detailed guidance is available to all staff in respect of road safety while on departmental business and line managers are responsible for monitoring arrangements. Guidance includes practical advice like checking vehicles prior to a journey, planning journeys and the need for regular breaks, using seat belts, not using a mobile phone while driving.
Staff are required to report all accidents via the internal arrangements in their agency or the Central Department. Reporting requirements includes accidents while driving in the course of their official duties. All accidents are investigated.
M5: Automatic Number Plate Recognition
[holding answer 2 December 2009]: The average speed cameras currently in use on the M5 to secure speed limit compliance through roadworks are shown in the table.
Scheme Location Safety camera partnership Number of cameras Gloucester Driver Information Scheme—new signs providing drivers with real time advance information on road conditions J11a-13 Gloucester Safety Camera Partnership 8 Newton Farm resurfacing/barrier replacement works J3-J4 West Mercia Safety Camera Partnership 14
As explained in my answer of 25 November 2009, Official Report, column 132W, the other types of cameras are not used for the detection of traffic offences.
Traffic offences are administered by the relevant Safety Camera Partnership Group and the Highways Agency does not keep records of these. Any enquiries relating to offences detected in the last 12 months would therefore have to be addressed directly to the Gloucester Safety Camera Partnership and the West Mercia Safety Camera Partnership respectively, for the above locations.
Norwich-London Railway Line
The Department for Transport does not hold the information requested. In the case of maintenance, either routine or otherwise, the decision to replace rail with bus transport will be taken by the train operating company and Network Rail.
Railways: Scotland
The timetable has not been decided as the stakeholder consultation exercise has not yet taken place. Options for rail services on the East Coast mainline are being examined, but no decision has been taken.
Railways: Standards
[holding answer 24 November 2009]: The table requested is as follows, showing the number of trains cancelled by each franchised train operator in each of the last five years as a percentage of all trains scheduled to run. Data are given for the five most recent financial years, including 2009-10 up to October 2009.
Percentage Train operator 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 (to October 2009) ATW 1.1 0.7 0.5 0.4 0.2 c2c 1.2 1.1 1.1 0.8 0.6 Chiltern 1.4 0.9 0.7 0.7 0.7 CrossCountry 1.6 1.4 1.3 1.2 1.1 East Midlands Trains 1.5 1.5 1.6 1.0 0.7 FCC 1.7 1.6 1.3 1.7 1.3 FGW 1.0 1.5 1.8 0.9 0.6 London Midland 1.6 1.5 1.4 1.9 1.2 London Overground 2.1 1.7 1.8 0.9 0.9 Merseyrail 1.5 1.0 0.9 0.8 0.6 Northern Rail 0.7 1.0 1.1 0.8 0.7 NXEA 1.3 1.6 1.2 1.1 0.9 NXEC 1.3 1.9 2.3 1.4 1.2 Southeastern 1.1 0.9 0.9 1.2 0.6 Southern 1.1 0.9 0.9 1.3 0.7 SWT 0.9 1.0 0.7 1.1 0.4 TPE 1.1 1.0 0.9 1.0 0.5 Virgin Trains 1.0 1.3 0.9 2.5 1.3
The equivalent detail for peak hour trains in London and the South East is as follows:
Percentage 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 (to October 2009) c2c 1.2 1.2 1.0 0.9 0.5 Chiltern 1.6 1.3 1.0 1.0 0.8 FCC 1.9 1.7 1.4 1.9 1.1 FGW ‘Link’ Only 1.2 1.6 1.8 1.3 0.7 London Midland 0.5 1.0 0.7 2.4 1.0 London Overground 1.2 1.0 1.1 1.0 0.9 NXEA 1.6 1.9 1.6 1.2 1.1 Southeastern 1.3 1.1 1.1 1.6 0.9 Southern 1.3 1.1 0.9 1.3 0.8 SWT 1.2 0.8 0.8 1.3 0.4
Railways: Tickets
South West Trains has an ITSO smartcard pilot in operation between Staines and Windsor and Eton Riverside. Another pilot is planned for the Worcester area shortly on London Midland services. Both are precursors to wider rollouts in future. On 23 November we announced the launch of pay as you go (PAYG) in London from 2 January 2010 which will allow use of Oyster on London rail services.
South West Trains, London Midland, East Coast, Southern, Arriva Cross Country and East Midlands Trains all have smartcard obligations. The specific details of these commitments are commercially sensitive as they will be the subject of competitive tender by the respective train operator and therefore are not in the public domain.
Roads: Accidents
Information about whether drivers involved in road accidents hold a licence is not held centrally.
The information requested is given in the table:
Number of fatalities Accident year (a) Vale of York1 (b) North Yorkshire2 (c) England 1994 18 84 3,077 1995 16 92 2,995 1996 13 79 3,024 1997 21 87 3,001 1998 18 88 2,834 1999 5 68 2,922 2000 18 90 2,915 2001 14 82 2,916 2002 26 95 2,980 2003 19 88 3,004 2004 7 80 2,714 2005 13 85 2,735 2006 10 69 2,695 2007 26 81 2,502 2008 7 52 2,123 1 Based on 2004 constituency boundary. 2 Includes unitary authority of City of York.
The information requested is given in the table:
Accidents per 100,000 population Accident year (a) North Yorkshire1 (b) Yorkshire and the Humber (c) England 1994 166 73 75 1995 158 75 74 1996 155 71 73 1997 166 70 71 1998 137 66 67 1999 145 65 64 2000 126 62 63 2001 130 63 61 2002 131 64 59 2003 124 62 56 2004 117 59 52 2005 108 54 48 2006 117 55 48 2007 112 55 46 2008 90 49 42 1 Includes York Unitary Authority
The information requested is given in the following table:
Number of accidents Accident year (a) North Yorkshire2 (b)London (c) Lancashire3 (d) England 1994 2,500 33,901 5,357 179,789 1995 2,550 33,180 5,084 177,225 1996 2,647 33,435 5,378 183,888 1997 2,663 33,634 5,529 188,328 1998 2,731 33,179 5,366 188,486 1999 2,736 33,879 4,965 186,701 2000 2,637 33,233 4,806 186,595 2001 2,652 32,219 5,134 182,649 2002 2,702 29,762 5,082 176,000 2003 2,644 27,898 4,613 169,659 2004 2,620 25,586 4,874 164,885 2005 2,292 23,925 4,836 158,516 2006 2,106 21,762 4,628 149,465 2007 2,138 20,339 4,595 143,540 2008 1,981 20,371 4,375 134,036 1 Includes accidents where fatal or serious injuries were also recorded. 2 Includes York Unitary Authority. 3 Includes Blackburn and Blackpool Unitary Authorities.
The information requested is given in th