Written Answers To Questions
Friday, 28th June, 1957
Royal Air Force
Meteorological Service (Reorganisation)
asked the Secretary of State for Air whether he will make a statement on the reorganisation of the Meteorological Service.
The scope and application of meteorology are steadily growing; and, with the agreement of the other Ministers concerned, the Secretary of State for Air in 1955 appointed a Committee under Lord Brabazon to review the organisation of the Meteorological Office in relation to current and future requirements. This Committee took evidence in writing or orally from a large number of user interests both within and outside the Government service. I am now in a position to inform the House of its conclusions and of the decisions we have taken as a result.
General
The Brabazon Committee saw no reason to question the wisdom of the decision taken in 1919 and reaffirmed in 1945 to entrust responsibility for the State Meteorological Service to the Air Ministry as the Department with the major user interest. It was also satisfied that the close association of the Meteorological Office with aviation since 1919 has been to the mutual advantage of both parties.
The Brabazon Report suggests that the present standing of the Office as a scientific institution is high, that user interests are appreciative of the advances achieved in recent years and that they have great confidence in the services provided.
The Committee welcomed the work which was being done by the research staff on the development of numerical methods of forecasting and the decision to install an electronic computer at the Central Forecasting Office. They also considered that there was a possibility of achieving greater precision in local forecasting by more detailed study of local weather characteristics, coupled with the use of radar scanners.
The Committee considered that there was at present a definite loss of effort owing to the dispersal of the Office between Central London, Harrow, Stanmore and Dunstable, and they welcomed the plan, of which the House is already aware, for developing a combined headquarters in the New Town of Bracknell.
Organisation
The Committee felt that, in view of increased commitments, some reorganisation and re-grading within the office was desirable. As a result of their recommendations, the Office has been reorganised in "three prongs", two prongs, each under a Chief Scientific Officer, being concerned with forecasting and services and with research, and the third, under an Assistant Secretary, with administration and general duties. The status and salary of the Head of the Office have also been improved, and his title altered to Director-General. This reorganisation will, I believe, result in a considerable strengthening of the Office and in making it more self-contained and self-reliant.
Staffing
The Committee devoted a good deal of attention to the prospects offered to members of the Scientific Civil Service entering the Meteorological Office. Certain measures approved as a result of its Report, which include an increase in the number of higher level posts, a reduction in the overall establishment of the scientific officer class and an increase in the number of senior appointments open to the experimental officer class, will improve the prospects available to entrants to both classes.
The Committee expressed the hope that it will be possible to bring home to the universities the challenge which meteorology should present to the imagination of the first-class physicist or mathematician; and I share its hope that it will be possible, with the new organisation now adopted, to improve recruitment, particularly to the scientific officer class, which has been lagging in recent years.
Research
The Committee reviewed the scale of effort devoted to research and saw no reason to suggest any changes in the constitution or terms of reference of the Meteorological Research Committee, which was formed in 1942 and contains a number of eminent outside scientists; the system of determining priorities; or the distribution of the research programme between the Meteorological Office and the universities. They felt, however, that the arrangement under which a separate grant is made to the Royal Society for fundamental research should be reviewed at the end of the current five-year period and that grants for research emanating from the Air Ministry should thereafter normally be channelled through the Meteorological Research Committee. This recommendation is still under discussion.
The Committee considered that a system of research grants for post-graduate study in meteorology would be helpful. The Department of Scientific and Industrial Research is in fact willing to consider awards under the scheme which it administers, and I hope there will be an increasing number of candidates for research grants in meteorology.
Services
The Committee considered that it was desirable to review the manpower requirement for aviation services and to effect such reductions as may be possible by the centralisation of forecasting for different airfields and increased use of facsimile transmission of charts. So far as the R.A.F. is concerned, centralised forecasting is now being carried out experimentally within one Command; and the requirements of two other Commands are the subject of special study. The requirements of civil aviation are being reviewed in conjunction with the Ministry of Transport and Civil Aviation to see whether any simplification is possible, particularly for the shorter flights.
The Brabazon Committee was of the opinion that a requirement existed for local forecasting units for non-aviation users, particularly in agricultural and horticultural districts. It recognised, however, that manpower considerations were likely to limit the establishment of such offices in the immediate future, and considered that a more detailed examination was required before any pattern of development could be approved.
It will be easier to judge the demand for such a scheme when rather more experience has been gained of the working of the automatic telephone weather service. This service has now been extended to a number of provincial cities, and my right hon. Friend the Postmaster-General and I hope that further extensions will be possible soon. In considering such extensions we shall have in mind not only whether the service will pay its way but also the opinion expressed by the Brabazon Committee about its value in agricultural and horticultural districts, and the extensions now planned include some centres in farming areas.
Meteorological Committee
The Brabazon Committee considered that the Meteorological Committee which was formed in 1919 to act as a "board of management" for the Meteorological Office and which includes representatives of the various departments with a user interest in meteorology, the universities, the Royal Society and the Royal Society of Edinburgh, was too large and had ceased to perform any very useful function. In view of the close relations which exist at working level between the Meteorological Office and the other bodies concerned, the Brabazon Committee considered that a representative committee was unnecessary, and they recommended that the existing committee should be replaced by an advisory committee of not more than five members, all of whom would be outside the Government service. I have accepted this recommendation, and the new Committee will consist of an independent chairman and four members, two of whom will be scientists and two normally laymen. The Chairman of the Meteorological Research Committee will serve on the new committee ex officio and the other scientific member will be appointed after consultation with the President of the Royal Society. I am glad to say that Lord Hurcomb has accepted my invitation to become Chairman of the new Committee.
The Committee will be required to keep under review the progress and efficiency of the Meteorological Office and the broad lines of its current and future policy; the general scale of effort and expenditure devoted to the Meteorological Office; and the contacts between the Meteorological Office and those who use its services.
The Brabazon Committee saw no reason to suggest any change in the terms of reference of the Meteorological Advisory Committee for Scotland.
Conclusion
I should like to express my thanks to Lord Brabazon and the members of his Committee for their very valuable Report, which will be of great assistance to us in charting the future development of the Meteorological Service.
Aircraft Accident, Jordan
asked the Secretary of State for Air if he will now make a statement in regard to the accident to the Valetta aircraft in Jordan.
Yes. The Valetta, carrying a crew of three and twenty-four Army passengers, took off from Aqaba at 10.23 local time on 17th April for Mafraq and Habbaniya. It was correctly loaded; visibility was good; and take-off was normal. The crash, which was reported by Jordan Arab Army personnel, took place about 10.30 some 20 miles N.N.W. of Aqaba on a plateau in mountainous country. The aircraft disintegrated and the wreckage caught fire. There were no survivors.A Board of Inquiry found that the accident was due to the failure of the port main spar of the outer wing which had resulted in the disintegration of the wing round the fracture and damage to the rear fuselage and tail. Subsequent investigation has shown that the spar failure was due to over-stressing such as might result from the conditions of extreme air turbulence which are known to have existed in the area at the time. There was no indication of fatigue failure in the fracture.I know that the House will join with me in expressing sympathy for the bereaved.
Foreign Nationals (Assistance)
asked the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs if he is aware that damage is being done to British prestige on the Continent because some 500 members of the wartime French, Belgian and Dutch resistance movements who, at risk of their own lives, helped Royal Air Force crews to escape from prisoner-of-war camps or evade capture, now find themselves in urgent want; and if he will arrange for part of the official British financial subsidy to the European Movement, and other similar supranational organisations, to be set aside to aid them.
Immediately after the war "Awards Bureaux" were set up in the capitals of certain countries and great efforts were made to discover and reward those foreign nationals who had assisted British Service and other personnel, through national resistance organisations or by individual action. Many awards, decorations, certificates, some clothing and in some cases gifts of money were given out through these bureaux, which were wound up some time ago.As regards the last part of the Question, generally speaking assistance to their own nationals is a matter for the foreign Governments concerned. I understand arrangements exist in the countries named for the granting of pensions to persons who participated in resistance activities. But requests are sometimes received by Her Majesty's Government for evidence that nationals of those countries, who may be claiming assistance from their own Governments, in fact rendered help to British airmen or other British personnel. This is always furnished wherever possible.
Ministry Of Health
North Staffordshire Royal Infirmary (Operating Theatres)
asked the Minister of Health the estimated time in which the new twin operating theatres at the North Staffordshire Royal Infirmary will be completed.
I would refer the hon. Member to my right hon. Friend's reply on 6th June to the hon. Member for Stoke-on-Trent, Central (Dr. Stross).
Rampton Institution (Inmate)
asked the Minister of Health if he will make a statement upon the case of an inmate of Rampton State Mental Institution, Nottinghamshire, about which the hon. Member for Hackney, Central has written.
This patient was admitted to St. Lawrence's Hospital, Caterham, on 4th August, 1954, by order of the Home Secretary under Section 9 of the Mental Deficiency Act, 1913, having been certified by two doctors as a mental defective within the meaning of the Act. She became unmanageable in that hospital because of her violent behaviour and was sent to Rampton, the hospital for such cases, on 24th September, 1954. She has been examined from time to time by the doctors who were responsible for her care, and they were satisfied that she was in need of treatment as a mental defective under the Act. The doctor who made the independent examination took the view that she was in need of treatment for her mental condition but was not a mental defective within the meaning of the Act. Representations on behalf of her parents in respect of this patient will shortly be heard by the Board of Control.
Local Government
Town And Country Planning Act (Claims)
asked the Minister of Housing and Local Government how many claims have been received under Part II and Part V of the Town and Country Planning Act, 1954, respectively; at what rate they are now being received; and how many have been settled to date.
By the middle of June, 1957, virtually all the claims likely to be made under Part V—i.e. in respect of planning decisions given before 1st January, 1955—had been received; they totalled 7,125, and 6,892 had been settled. Part V claims, being in respect of old decisions, were given priority over claims under Part II—i.e. those in respect of planning decisions given on or after 1st January, 1955. Of the latter, 9,866 claims had been received by the middle of June and 6,901 had been settled. Part II claims continue to come in at an average of nearly 100 cases per week, but I am glad to say that the arrears are nevertheless being steadily overtaken.
Trade And Commerce
Flame Resistant Fabrics
asked the President of the Board of Trade whether he is aware that the existing Regulations under the Fabrics Misdescription Act, 1913, do not permit the development for use in trade of a reasonable standard for flame resistant fabrics: and what action he proposes to take.
Yes. The Transfer of Functions (Misdescription of Fabrics) Order, 1957 (S.I. 1957/1077), which was laid before Parliament on 25th June, transfers to the Board of Trade the functions under the Fabrics (Misdescription) Act, 1913. I am advised that under that Act it would be unlawful to attribute the quality of non-inflammability to fabrics even though they conformed to a recognised specification for flame resistant fabrics—such as that recommended in the recent report by the British Standards Institution on the flammability of clothing fabrics—until such a specification is prescribed by Regulations made under the Act. As soon as such a specification is available, I therefore propose to make new Regulations under the Act which will enable manufacturers to attribute the quality of flame resistance to fabrics which conform with it.
Scotland
Uncertificated Teachers
asked the Secretary of State for Scotland how many uncertificated teachers are at present employed in Glasgow, Renfrewshire, Lanarkshire and Dunbartonshire.
Ninety-seven in Glasgow, 49 in Renfrewshire, 209 in Lanarkshire and 16 in Dunbartonshire.
Home Department
Mock Auctions
asked the Secretary of State for the Home Department what consideration has been given to introducing legislation to deal with mock auctions in this country in a similar way to that operating in the Isle of Man under Section 69 of the Highway Act, 1927.
Provisions requiring the registration of premises used for auctions are contained in the Brighton Corporation Act, 1954, and the Croydon Corporation, the Leeds Corporation and the Rhyl Urban District Council Acts, 1956, and it is open to the local authority of any other area where mock auctions present a problem to promote a local Bill containing similar provisions. I can hold out no prospect of the Government introducing general legislation.