Written Answers To Questions
Monday 23 March 1987
Defence
Bullying (Army)
Taylor asked the Secretary of State for Defence what representations he has received regarding bullying in the Army; and if he will make a statement.
No direct representations have been received in the Department. However, I should like to state quite emphatically that bullying is not tolerated in the Army. In recent months there have been a number of press reports carrying allegations of bullying. All such cases are thoroughly investigated, and in those few instances where allegations are substantiated, firm disciplinary action is taken against the offenders. In the case of the most recent allegations, concerning incidents at Junior Infantry Battalion Shorncliffe, an Special Investigation Branch investigation is under way, and I have called for reports when inquiries are completed.
Raf Presentation (Boston)
asked the Secretary of State for Defence who invited the Royal Air Force to make a presentation at Boston, Lincolnshire, on Tuesday 17 February.
The presentation was arranged following correspondence between the Royal Air Force presentation team and the mayor of Boston. It is normal practice for the presentation to be offered to a variety of local authorities, education institutions and other organisations some time in advance. A presentation is only given where a favourable response is received.
asked the Secretary of State for Defence what subjects and issues were covered in the Royal Air Force presentation at Boston, Lincolnshire, on Tuesday 17 February.
A standard presentation was given on the role and capability of the Royal Air Force against the background of United Kingdom defence policy and membership of NATO. As is usual, the presentation was followed by questions on a number of subjects.
asked the Secretary of State for Defence who undertook the Royal Air Force presentation at Boston, Lincolnshire, on Tuesday 17 February on behalf of the Royal Air Force.
The Royal Air Force presentation team.
Service Presentations (Policy)
asked the Secretary of State for Defence what guidance is issued to service personnel on the political content and handling of politically controversial subjects within presentations they make on behalf of the armed forces; and if he will make a statement.
The Royal Air Force presentation team is comprehensively briefed on all subjects likely to arise in the course of a season, updated whenever necessary, to ensure that the content of the presentation and answers to subsequent questions are consistent with Government defence policy. I have no reason to doubt the integrity or ability of the team to deal with controversial subjects which may arise in the course of a presentation.
Recruitment And Discharges
asked the Secretary of State for Defence, in the last year for which figures are available, how many soldiers enlisted at the ages of (a) 16 years, (b) 17 years and (c) 18 years; and what proportion had discharged themselves before serving (i) three months, (ii) six months and (iii) 12 months.
In the financial year 1985–86, the numbers of soldiers enlisted at ages 16, 17 and 18 were as follows:
| Number | |
| Age 16 | 7,106 |
| Age 17 | 3,310 |
| Age 18 | 2,475 |
| Per cent. | |
| Age 16 at entry | 21·1 |
| Age 17 at entry | 18·9 |
| Age 18 at entry | 15·0 |
Cruelty And Brutality
asked the Secretary of State for Defence how many complaints have been made about cruelty or brutality in the armed forces in each of the last four years.
The information requested is not held centrally and could only be collected with disproportionate cost and effort.
asked the Secretary of State for Defence in how many cases in each of the last four years disciplinary proceedings have been taken because of unfair, cruel or brutal treatment in the armed forces.
I shall reply shortly.
asked the Secretary of State for Defence what steps he is taking to investigate allegations of cruelty and brutality in the armed forces; and whether the results of any inquiries will be published.
All allegations of cruelty or brutality in the armed forces are fully investigated. Appropriate disciplinary and redress of grievance procedures exist to deal with them.Investigation reports are not normally published but the results are made available on request.
Military Schools Of Music
asked the Secretary of State for Defence if he is yet in a position to make a statement on the future of military schools of music.
My right hon. Friend the Member for Henley (Mr. Heseltine) announced in July 1984 that a defence school of music would be formed at Deal, combining there the present separate music schools of the Royal Marines, the Army and the Royal Air Force. Subsequently, however, a number of uncertainties arose, not least in relation to the cost of creating a DSM, and following the publication of the 11th report from the Committee of Public Accounts Session 1985–86, my noble Friend the then Minister for Defence Support announced on 12 February 1986 in another place that the Ministry of Defence was setting in hand, with the assistance of consultants, a thorough review of all the options for training service musicians, including rentention of the present arrangements. Arthur Young was awarded the contract for this study in March 1986.Arthur Young submitted its report in July 1986. In addition valuations of the relevant sites were obtained from independent firms of surveyours, who consulted officers of the planning authorities concerned. In the light of this information, consideration has since been given to how service musicians should be trained in future.The consultants' report shows that the estimated cost, on a discounted cash flow basis, of keeping the existing three separate schools of music—at Deal for the Royal Marines, at Kneller hall for the Army and at Uxbridge for the RAF—is £56·85 million, over a 15-year period and that, on the same basis, the estimated cost of a DSM at Deal is £51·25 million. A DSM at Deal thus offers a saving of a net present value of £5·6 million over 15 years compared with the status quo. None of the other options considered, such as a DSM at Eastney barracks in Portsmouth or at Redford barracks in Edinburgh or rebuilding a school at Deal for the Royal Marines, offers any worthwhile saving over the cost of the status quo.The above figures do not include provision for the optional additional facilities of a drill shed, bandstand and concert hall, although some of these facilities are at the existing schools of music. The total estimated cost of these facilities at a combined school is £500,000 to £1·5 million, depending on whether a concert hall is provided by converting an existing building or constructing a new one. The consultants considered that a DSM at Deal was the cheapest way of providing these facilities.The consultants also reviewed the social factors such as employment issues which Ministers took into account when they made the original decision in 1984. They reported that these were not of major significance but marginally favoured a DSM at Deal.In all our consideration of this complex issue we have had in mind the effect on service morale of abandoning proven and respected schools of music in favour of creating a joint establishment which might not in the end show itself to be responsive to particular single service needs. This factor is not a new one: of its nature it is intangible and unquantifiable but, however indefinable, we recognise it is of much significance and has to be considered against the opportunity of financial advantage in a single school of music offered by the prospect of savings both from the disposal of land no longer needed and in operating costs.The financial benefits, however, would arise in the longer term and to secure these savings a capital investment of nearly £10 million would be needed. If the scheme went ahead straight away, these costs would be likely to fall in 1990–91 and 1991–92, and while the DSM at Deal would offer the prospect of long-term savings, over the first five years it would involve additional expenditure of nearly £8 million at net present value over the status quo. Moreover, in any project of this kind there is bound to be some uncertainty about the final outcome in respect of both expenditure and savings.The background against which the short term impact of investment in the DSM at Deal has had to be considered is that, as was indicated in the 1987 public expenditure White Paper, the defence budget is declining in real terms. The overall budgetary position now is therefore significantly different from that which existed at the time of the original decision in 1984. There are now many more competing demands within the defence programme for the available resources. To accommodate the early capital expenditure which would be needed at Deal, high priority items already in the defence programme would have to be postponed or forgone.Whether in these circumstances to proceed with the DSM at Deal is a finely balanced judgment, but we have concluded that the savings that the scheme would eventually produce are not so large as to justify setting aside the effect on service morale and the measures that would have to be taken in order to find the necessary short term capital at a time of general budgetary constraint. My right hon. Friend the Secretary of State has decided therefore not to form a defence school of music at Deal and that the training of service musicians should accordingly continue to be carried out where it is undertaken now. This decision will enable us to proceed with the disposal of the sites at Eastney and Redford barracks, Edinburgh and to consider how best to make effective use of the MOD land and buildings at Deal for the continued use of the Royal Marines.
Submarines (Safety)
asked the Secretary of State for Defence on what basis the countermeasure zones in the public safety schemes for nuclear-powered submarines at Vickers shipyard at Barrow-in-Furness and Devonport dockyard were set at their current limits; if there are any plans to change them in the light of the higher fission product inventory at Devonport; and if he will make a statement.
My Department's contingency plans are based on an assessment of the magnitude of releases to the atmosphere associated with various reactor accidents scenarios, and the probability of their occurring. Since it is inconceivable that a reactor accident on one submarine would result in a reactor accident aboard another, the source term release is not cumulative where more than one submarine is present.The counter-measure zone in the public safety scheme for all naval bases and for the Vickers shipbuilding yard at Barrow is based on the assessment that, within a circular zone of 550 metres radius centred on the submarine, counter-measures will be taken automatically as soon as a reactor accident occurs; that all people remaining within the zone have been given instructions on what they should do; and that, provided they follow these instructions, no people within the zone should exceed any of the upper emergency reference levels of dose specified by the National Radiological Protection Board, and the majority should not exceed any of the lower levels of dose specified by the National Radiological Protection Board. There are no plans to change this assessment.
Devonport Dockyard
asked the Secretary of State for Defence if he will state the specific measures that his Department has taken to alleviate the adverse economic and social effects for the Plymouth travel-to-work area resulting from the projected job reductions at Her Majesty's dockyard, Devonport; and if he will make a statement.
As my hon. Friend knows, the naval refit and repair programme is a declining one, and we have estimated that, as a result, the job losses at Devonport dockyard alone over the next seven years would amount to some 5,000, of which some 4,000 would be lost by April 1990. The planned introduction of commercial management to Devonport dockyard from 6 April, under a contract signed with Devonport Management Limited (DML) on 24 February, is expected to result in a significantly lower level of job losses, of some 2,300 by 1990, and DML will seek to minimise compulsory redundancies. The biggest single measure that my Department can make, therefore, to alleviating the job losses which would otherwise result from the decline in naval shipwork is the introduction of commercial management as planned.So far as the current year is concerned, the work load at Devonport is such that selective recruitment is necessary. DML is committed to increasing the Dockyard's efficiency so that in the longer term it can compete, with increasing success, for unallocated Royal Navy work and commercial work, thereby minimising job losses in the Dockyard. DML is also committed to craft and apprentice training and estimates that in 1987 some 125 to 150 apprentices will be required. Wherever practicable, co-operation with local educational and training institutions will be encouraged.
Raf Carlisle
asked the Secretary of State for Defence what was the full cost of the study recently carried out at 14 Maintenance Unit, RAF Carlisle.
For reasons of commercial confidentiality we do not disclose the costs of specific studies undertaken for the Department by outside management consultants.
asked the Secretary of State for Defence why he used an outside firm of accountants rather than his Department's own staff for the recent study at 14 Maintenance Unit, RAF Carlisle.
The study referred to, covered the whole of the RAF supply management organisation and not just 14 maintenance unit, RAF Carlisle. Decisions on whether to use internal MOD resources or external consultants on studies of this kind are taken on their merits, taking into account factors such as staff resources and availability, relevant expertise, time scale and cost.
Carlisle And Harrogate (Defence Facilities)
asked the Secretary of State for Defence if, when considering the study of Peak, Marwick of the efficiency and effectiveness of Ministry of Defence facilities at Carlisle and Harrogate, he will take into account the level of unemployment in Carlisle.
The examination of this study, which is likely to take some time, will take all relevant factors into account.
Hms Fife
asked the Secretary of State for Defence if he will make a statement on the sale of HMS Fife.
HMS Fife is planned to complete her RN operational service at the end of June 1987. Following sales negotiations with prospective customers the ship is expected to be disposed of by sale to another Government, for handover by August 1987.Alternatively, should this method of disposal not succeed, the vessel will be destored and de-equipped for disposal commercially, probably to a shipbreaker for scrapping.
Royal Ordnance Factories
asked the Secretary of State for Defence if he will make a statement about the current level of orders with the Royal Ordnance factory at Patricroft.
The Ministry of Defence places its orders with Royal Ordnance plc and with other defence contractors some of whom sub contract work to Royal Ordnance. The loading of individual factories within Royal Ordnance to implement such contracts and sub contracts is a matter for Royal Ordnance plc.
asked the Secretary of State for Defence if he will make a statement about his policy toward the timing of orders to Royal Ordnance factories in the light of the protection tendering procedure.
The primary objective of our procurement policy is to satisfy the essential requirements of the services in a way that secures the best value for money for the taxpayer. As a matter of good procurement practice, we do however seek to maintain, as far as is practicable, an even ordering pattern to allow efficient production planning by our suppliers.
asked the Secretary of State for Defence if he will make a statement about redundancy programmes planned or considered at the Royal Ordnance factory, Patricroft.
Employment levels at individual sites of Royal Ordnance plc are a matter for the company.
asked the Secretary of State for Defence which companies remain as bidders for the Royal Ordnance Factories plc.
I refer the hon. Member to the answer I gave to my hon. Friend the Member for South Ribble (Mr. Atkins) on 16 March 1987 at column 376.
Research
asked the Secretary of State for Defence whether he will list all research contracts his Department has with universities in the United Kingdom and with Marconi in relation to the strategic defence initiative.
The information is as follows:a.
United Kingdom Universities
None.
b. Marconi
A number of SDI research awards (known as letters of offer and acceptance) have been placed on the Ministry of Defence by the United States Government. In turn the majority of the work in each of the study areas has been contracted to British companies by the Ministry of Defence. In this respect the Marconi Company Ltd. is under contract in the following studies:
asked the Secretary of State for Defence what contracts his Department has with Loughborough university for research; and into what subjects.
The Ministry of Defence has 15 research agreements with Loughborough university covering a range of defence-related topics. It is up to the university itself to decide whether to make further information available.
9 Signal Regiment
asked the Secretary of State for Defence whether the studies recommended by Mr. Calcutt in his report on the investigations carried out by the service police in the 9 Signal Regiment case have been completed; and if he will make a statement.
In my statement in the House on 22 May 1986 at columns 558–59 I said that Mr. Calcutt had recommended seven matters for furter consideration, all of which the Government accepted, and that the House would be informed of the outcome of this further work. These studies have now been completed and our conclusions are as follows.Mr. Calcutt's first matter for consideration concerned the potentital conflict between learning the nature, extent and full circumstances of any breach of security and bringing the offender to justice. Whilst acknowledging that the rules applicable to criminal investigations can, in certain circumstances, inhibit the counter intelligence aspect of espionage inquiries, we have concluded that this is an inevitable consequence of according all suspects the basic rights which the law requires.Mr. Calcutt also recommended that consideration should be given to the need to give, at an early stage in an investigation, clear guidance on the relative priority to be given to the counter intelligence aspect and the criminal aspect of a security case. We accept the need for this and there are instructions to service units to ensure that any such cases or suspected cases are reported immediately to the Ministry of Defence. These instructions have been reviewed and, where appropriate, are being amended.Mr. Calcutt recommended that we should consider whether, in certain circumstances, the 48-hour maximum period allowed under current service procedures for suspects to be detained without charge should be capable of being extended. We have concluded that in present circumstances such an extension would not be justified.Mr. Calcutt's fourth recommendation was to consider whether RAF Queen's Regulation 1034, which deals with forms of custody, should be either annulled or amended. We have concluded that this regulation, which Mr. Calcutt found to be of doubtful utility and obscure in its meaning, should be deleted and replaced by appropriate amendments to other regulations in QR(RAF) so as to remove any ambiguity about the special circumstances which it was originally intended to cover.Mr. Calcutt recommended that consideration be given to how far the rigid application of the need to know principle may have the effect of depriving a suspect of the protection which the law provides for him. We have considered this and have concluded that, whenever practicable in future security cases, persons under investigation should not be placed under the command of officers who do not hold the appropriate security clearance and that suitably cleared legal advisers and investigators should be available. Instructions to service units are being amended as necessary.Mr. Calcutt's sixth recommendation was to consider whether the routine documentation in security investigations might itself give rise to security considerations. We have reviewed our existing rules and have concluded that no amendments are needed; existing procedures provide for such documentation to be given a security classification where necessary.Mr. Calcutt's last recommendation was to consider whether investigations such as those leading up to the Cyprus case trial should be conducted from the United Kingdom rather than overseas. We have concluded that, for practical reasons, such investigations should be carried out in situ, but that they should be directed and coordinated from the Ministry of Defence. A contact point in the Ministry will be nominated for this purpose in any future case.
Mr Avtar Singh-Gida
asked the Secretary of State for Defence whether he will initiate an inquiry into the possible security implications of the disappearance of Avtar Singh-Gida, a researcher into strategic defence initiative-related subjects at Loughborough university; and if he will make a statement.
Mr. Avtar Singh-Gida's disappearance is a matter for the police. He was engaged on an unclassified research agreement for the MOD at Loughborough university on matters unrelated to the strategic defence initiative studies.
Home Department
Pesticides
asked the Secretary of State for the Home Department whether he will list the species of animals used in the United Kingdom for testing the safety of pesticides.
The latest available information, which relates to 1985, is published in table 2 of "Statistics of experiments on living animals, Great Britain 1985" (Cmnd. 9839), a copy of which is in the library. Corresponding figures for Northern Ireland are not available.
Ec Nationals (Residence)
asked the Secretary of State for the Home Department (1) what is his policy on European Economic Community proposals on a right of residence for European Economic Community nationals in the territory of another member state; if this right would involve a right to vote; and if he will make a statement;(2) what proposals are under discussion in the European Economic Community on a right of residence for European Economic Community nationals in the territory of another member state.
A draft directive on a right of residence was first put forward by the Commission in 1979. The current text, which is under discussion in the Council of Ministers, is designed to provide a right of residence throughout the European Community to those nationals of member states who do not already have such a right under the free movement provisions of the treaty of Rome. The Government favour the principle of a right of residence providing that it is conditional upon a person having the resources to support himself, without recourse to public funds, in the host state.
Crime Prevention
asked the Secretary of State for the Home Department what new initiatives the Home Office crime prevention unit is providing in the field of crime prevention.
The crime prevention unit will continue to stimulate and encourage a very wide range of activity aimed at involving the whole community in crime prevention. These at present include: strengthening the crime prevention element in central government policies, through the ministerial group on crime prevention; encouraging the private sector to engage more fully in crime prevention work; devising a new publicity campaign as part of an increased publicity budget of £4·8 million; working with the local authority associations and the police to establish a travelling conference to promote local crime prevention activity; completing research projects on a range of topics including aspects of autocrime, commercial robbery and crime in the inner city; and considering the problems of young people and crime by, among other things, the setting up of three new working groups to report to standing conference on crime prevention in November 1987.
Wapping Dispute
asked the Secretary of State for the Home Department if he has received representations from Edinburgh district trades council about the Wapping dispute; and if he will make a statement.
None of which I am aware.
Cruelty To Animals
asked the Secretary of State for the Home Department whether he will introduce legislation to provide Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals' inspectors with the authority to enter a house where he or she has reason to believe that a dog or other animal is being ill-treated.
The Government applaud the fine work done by the RSPCA in the field of animal welfare. However, any increase in powers of entry is a considerable infringement of personal liberty and we do not believe it would be right to give the society's inspectors a power of entry in cases of possible cruelty to animals.
Metropolitan Police District (Properties)
asked the Secretary of State for the Home Department, further to his reply on Monday 16 March to the question from the hon. Member for Fulham, Official Report, column 356, if he will call for a report from the Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis about what. steps he proposes to take to ensure that the 573 residential properties owned by the Metropolitan police which are currently empty in the Metropolitan police district are brought back into use.
The Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis keeps the level of vacant property under constant review. He informs me that, of the 573 residential quarters currently vacant, 117 are in the process of being sold; 64 have been allocated to tenants who will occupy them shortly; and 90 are in the process of being allocated to tenants. The balance is being assessed for sale or for essential remedial works before allocation.
Aliens
asked the Secretary of State for the Home Department if he will list the fees charged for registration and naturalisation of aliens; what is the proportion by which that fee has been abated; and if he will publish the work sheets which form the basis of the calculation of costs to the police.
The current fees are in the schedule to the British Nationality (Fees) (Amendment) Regulations 1986. Fees are set to recover the full cost of processing applications, except for those which are not successful where applicants pay on average less than 10 per cent. of the full cost. Police costs are derived from information provided by police forces about the actual cost of dealing with the inquiries which are referred to them. We do not propose to publish all the detailed workings, but the cost of police work, together with the work of the immigration service, has been published in the nationality fees memorandum and trading account for 1985–86, a copy of which is in the Library.
Women's Rights
asked the Secretary of State for the Home Department what policies are being implemented by Her Majesty's Government to promote the rights of women.
Our policies for promoting equality of opportunity between men and women will be set out in full in a document to be published shortly as the Government's response to the "Forward Looking Strategies" drawn up at the United Nations conference in Nairobi. Some information on current and past initiatives in the Home Office which have benefited women was given in my reply to a question from the hon. Member for Barking (Miss Richardson), on 18 December 1986 at columns 652–53; similar information for other Departments was given by other Ministers in reply to similar questions from the same hon. Member on 15 December at columns 399–400; 16 December, at columns 494–96, 433–34, 445–58, 457–58, 494–96; 17 December, at columns 546–47; 18 December, at column 677, and 19 December, at columns 813–14.
Correspondence
asked the Secretary of State for the Home Department when the hon. Member for Rutland and Melton may expect a reply to his letter of 22 December 1986 to the Minister of State, the hon. Member for Ribble Valley (Mr. Waddington) on behalf of a constituent from Hose, near Melton Mowbray, relating to two Iranian refugees in Pakistan; and why a letter which was marked as urgent has not received an earlier reply.
I am writing today to the hon. Member.
Deaths (Bristol)
asked the Secretary of State for the Home Department if he will call for reports from the appropriate chief constables as to progress with their inquiries into the deaths near Bristol of Mr. Vimal Dajibhai and Mr. Ashad Sharif and the disappearance in Derbyshire of Mr. Avtar Singh-Gida and into any link between the three incidents; and if he will make a statement.
The Avon and Somerset police have completed their inquiries into the deaths of Mr. Dajibhai and Mr. Sharif. The coroner recorded an open verdict in the case of Mr. Dajibhai and a verdict of suicide in the case of Mr. Sharif. I understand from the chief constable of Derbyshire that the police investigation into Mr. SinghGida's disappearance is continuing. Other than that Mr. Dajibhai and Mr. Sharif were employed in different parts of the Marconi company and that Mr. Dajibhai and Mr. Singh-Gida probably knew each other when at Loughborough university together in 1979, there is at present no evidence of to link the three cases.
Church Commissioners
St Mary's, Stamford Brook
asked the hon. Member for Wokingham, as representing the Church Commissioners, what information he has as to the price for which St. Mary's, Stamford Brook, Hammersmith, was sold.
I have been asked to reply. This redundant church was leased by the London diocesan fund to a property company in 1985 for conversion to residential use. The consideration is confidential to the parties to the transaction. The commissioners were not a party to the lease, nor was their consent required.
Transport
A Roads (Telephones)
asked the Secretary of State for Transport what consideration has been given to installing emergency roadside phones on A class roads.
I have completed a preliminary review. My conclusion is that grounds for providing emergency telephones on trunk roads are not strong enough to justify their general provision, although the case is stronger for particular locations. We intend to provide such telephones in a limited range of circumstances as and when funds allow. We shall identify suitable sites for installations. A trial of a cellular radio system is also to be undertaken this year.
asked the Secretary of State for Transport if he intends to install emergency telephones on the A180.
Because of intense local concern for emergency telephones on the A 180 trunk road between Barnetby and Grimsby, I have decided to install emergency telephones on this section immediately.
Lorries (Overloading)
asked the Secretary of State for Transport if he will make a statement on the enforcement of traffic requirements for the maintenance of driving hours and overloading of lorries in the north-west region and elsewhere during the past six months; and if he will publish in the Official Report the total numbers of inspections undertaken and the results.
During the six months to September 1986, vehicle examiners carried out 6,555 maintenance inspections in the north-west, resulting in 787 prohibitions. National figures are not yet available for this period, but during the year ending 31 March 1986, 101,075 maintenance inspections were carried out, of which 13,797 resulted in prohibitions.Traffic examiners carried out 4,158 weight checks on lorries in the north-western traffic area during the six months to September 1986 and found 652 to be overloaded; 70,000 tachograph charts were checked and 10,109 breaches of the regulations found. Over the whole country during this period 33,822 lorries were weighed and 6,426 found to be overloaded; 290,000 tachograph charts were checked.
Nato (Planning Board Of European Inland Transport)
asked the Secretary of State for Transport if he will make the minutes of the meetings of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation's planning board for European inland transport available in the Library.
No. The minutes of the board are classified confidential.
Nato (Civil Aviation Planning Committee)
asked the Secretary of State for Transport if he will make the minutes of the meetings of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation's civil aviation planning committee available in the Library.
No. The minutes of the committee are classified NATO confidential.
Undersea Cable (Douglas-Colwyn Bay)
asked the Secretary of State for Transport, pursuant to his answer of 6 March, Official Report, column 731, regarding the dimensions of the BT undersea cable running between Douglas and Colwyn Bay, what information he has as to the texture and appearance of the external surface of the cable.
I understand that the cable is covered in standard spirally wound jute and then covered in tar; it is dark in colour and its texture remains slightly sticky due to being constantly surrounded by water.
Driving Test
asked the Secretary of State for Transport if he will publish the numbers of people in the most recent period for which figures are available taking driving tests who have failed such tests on (a) one, (b) two, (c) three, (d) four and (e) more than four previous occasions; and how many tests on average an individual takes.
This information is not available.Results of a sample survey of driving tests conducted in 1985 showed that 47 per cent. of tests were taken by candidates who had previously failed.
Road Accidents (New Drivers)
asked the Secretary of State for Transport if he will take steps to procure information on the number of accidents involving drivers who have passed their test within the last 12 months.
The information requested is not recorded on the accident report form.
Driving Tests (Accidents)
asked the Secretary of State for Transport how many accidents are recorded as having occurred during driving tests; and if he will make a statement.
During the last year for which figures are available, 381 accidents during driving tests were recorded. During the same period (October 1983 to September 1984) 1,797,177 tests were conducted. The percentage on which accidents occurred was roughly 0·02 per cent., about 1 in 4,700 tests. Recorded accidents range from minor incidents such as bumper touches to more serious accidents involving personal injury.
Salcombe Estuary
asked the Secretary of State for Transport when he issued a licence for the spoil ground in the Salcombe estuary and for what period.
A consent under section 34(1)(b) of the Coast Protection Act 1949 was first issued to the local district council to deposit material in the deep channel at Salcombe in 1969. This consent, which is concerned with safety of navigation, has been renewed at regular intervals, the last occasion being in February 1987 for a further period of three years.My right hon. Friend the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, has also separately licensed these deposits under the Food and Environment Protection Act 1985, the last renewal being on 6 March 1987 for one year.
Residential Areas (Traffic Management)
asked the Secretary of State for Transport whether he plans to issue up-to-date guidance on ways in which traffic and parking in residential areas can be better controlled; and if he will make a statement.
We shall be sending all county, borough and district councils in England the first in a new series of traffic leaflets. This will also be sent to a wide range of professional and representative bodies. It will illustrate self-enforcing measures that can help deter through traffic from using residential streets, so as to give greater emphasis to the needs of residents. Further traffic leaflets are planned on this topic. Their main purpose will be to make available, on as wide a basis as possible, information on traffic and parking techniques. The first leaflet includes road humps. footway widening, rumble strips, environmental road closures, width restrictions, wide area crossings and a range of entry treatments. Copies of the leaflet have been placed in the Library of the House.
Foreign And Commonwealth Affairs
Csce (Vienna)
asked the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs what progress is being made at the conference on security and co-operation in Europe in Vienna; when it is likely to be concluded what input the British delegation is making; and if he will make a statement.
I refer my hon. Friend to the answers that my hon. Friend the Minister of State, Foreign and Commonwealth Office, the hon. Member for Mid-Sussex (Mr. Renton) gave to my hon. Friends the Members for Dudley, West (Dr. Blackburn) and for Cardiff, Central (Mr. Grist) on 18 March at columns 916 and 550. Participants have agreed to aim to complete negotiations by 31 July this year. Our delegation will continue to make a forceful and constructive contribution.
Falkland Islands
asked the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs if he will give a breakdown by nationality of the 74 fishing vessels boarded by fisheries protection personnel in the Falkland Islands conservation zone since 1 February.
A breakdown by nationality of the 74 vessels boarded by Falkland Islands Government fisheries protection personnel in the Falkland Islands interim conservation and management zone between 1 February and 12 March 1987 is as follows:
| Number | |
| Spain | 45 |
| Poland | 23 |
| Japan | 3 |
| Italy | 2 |
| Greece | 1 |
Forged Passports
asked the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, pursuant to the answer of 18 March regarding British passports forged by agents of the Israeli Government, if he will state (a) on how many occasions this has occurred, (b) what action was taken when this was discovered, (c) what has happened to the forged passports and (d) what assurances he has that no acts of terrorism have been committed by holders of these passports.
We know of previous occasions in 1973 and 1979 when Israelis were found to be using forged British passports. The Israeli Government did not then provide satisfactory assurances that such abuse would not recur. On this occasion, the assurances which we have received do not relate to the previous use of the forged passports, which have been retained by the Foreign and Commonwealth Office.
Employment
Labour Statistics
asked the Paymaster General if he will estimate the number of jobs lost in the Darlaston area of Walsall since 1979; what is his estimate of the current level of unemployment there; and how this figure compares with 1979.
Information about job losses is not available. My Department's small area statistics monitor only net changes in employment between census of employment dates, and the most recent figures are for September 1981. No census was taken in 1979 and the September 1984 census estimates for local areas are not yet available.Following is the available information about unemployment which is also in the Library. On 12 February 1987, the number of unemployed claimants in the electoral wards of Bentley and Darlaston North and Darlaston South was 2,569. Statistics of unemployment for electoral wards are derived from the ward based system and are available only from June 1983.
asked the Paymaster General what information he has as to the total level of unemployment in the European Economic Community at the most recent date for which figures are available, and as to the comparable figures 10 years previously.
In January 1987, there were 17·052 million people registered as unemployed in the European Community. This compares with an estimate of 6·642 million for the same countries in January 1977.
Machine Safety
asked the Paymaster General if he has received recent representations from the British Machine Guarding Authority about safety standards; and if he will make a statement.
Yes. A letter will be sent to the British Machine Guarding Authority to make the Government's position clear. I will place a copy in the Library.
Devonport Dockyard
asked the Paymaster General if he will state the specific measures that his Department has taken to alleviate the adverse economic and general effects for the Plymouth travel-to-work area resulting from the projected job reductions at Her Majesty's dockyard, Devonport; and if he will make a statement.
The local jobcentre manager is in contact with management at the dockyard and anyone facing redundancy will be eligible for the full range of help and assistance available to them through our Action for Jobs programme. This includes job placing services, information about jobs available locally and in other districts; advice on a wide range of employment matters and Manpower Services Commission schemes; and advice on and assistance with training and retraining. Until the new management, Brown and Root, has taken control on 6 April 1987, any estimates of likely redundancies or their timing must be purely speculative.
Bridge Cpa Ltd, Dartington
asked the Paymaster General (1) if he will advise the Manpower Services Commission to consider granting the Bridge Agency at Dartington a new contract covering the South Hams area;(2) if, in the light of representations he has now received, he will arrange for the Manpower Services Commission to grant a new contract to the Bridge Agency in Dartington;(3) if he will make a statement on the employment implications of the decision of the Manpower Services Commission not to renew the contract of the Bridge Agency at Dartington; and if he will make a statement.
The community programme agency operated in south Deven by Bridge CAP Ltd, which covers the South Hams and Dartington areas, is based at Totnes. The decision has been made by the Manpower Services Commission not to renew the present contract and after 3 April 1987, the management of the agency will be undertaken by Community Rural Aid Ltd, a well established national community programme agent with experience of operating community programme projects in rural areas.It is anticipated that Community Rural Aid will be able to offer the existing employees the remainder of their period of employment under the programme. The management team based at Totnes will continue to function but under fresh direction from Community Rural Aid, who influence will be mainly directed to the agency's system of operational and financial control.
Industrial Tribunals Board (Ethnic Minorities)
asked the Paymaster General how many people from ethnic minorities have been recruited on to the Nottingham panel of the Industrial Tribunals Board over the last nine years for which figures are available.
One.
Yts
asked the Paymaster General if he has any plans to provide a meal allowance for trainees on the YTS.
The weekly training allowance payable to YTS trainees is intended to cover normal living expenses. including meals.
The first-year allowance will be increased to £28·50 per week from April 1987. I have no plans to introduce an additional meal allowance for YTS trainees.
asked the Paymaster General what is the current real value, based on (a) retail prices index and (b) average earnings, of the YTS allowance compared with its value in 1978.
The youth opportunities programme allowance in 1978 was £19·50, equivalent to about £39 when adjusted to take account of increases since 1978 in the retail price index, and about £47 if the adjustment is based on increases in average earnings. The YTS allowance for first-year trainees will increase from its present £27·30 to £28·50 on 6 April 1987; second year trainees will continue to receive a training allowance of £35 per week. Allowance levels must reflect the fact that trainees are still learning, and YTS provides substantially upgraded training compared with the youth opportunities programme.
Gay Men And Lesbians
asked the Paymaster General what is the policy of Her Majesty's Government in respect of discrimination against gay men and lesbians.
The Government have made it clear that we deplore prejudice of any kind in employment and indeed regard it as poor business practice.
Restart
asked the Paymaster General if, for the most recently available date, and in the table form used in the Official Report, column 157 on 29 October, he will show for each Manpower Services Commission region the number of people interviewed under the restart programme; and how many have been placed into a destination.
asked the Paymaster General if he will list for the most recently available date, and in the table form used in the Official Report, column 157 on 29 October (a) how many people have been called for interview under the restart programme and (b) how many have been counselled and how many have been placed into a destination for (i) each Manpower Services Commission region, (ii) the Greater London area, (iii) the area manpower board areas covering the former Merseyside county council, the former West Midlands county council and (iv) Lancashire.
Figures given in the form used by my hon. Friend in his reply on 29 October 1986 could not be used as an answer to this question. They were only a measure of the extent to which we know of direct placements made as the immediate result of an interview. This is not a measure of the total number of people who find work or training directly or indirectly as a result of the restart programme.Seventy-four per cent. of participants agree to pursue the offer made to them at their interview, and we do not know the results of all of them. The immediate placings do not include the many people who subsequently find jobs, or other openings, such as training, as a result of counselling, restart courses or the outcome of other elements of the restart menu. I do not therefore believe that figures in the form asked for by the hon. Member could accurately measure the "destination" of those interviewed.
Wales
Wales Advisory Board
1.
asked the Secretary of State for Wales when he expects to chair a meeting of the Wales Advisory Board for local authority higher education.
The committee of the Wales Advisory Board for Local Authority Higher Education, of which I am chairman, next meets on 3 April.
Gresford-Pulford Bypass
16.
asked the Secretary of State for Wales what estimates he makes of the percentage of local labour employed in the construction of the Gresford to Pulford bypass.
Subject to temporary fluctuations as the work progresses, I estimate that about 70 per cent. of the hourly paid work force directly engaged by the main contractor will be recruited locally.
Doctors And Nurses
17.
asked the Secretary of State for Wales what is the latest available information regarding the numbers of doctors and nurses employed in hospitals in Wales; and how these compare with the numbers so employed in 1979.
At 30 September 1986, the number of medical staff employed in the hospital service in Wales, measured in whole-time equivalents, was 2,062, compared with 1,786 in September 1979—an increase of 15·4 per cent. The latest figures for nursing staff employed in the hospital service in Wales relate to September 1985; after adjustment for the reduction in working hours in 1980, the whole-time equivalent figure for 1985 is 20,812, compared with 18,035 in September 1979, again an increase of 15·4 per cent.
Sites Of Special Scientific Interest
asked the Secretary of State for Wales if he will list the sites of special scientific interest in Wales that have been, or are due to be, damaged or destroyed through developments which have been given planning permission since 1977, the type of development, the county and district in which they are situated, and the date when permission was given.
My hon. Friend the Minister for the Environment, Countryside and Local Government will be writing to the hon. Member with the information for England, Scotland and Wales.
Waiting Lists
asked the Secretary of State for Wales if he will set out region by region, district health authority inpatient waiting lists, the total population living in each district, the percentage which the former represents of the latter and their national ranking by that percentage.
The latest available information relates to 30 September 1986, and is given in the following table:
| Cases on Hospital in-patient waiting lists | Estimated population mid-1985 (thousands) | Number of cases waiting per 1,000 population | |
| Powys | 59 | 111·4 | 0·5 |
| Gwynedd | 1,982 | 233·6 | 8·5 |
| East Dyfed | 2,354 | 226·6 | 10·4 |
| Clwyd | 4,689 | 397·9 | 11·8 |
| West Glamorgan | 5,011 | 364·1 | 13·8 |
| Mid Glamorgan | 8,961 | 533·9 | 16·8 |
| Gwent | 8,321 | 440·2 | 18·9 |
| South Glamorgan | 7,620 | 394·8 | 19·3 |
| Pembrokeshire | 2,430 | 109·3 | 22·2 |
asked the Secretary of State for Wales if he will set out region by region, the hospital urgent in-patient waiting list in each district, together with the number of urgent cases waiting more than a month, the percentage the latter represents of the former and their national ranking by that percentage.
The latest available information relates to 30 September 1986, and is given in the following table:
| Urgent cases on Hospital In-patient Waiting Lists | |||
| Total number | Number waiting for more than one month | Number waiting for more than one month as a percentage of total | |
| East Dyfed | 7 | — | — |
| Powys | — | — | — |
| West Glamorgan | 661 | 139 | 21·0 |
| Gwynedd | 61 | 25 | 41·0 |
| Mid Glamorgan | 332 | 206 | 62·0 |
| Gwent | 949 | 603 | 63·5 |
| Clwyd | 187 | 142 | 75·9 |
| Pembrokeshire | 324 | 250 | 77·2 |
| South Glamorgan | 1,087 | 852 | 78·4 |
asked the Secretary of State for Wales if he will set out region by region, the hospital non-urgent inpatient waiting list in each health district together with the number of non-urgent cases waiting more than a year, the percentage the latter represents of the former and their national ranking by that percentage.
The latest available information by district health authority relates to 30 September 1986, and is given in the following table:
| Non-urgent cases on hospital in-patient waiting lists | |||
| Total number | Number waiting for more than one year | Number waiting for more than one year as a percentage of total | |
| Powys | 59 | 1 | 1·7 |
| Gwynedd | 1,921 | 67 | 3·5 |
| East Dyfed | 2,347 | 270 | 11·5 |
| West Glamorgan | 4,350 | 506 | 11·6 |
| Clwyd | 4,502 | 623 | 13·8 |
| Gwent | 7,372 | 1,882 | 25·5 |
| South Glamorgan | 6,533 | 1,788 | 27·4 |
| Mid Glamorgan | 8,629 | 3,058 | 35·4 |
| Pembrokeshire | 2,106 | 1,361 | 64·6 |
Farming Unions (Representations)
asked the Secretary of State for Wales what recent representations he has received from farming unions in Wales; and if he will make a statement.
I have received representations from both the farming unions in Wales on a wide range of agricultural issues.
Cambrian Housing Association
asked the Secretary of State for Wales if he will ask the Housing Corporation to investigate the reasons for the Cambrian Housing Association in Swansea failing after 12 months of negotiations to complete sales of houses to its tenants and failing to reply to correspondence from would-be purchasers and their solicitors.
I have asked the Housing Corporation office for Wales to investigate this matter and will write to the hon. Gentleman as soon as possible.
Overseas Development
Aid Programme
asked the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, pursuant to his answer to the hon. Member for Clydesdale (Dame J. Hart) on 11 March, Official Report, column 186, what proportion of the total aid programme in each year since 1979 has been represented by conversion of loans into grants under the policy of retrospective terms adjustment.
The cost of measures set out in the Official Report on 11 March 1987, at column 186, in respect of the policy of retrospective terms adjustment, as a proportion of gross public expenditure on aid, has been as follows:
| Per cent. | |
| 1979 | 3·4 |
| 1980 | 5·8 |
| 1981 | 5·9 |
| 1982 | 5·0 |
| 1983 | 7·0 |
| 1984 | 6·3 |
| 1985 | 5·9 |
Students (South Africa)
asked the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs whether he is satisfied that no discrimination on the grounds of race, colour or creed is involved in the selection of South African students to attend British institutions of higher education at public expense.
The training in question is specifically for the benefit of non-white South Africans disadvantaged by the apartheid system. A limited number of opportunities for study are provided to specially selected white South Africans through other channels.
asked the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs whether he will set out the criteria employed by the Educational Opportunities Council of the United States of America in choosing South African students to attend British institutions of higher education at public expense.
The Education Opportunities Council is a non-governmental organisation in South Africa and is not funded by the United States Government. Students are selected on an individual basis and in the light of their educational qualifications.
asked the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs what is the financial basis of the arrangement made between his Department and the Education Opportunities Council of the United States of America.
We pay a fee to the Educational Opportunities Council for its administrative services in selecting candidates for the new programme of undergraduate training announced by my noble Friend the Minister of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Baroness Young, in another place on 21 October 1986.
asked the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs whether he will state the reasons why his Department was unable to make its own arrangements for the selection of South African students to attend British institutions of higher education at public expense.
My Department is involved in the selection process through the agency of the British Council representative in Johannesburg; the large number of applications for scholarships has necessitated the involvement also of the Educational Opportunities Council, a non-governmental organisation in South Africa.
asked the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs what proportion of the students currently selected to attend British institutions of higher education from South Africa at public expense have been sponsored or in any way recommended by the African National Congress.
None.
Trade And Industry
Civil Defence
asked the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry if the report on the study and assessment of industry capabilities to meet the requirements of civil defence is available for public inspection; and if he will make a statement.
Progress has been made with the study, but I am not able to say when it will be complete. The study will remain confidential.
Nato (Committees)
asked the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry if he will make the minutes of the meetings of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation's Industrial Planning Committee available in the Library.
No. It would be inappropriate to do so because the minutes of meetings contain security classified information.
Chrome Ore
asked the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry what information he has as to the quantity, source, and port of entry of the imports of chrome ore to Great Britain in each year since 1980.
Port of entry data for all years and data on source from 1984 are not available. Imports to the United Kingdom of chrome ore, classified to STIC sub-group 287·91, for 1984 and 1985 were 129·8 and 137·7 thousands of metric tonnes respectively. Latest information for 1986 shows imports for January-November of 119·6 thousands of metric tonnes. Information for the years 1980–83 is as follows:
| United Kingdom imports of chromium ore and concentrates 1980–83 | ||||
| thousands m/tonnes | ||||
| Country | 1980 | 1981 | 1982 | 1983 |
| South Africa | 70·6 | 54·8 | 53·7 | 91·9 |
| Mozambique | 9·7 | 6·9 | 0·0 | 0·0 |
| Philippines | 92 | 4·0 | 1·5 | 2·6 |
| Cyprus | 2·0 | 3·8 | 5·4 | 1·1 |
| Finland | 0·7 | 5·6 | 0·6 | 0·0 |
| Greece | 0·0 | 1·0 | 2·5 | 2·1 |
| Other | 0·4 | 0·4 | 0·8 | 2·7 |
| Total | 92·6 | 76·5 | 64·5 | 100·4 |
Source: Overseas Trade Statistics. Country of origin (COO): SITC R2 Sub-group 287·9.
Ec (Regional Development Fund)
asked the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry when he hopes to announce a decision regarding the two applications made by the Cornwall county council in January 1986 for financial assistance under article 15 of the European regional development fund main regulation; and if he will make a statement.
I cannot give a firm date, but I hope that this problem will be resolved soon.
Devonport Dockyard
asked the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry if he will state the specific measures that his Department has taken to alleviate the adverse economic and social effects for the Plymouth travel-to-work area resulting from the projected job reductions at Her Majesty's dockyard, Devonport; and if he will make a statement.
I will reply to my hon. Friend as soon as possible.
Lonrho Plc
asked the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry what representations he has received in relation to the purchase by Lonrho plc of 10 whisky brands from Guinness plc.
Representations have been received and the inspectors appointed to investigate the affair and membership of Guinness plc are aware of them. It would not be in the public interest for me to give further details.
asked the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry what representations he has received in relation to a possible breach of section 231 of the Companies Act 1985 by Lonrho plc in relation to its Liechtenstein subsidiaries Blorg and Contango.
Representations have been received and are under consideration. It would not be in the public interest for me to give further details.
Insider Dealing
asked the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry what discussions he has had with the authorities on the Channel Islands and the Isle of Man about developing an agreed policy to limit insider dealing.
There have been some informal discussions at official level. I would hope, in due course, to arrive at arrangements along the lines envisaged by the hon. Member.
Council Of Industry Ministers
asked the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry what was the outcome of the Council of Industry Ministers meeting on 19 March.
Ministers discussed proposals from the European steel producers association Eurofer for reducing excess European steel capacity. The Council agreed that substantial excess capacity still exists, and the Commission will now have discussions with Eurofer and the producers designed to achieve further closures, and aimed primarily at lossmaking firms. I made it clear that the United Kingdom has already made a major contribution to the restructuring of the European steel industry, and that the United Kingdom steel industry was now in profit. As no BSC volume was contained in the Eurofer proposals, nothing under discussion at the Council will affect the three-year BSC strategy agreed in August 1985, or will prejudice decisions on BSC strategy after 1988.Ministers also discussed the steel production quota system. The Commission will make new proposals concerning 1988 in time for discussion at the next meeting of the Industry Council.The Council also agreed a two-year extension to the SPRINT programme whose main aim is to help improve the competitivness, particularly of small and medium-sized firms, by setting up means to assist the exchange of technology and innovation practice.
Prime Minister
Ec Butter Surplus (Expenditure)
asked the Prime Minister if she will raise at the next meeting of the European Council the report of the Court of Auditors regarding the legality of the decision of the Agriculture Council on the financing of the disposal of butter surpluses; and if she will make a statement.
I have no plans to do so.
Court Of Auditors
asked the Prime Minister if she will propose at the next meeting of the European Council that representatives of the Court of Auditors should be present at all future meetings of the Council; and if she will make a statement.
No. The president of the court already addresses the ECOFIN Council each year, and court representatives attend meetings of appropriate Council committees.
Information Services
asked the Prime Minister if she will list the expenditure in 1987 on a weekly basis of all Government information services itemised by Department and function; and what were the comparable figures for each of the two previous years.
The information is not recorded centrally. I refer the right hon. Member to my answer on 19 November 1986 at column 190 to the hon. Member for Holborn and St. Pancras (Mr. Dobson) for the costs of the press office at 10 Downing street.
Public Bodies (Women)
asked the Prime Minister how many women she has appointed to public bodies since 1979; and what percentage this represents of total appointments.
I have appointed or re-appointed 45 women to public bodies since 1979. This represents 14·0 per cent. of such appointments since that date for which I have been responsible.
Energy
Electricity Supply
asked the Secretary of State for Energy what information he has available as to the number of occupied dwellings not connected to the public electricity supply according to local authority areas or other geographical areas.
I regret that no such information is available.
Nuclear Safety
asked the Secretary of State for Energy (1) whether ambulance staff have participated in the exercise at the local emergency plan at Chapelcross, Sellafield, Wylfa, Trawsfyndd, Oldbury, Berkeley, Hinkley Point, Winfrith, Dungeness, Bradwell and Sizewell; and, in each case where units were involved, if he will list which ones participated;(2) if he will list for each of the following power stations what studies have been made of the problems of evacuating all low mobility groups in the event of a worst case atomic accident at Chapelcross, Sellafield, Wylfa, Trawsfyndd, Oldbury, Berkely, Hinkley Point, Winfrith, Dungeness, Bradwell, Sizewell and Hartlepool; and if he will also list for each study the geographical area covered;(3) what specialist equipment, including personal dosimeters, radiac survey meters and decontamination meters are available for ambulance staff at Chapelcross, Sellafield, Wylfa, Trawsfyndd, Oldbury, Berkely, Hinkley Point, Winfrith, Dungeness, Bradford and Sizewell, respectively; and in each case what training staff have received;
(4) what training has been given to ambulance staff to deal with a major accident at each of the following nuclear installations: Chapelcross, Sellafield, Wylfa, Trawsfyndd, Oldbury, Berkely, Hinkley Point, Winfrith, Dungeness, Bradwell, Sizewell and Hartlepool.
[pursuant to his reply, 12 February 1987, c. 318–19]: The Central Electricity Generating Board has now amended advice which it earlier gave me. CEGB medical centres, although often colloquially known as ambulance centres, in fact rely on National Health Service ambulances. My reply of 12 February is otherwise unaffected.
asked the Secretary of State for Energy when public safety siting criteria for nuclear installations were last changed or updated; what information on such safety criteria has been published by his Department; and if he will make a statement.
[pursuant to his reply, 12 February 1987,c. 317–18]: The last decision to change public safety siting criteria was that announced by the then Minister of Power on 6 February 1968, at column 235 of the Official Report. Information on siting criteria has been published by the Health and Safety Executive in its booklet "The Work of HM Nuclear Installations Inspectorate", a copy of which is in the Library of the House, and in the documents referred to therein.
asked the Secretary of State for Energy what statistical demographic criteria, for each type of nuclear reactor, are used in Her Majesty's Nuclear Installations Inspectorate's assessment of the safety of sites for nuclear power stations; if he will publish a list showing for each existing nuclear power station (a) the relevant limiting criteria compared with (b) the actual population figures in each case; and if he will make a statement.
[pursuant to his reply, 12 February 1987,c. 317–18]: The main criteria used by Her Majesty's nuclear installations inspectorate cover the population at particular distances from a site, viz:
| Distance | Guideline population | |
| km | MAGNOX | AGR |
| 0 to 2 | 1,400 | 9,000 |
| 2 to 3 | 4,600 | 35,000 |
| 3 to 5 | 16,000 | 113,000 |
| 5 to 8 | 45,000 | 325,000 |
| Distance (km) | ||||
| 0 to 2 | 2 to 3 | 3 to 5 | 5 to 8 | |
| Berkeley | 320 | 2,000 | 7,900 | 8,300 |
| Bradwell | 460 | 190 | 7,200 | 3,900 |
| Calder Hall | 140 | 2,100 | 2,300 | 8,100 |
| Chapelcross | 250 | 410 | 11,000 | 3,100 |
| Dungeness | 60 | 140 | 590 | 6,000 |
| Hinkley Point | 120 | 300 | 1,200 | 2,800 |
| Flunterston | 50 | 100 | 6,400 | 1,400 |
| Oldbury | 250 | 260 | 1,800 | 30,000 |
| Sizewell | 140 | 3,200 | 3,600 | 4,200 |
| Trawsfynydd | 320 | 290 | 1,500 | 5,400 |
| Wylfa | 460 | 730 | 1,100 | 1,600 |
The NII does not necessarily insist on rigid adherence to these criteria but, in addition, takes account of various unquantifiable factors.
Once a site has been accepted for a nuclear station, arrangements are made to ensure that residential and industrial developments are so controlled that the general characteristics of the site are preserved, and that local authorities consult with the inspectorate with regard to any proposed new development which falls outside the guidelines.
Coal Liquefaction
asked the Secretary of State for Energy if the Government have yet been able to attract private investment for the Point of Ayr coal-to-oil liquefaction project.
[pursuant to the reply, 26 February, c. 364]: I am pleased to announce that the Department of Energy will now be making available support of about £2·5 million for British Coal's liquefaction project at Point of Ayr, Clwyd, North Wales. This will cover the period of construction, commissioning and operation, and follows the signing by British Coal of an agreement with Ruhrkohle Oil and Gas, a subsidiary of the largest German coal-producing group, Ruhrkohle, bringing it into the project on a non-exclusive basis. Departmental support for this stage of the project had been conditional on British Coal's securing acceptable private sector participation.This important project is at an advanced stage of construction and should be commissioned early next year. The construction phase to date has been funded by British Coal with support from the European Commission. I trust that the new agreement marks the beginning of increasing industrial interest in this process.
Scotland
Sites Of Special Scientific Interest
asked the Secretary of State for Scotland if he will list the sites of special scientific interest in Scotland that have been, or are due to be, damaged or destroyed through developments which have been given planning permission since 1977, the type of development, the regions and districts in which they are situated, and the dates when permission was given.
As the hon. Member is seeking similar information for England and Wales, the Nature Conservancy Council is compiling this in respect of Great Britain as a whole, My right hon. Friend the Secretary of State for the Environment will be writing to the hon. Member with this information as soon as it is available.
In-Patient Waiting Lists
asked the Secretary of State for Scotland if he will set out region by region, health board in-patient waiting lists, the total population living in each district, the percentage which the former represents of the latter and their national ranking by that percentage.
The information requested is as follows:
Waiting List as at 30 September 19861
| Estimated population as at 30 June 1985
| Waiting List as percentage of population2
| Ranking
| |
| Argyll and Clyde | 6,528 | 446,637 | 1·46 | 8 |
| Ayrshire and Arran | 4,862 | 375,212 | 1·30 | 7 |
| Borders | 301 | 101,705 | 0·30 | 3 |
| Dumfries and Galloway | 3,205 | 146,562 | 2·19 | 15 |
| Fife | 5,468 | 344,019 | 1·59 | 11 |
| Forth Valley | 2,558 | 272,426 | 0·94 | 5 |
| Grampian | 9,969 | 500,566 | 1·99 | 14 |
| Greater Glasgow | 17,866 | 968,801 | 1·84 | 12 |
| Highland | 3,040 | 198,617 | 1·53 | 9 |
| Lanarkshire | 6,249 | 568,077 | 1·10 | 6 |
| Lothian | 14,341 | 745,229 | 1·92 | 13 |
| Orkney | 50 | 19,351 | 0·26 | 2 |
| Shetland | 142 | 23,440 | 0·61 | 4 |
| Tayside | 6,215 | 394,322 | 1·58 | 10 |
| Western Isles | 68 | 31,545 | 0·22 | 1 |
| Scotland | 80,862 | 5,136,509 | 1·57 | — |
1 Provisional. | ||||
2 The numbers on the waiting list for a particular health board may include numbers of people not resident in that health board area. | ||||
asked the Secretary of State for Scotland (1) if he will set out region by region, the hospital urgent in-patient waiting list in each district, together with the number of urgent cases waiting more than a month, the percentage the latter represents of the former and their national ranking by that percentage;(2) if he will set out region by region, the hospital non-urgent in-patient waiting list in each health district together with the number of non-urgent cases waiting more than a year, the percentage the latter represents of the former and their national ranking by that percentage.
This information is not available centrally.
asked the Secretary of State for Scotland if he will publish the hospital in-patient waiting lists for each health board at the end of September 1986.
[pursuant to his reply, 19 March 1987, c. 580]: The information requested, which relates to 30 September 1986 and is provisional, follows:
| Number | |
| Argyll and Clyde | 6,528 |
| Aryshire and Arran | 4,862 |
| Borders | 301 |
| Dumfries and Galloway | 3,205 |
| Fife | 5,468 |
| Forth Valley | 2,558 |
| Grampian | 9,969 |
| Greater Glasgow | 17,866 |
| Highland | 3,040 |
| Lanarkshire | 6,249 |
| Lothian | 14,341 |
| Orkney | 50 |
| Shetland | 142 |
| Tayside | 6,215 |
| Western Isles | 68 |
| Scotland | 80,862 |
Scottish Development Agency (Public Relations)
asked the Secretary of State for Scotland what is the annual budget of the public relations department of the Scottish Development Agency; and how many people it employs.
The budget for the current financial year is £660,000 and the department employs nine staff.
asked the Secretary of State for Scotland why the Scottish Development Agency put out to private public relations consultants the arranging of the ceremony of the declaration of continuing commitment to the east end of Glasgow; and what was the total cost of this event.
I shall reply to the hon. Member as soon as possible.
Gear Project
asked the Secretary of State for Scotland what was the full cost of the evaluation study of the GEAR project as commissioned by the Scottish Development Agency.
This study is not yet completed, but is expected to cost about £125,000.
asked the Secretary of State for Scotland what action he proposes to take in the light of the findings of the Scottish Development Agency evaluation study of the GEAR project regarding the adequacy of the resources made available to the project; if he will now make additional resources available; and if he will make a statement.
Although the consultants commissioned by the Scottish Development Agency gave an oral account today of the evaluation work at the final meeting of the GEAR governing committee, their report is not yet completed. Their findings will have to be considered in due course by all the partners involved in GEAR. Throughout the 10 years of GEAR, it has been made clear that each partner is responsible for the level of its programmes in the area, in the light of the resources available to it overall.
Electricity And Gas Disconnections
asked the Secretary of State for Scotland what information he has about the numbers of domestic consumers disconnected from (a) their electricity and (b) their gas supply in (i) the quarter and (ii) the 12 months to December 1986 in each electricity and each gas region in Scotland.
The information requested on electricity disconnections is not held centrally but I am asking the chairmen of the South of Scotland Electricity Board and the North of Scotland Hydro-Electric Board to write to the hon. Member.Information in respect of gas consumers is a matter for British Gas plc. I am asking the chairman to respond to the hon. Member's request.
Ross Memorial And Nicholson Mackenzie Hospitals
asked the Secretary of State for Scotland when he expects to be in a position to respond to the request from the Highland health board for the proposed change of use of the Ross memorial hospital, Dingwall, and the proposed closure of the Nicholson MacKenzie hospital, Strathpeffer; and if he will make a statement.
My right hon. and learned Friend has received a formal submission from the Highland health board seeking approval for its proposals. A decision will be made once the submission has been fully considered.
Health Service Premises, Ross-Shire
asked the Secretary of State for Scotland what steps were taken to ensure that the correct procedures for public consultation were carried out over the Highland health board's proposed closure and change of use of health service premises in Ross-shire as outlined to him in its letter of 4 December 1986; and if he will make a statement.
Health boards are required to carry out extensive consultation before submitting any proposal for closure or significant change of use to the Secretary of State. It is for each board to determine the range of consultation necessary in any particular case but, as a normal rule, boards are expected to invite comments from the relevant local health councils, area professional committees, regional, district or islands councils, trade unions and staff associations.The submission at present under consideration shows that consultations have taken place with all of these organisations, as well as general medical practitioners in Tain and Beauly and members of the public who had registered opposition to the proposals. Copies of the consultation correspondence have been lodged with the Secretary of State as part of the board's submission.
asked the Secretary of State for Scotland what assessment he has made of the impact which his recently announced 5·7 per cent. increase in revenue spending allocations for 1987–88 will have for the Highland health board, particularly with respect to (a) the additional overheads associated with Raigmore hospital, Inverness and (b) the proposal from the Highland health board of 6 December 1986 for the closure and change of use of health service premises in Ross-shire; and if he will make a statement.
Highland health board's revenue allocation for 1987–88 amounts to an increase of 6·84 per cent. over their allocation for 1986–87, well in excess of the average increase of 5·7 per cent. to Scottish health boards. Once increases in pay and prices have been met, it is estimated that the board will be able to devote 2·14 per cent. or £1·15 million to the growth and development of services in its area. This compares with an average growth of 1 per cent. for Scotland. In addition the board have been asked to identify savings equivalent to 1·5 per cent. of their net revenue allocation from greater efficiency and to direct these into patient care. The board 's allocation is expected to be more than sufficient to meet any new commitments associated with Raigmore hospital, Inverness. If the board's proposals for the closure and change of use of health service premises in Ross-shire are accepted and implemented the resultant savings will not accrue to the board until 1988–89.
Scottish Development Agency (Consultancy Work)
asked the Secretary of State for Scotland what is the total value of work put out to consultants by the Scottish Development Agency for each of the last five years.
I refer the hon. Member to the answer given by my hon. Friend the then Minister for Industry and Education to the hon. Member for Glasgow, Maryhill (Mr. Craigen) on 28 April 1986 at column 298. That answer covered the last six full financial years for which information is currently available.
Criminal Statistics
asked the Secretary of State for Scotland if he will publish in the Official Report a table showing for Scotland and each police force area in Scotland the total number in 1986 of (a) all crimes, (b) crimes of violence against the person, (c) burglaries, (d) thefts and offences of handling stolen goods, (e) offences of fraud and forgery and (f) offences of criminal damage.
This information is not yet available. The 1986 recorded crime figures for Scotland are currently being compiled and will be published shortly.
Environmentally Sensitive Areas
asked the Secretary of State for Scotland when he intends to lay before Parliament the statutory orders designating the Breadalbane and Loch Lomond environmentally sensitive areas.
[pursuant to his reply, 20 March 1987, c. 653]: My right hon. and learned Friend expects to be able to lay the necessary designating order shortly.
asked the Secretary of State for Scotland what sites he will consider for designation as environmentally sensitive areas in 1988 in Scotland.
[pursuant to his reply, 20 March 1987, c. 653]: In selecting any further sites for designation as environmentally sensitive areas in Scotland, my right hon. and learned Friend will, in the first instance, consider carefully the list of areas already suggested by the Nature Conservancy Council and the Countryside Commission for Scotland.
Education And Science
Welsh Plant Breeding Station
26.
asked the Secretary of State for Education and Science if he will make a statement on the current level of employment at the Welsh plant breeding station, Gogerddan.
I understand that the number of staff employed at the Welsh plant breeding station on 1 April 1986 was 211 and is expected to be 191 on 1 April 1987.
Hertfordshire
asked the Secretary of State for Education and Science if he has received any recent representations regarding the current and future provision of education in Hertfordshire.
Yes. A number of representations have been received on possible reorganisation of secondary school provision in Hertfordshire. Correspondents have been advised of their rights to lodge objections should statutory proposals be made under the provisions of the Education Act 1980.
Natural Environment Research Council
asked the Secretary of State for Education and Science whether he will list the total number of staff employed by the Natural Environment Research Council annually since 1979; and if he will give the projection for the next two years.
The total numbers of staff employed by the Natural Environment Research Council since 1979 (excluding those directly employed by grant-aided associations) were:
| 31 December | Number |
| 1979 | 2,908 |
| 1980 | 3,034 |
| 1981 | 2,979 |
| 1982 | 2,915 |
| 1983 | 2,828 |
| 1984 | 2,835 |
| 1985 | 2,571 |
| 1986 | 2,481 |
Yts (Meals)
asked the Secretary of State for Education and Science if he will allocate funds to local education authorities for the provision of free or subsidised meals to those students attending local education authority schools or colleges as part of a YTS; and if he will make a statement.
There are no plans to allocate funds in this way.
School Closures
asked the Secretary of State for Education and Science how many school closures his Department has approved since 1979; and what information he has on the subsequent use of the school buildings and land.
Since 1979, the closures of 1,576 schools have been either approved by me or my predecessors or determined by local education authorities, under section 12(7) of the Education Act 1980. Authorities and voluntary bodies are entitled to make use of or dispose of redundant school sites and premises as they wish without informing the Department.
Gcse
asked the Secretary of State for Education and Science what discussions his Department has had with the Secondary Examinations Council about its decision to withhold its approval for inclusion in the general certificate of secondary education of the syllabus entitled "English as a Second Language"; and if he will make a statement.
The Department is aware of the Secondary Examinations Council's decision, which will not affect pupils already embarked on syllabuses. I understand that the chairman of the council has written explaining the council's reason, and my right hon. Friend will respond when he receives that letter. However, in his view all pupils awarded a GCSE certificate in English need to have aspired to the same standards, and the introduction of a special version of English would be detrimental to the interests of those pupils seeking the qualification and to the responsibilities of schools to ensure that all pupils achieve a good standard in English.
Teachers (Special Qualifications)
asked the Secretary of State for Education and Science what information is available to his Department on the numbers of teachers in each local education authority with special qualifications relevant to the teaching of pupils with statements under the Education Act 1981, other than teachers employed full-time in special schools; if he will publish what information is available for the last year; and if he will make a statement.
I shall reply to the hon. Member as soon as possible.
"Preparation For Parenthood In The Secondary School Curriculum"
asked the Secretary of State for Education and Science when he received the report of the inquiry carried out into "Preparation for Parenthood in the Secondary School Curriculum" conducted for his Department by the University of Aston; what was the total cost to the Government of that inquiry; what were its recommendations; which of those recommendations have so far been implemented; and if he will make a statement.
In September 1983 the Department received the report of this commissioned research project, which was funded by grant totalling £128,778 over the period 1979–83. The report included a number of wide-ranging recommendations aimed at improving parenthood education in secondary schools; most of these were addressed to local education authorities, schools and teacher training institutions. So far as the Department is concerned, account has been taken where appropriate of the recommendations in Her Majesty's inspectorate's discussion document on "Health Education from 5 to 16". The Education (No. 2) Act 1986 now requires that any sex education given in schools shall encourage pupils to have due regard to moral considerations and the value of family life. The Act will also transfer control over the content and organisation of sex education to the new school governing bodies with greater parental and local community representation; and governing bodies will have an increased say over other parts of the school curriculum.
Loughborough University (Member's Correspondence)
asked the Secretary of State for Education and Science when the hon. Member for Rutland and Melton may expect a reply to the letter which he wrote to the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, the hon. Member for Buckingham, (Mr. Walden), on 21 October 1986 regarding Loughborough university, with a further letter on 30 January 1987 and a telephone call to his private office recently; and if he will instruct his Department to deal more expeditiously with correspondence from hon. Members.
I replied to my hon. Friend on 20 March. I apologise unreservedly for the delay in writing to him. The Department has introduced a new system for handling correspondence from hon. Members. We fully expect this to lead to fewer delays in replying.
Playground Supervision
asked the Secretary of State for Education and Science if he will introduce legislation to impose a statutory requirement on education authorities in England and Wales to provide playground supervision in schools; and if he will make a statement.
My right hon. Friend has no such plans.
Civil Service
Appointments
asked the Minister for Civil Service in what circumstances regulation 11 of the Civil Service Commission General Regulations 1986 permits the requirement for open competition to be waived in making an appointment; and if he will make a statement.
The Civil Service Commissioners have discretion to waive open competition in the circumstances specified in regulation 11 of the Civil Service General Regulations. These can be summarised as follows:
(a) is recorded in the commissioners' annual report; there are typically one or two such cases a year. Appointments under (b)- (d) are made infrequently. Under (e) 52 inward secondments were approved from 1 May 1986 to 31 December 1986. There are approximately 400 cases a year under (f).
National Finance
Income Tax
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer how much was paid in income tax by the top 5 per cent. of income earners in 1978–79 and in the most recent year for which figures are available; and whether he has any estimate of the total incomes of this group of taxpayers in each of those years.
In 1978–79 the total gross income of the top 5 per cent. of income tax payers (about 1·08 million married couples and single people) was about £15 billion and their tax liability was about £4·85 billion. The latest estimates for 1986–87 are that the top 5 per cent. of income tax payers comprise 1·03 million married couples and single people who have gross income of £38 billion and tax liabilities of about £11·2 billion.
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer if he will publish a table giving the range and size of income tax cuts since 1979 in the same form as the answer to the hon. Member for Thurrock (Dr. McDonald) on 4 April 1985, Official Report, columns 705–6.
The table shows estimates of reductions in income tax liabilities at 1987–88 income levels of the proposed allowances, thresholds and rates for 1987–88 compared with an indexed 1978–79 regime. For the comparison, the 1978–79 allowances and thresholds have been indexed in line with the increase in the RPI between December 1977 and December 1986. As child tax allowances were being phased out in 1978–79 they have been excluded from the comparison.
| Range of total income in 1987–881 | Number of units paying tax in 1987–88 | Reductions in income tax compared with 1978–79 indexed regime | |
| £ | (million) | Amount £ million | Average per tax unit £ |
| Under 5,000 | 3·20 | 350 | 285 |
| 5,000–10,000 | 7·60 | 1,950 | 2250 |
| 10,000–15,000 | 5·30 | 2,550 | 480 |
| 15,000–20,000 | 2·70 | 1,950 | 710 |
| 20,000–30,000 | 1·60 | 2,000 | 1,240 |
| 30,000–50,000 | 0·60 | 1,450 | 2,380 |
| Over 50,000 | 0·15 | 1,750 | 11,400 |
| TOTAL | 21·2 | 12,000 | 540 |
| 1 All information is in terms of tax units — that is, married couples ae counted as one and their incomes combined. | |||
| 2 By reference to the estimated numbers who would be liable to pay tax under the indexed 1978–79 regime; this number is some 900,000 greater than the numbers paying tax in 1987–88, some 800,000 in the income range below £5,000 and 100,000 in the range £5,000 to £10,000. | |||
Personal Allowances
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer if he will publish figures showing (a) the gross cost in 1987–88 of replacing all existing personal income tax allowances with tax-free, non-means-tested tax credits or basic incomes of £10 a week for each person aged 16 or over, (b) the additional costs of allowing each individual, counting husbands and wives separately, fixed amount tax discounts as follows: (i) £3 a week, £6 per week and £7·50 a week on earned income and (ii) £3, £6, £7·50, £21 and £30 per week on investment income including occupational pensions.
Assuming indexation of personal allowances, it is estimated that replacing all existing personal allowances with tax-free non-means-tested basic incomes of £10 per week for each person aged 16 or over would lead to a yield to the Exchequer of about billion in a full year at 1987–88 income levels. The offsetting costs from allowing tax discounts on earned and unearned incomes for each individual are estimated to be as follows:
| Weekly tax discount on earned income (£) | Cost in a full year at 1987–88 income levels (£) |
| 3.00 | 4 |
| 6.00 | 8 |
| 7.50 | 10 |
| Weekly tax discount on investment income1 (£) | Cost in a full year at 1987–88 income levels (£) |
| 3·00 | 3 |
| 6·00 | 5 |
| 7·50 | 6 |
| 21·00 | 10 |
| 30·00 | 12 |
| 1 Assuming that occupational pensions and the state retirement pension are treated as investment income. | |
Company Taxation
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer whether he will publish in the Official Report a table showing for 1957, 1964, 1973, 1979 and each of the past three years his estimate of the amount of mainstream corporation tax paid by companies as a percentage of their total income; and if he will provide a similar percentage for the amount of tax paid or payable at the standard rate by the company or the recipient on the amount distributed by way of interest and dividends.
The present imputation system of corporation tax was introduced with effect from April 1973; a consistent series for mainstream corporation tax is therefore available only after 1973. The required figures, excluding public corporations, are:
| Mainstream Corporation Tax | Tax on dividends and annual payments1 | |||
| Financial year | Amount £ billion | Percentage of income2 Per cent. | Amount £ billion | Percentage of income2 Per cent. |
| 1979 | 2·8 | 7·1 | 2·1 | 5·3 |
| 1983 | 3·8 | 7·0 | 2·4 | 4·4 |
| 1984 | 5·0 | 7·5 | 3·4 | 5·1 |
| 1985 | 6·7 | 9·0 | 4·3 | 5·7 |
1 Advance corporation tax on dividends and tax on companies annual payments.
2 Total company income in the calendar year as defined in the national accounts, net of interest payments.
Estimates of 1986 company incomes will be available later this year.
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer whether he will publish in the Official Report a forecast of gross income for tax purposes in the current financial year of (i) financial companies and institutions, (ii) companies engaged in the extradition of oil and gas and (iii) other industrial and commercial companies; and if he will include figures for each category of tax.
I regret that this information is not yet available.
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer whether he will publish in the Official Report a table showing the amount of mainsteam corporation tax collected on the profits of industrial and commercial companies, excluding the extraction of oil and gas, as a percentage of its gross income for tax purposes in 1957, 1967, 1977 and in each of the past three years, together with the amount of taxes collected or payable; and if he will provide similar figures for tax on the amount distributed.
The present imputation system of corporation tax was introduced with effect from April 1973; a consistent series for mainstream corporation tax is therefore available only after 1973. I regret that it is not possible to identify the contribution of extraction of oil and gas to total company income and to dividend payments. The required figures for all industrial and commercial companies, excluding public corporations, are:
| Mainstream Corporation Tax | Advance Corporation Tax on dividends | |||
| Financial year | Amount £ billion | Percentage of income1Per cent. | Amount £ billion | Percentage of income1Per cent. |
| 1977 | 1·7 | 7·4 | 1·0 | 4·6 |
| 1983 | 3·3 | 7·0 | 1·7 | 3·6 |
| 1984 | 4·4 | 7·4 | 2·7 | 4·6 |
| 1985 | 5·7 | 8·9 | 3·3 | 5·1 |
| 1 Total company income in the calendar year as defined in the national accounts, net of interest payments. | ||||
Dividends (Taxation)
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer what is his estimate of the yield in the current financial year of the standard rate of tax on dividends not subject to the relief in the hands of the recipient.
Advance corporation tax receipts for the current financial year are estimated at £4·4 billion. I regret that a reliable estimate of repayments of the associated tax credit is not available.
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer what information he has on how much British banks have disbursed in loans to Latin America in each of the past three years.
Data on gross disbursements by British banks to individual countries are not routinely collected. The available statistics for United Kingdom-registered banks showing their consolidated claims on individual countries are published in the Bank of England Quarterly Bulletin, table 15, copies of which can be found in the House of Commons Library.
Privatisation
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer if he will publish in the Official Report up-to-date figures for fees paid in respect of all privatisation issues since 1979 on a comparable basis to the figures supplied to the hon. Member for Sedgefield (Mr. Blair) on 24 May, Official Report, columns 560–64.
I refer the hon. Member to the reply I gave the hon. Member for Sedgefield (Mr. Blair) on 24 May 1985, at columns 560–64, and to the reply I gave the hon. Member for Thurrock (Dr. McDonald) on 12 June 1985, at column 447. Except for the British Telecom and British Aerospace (1985) sales the figures given in these earlier replies, for total fees and commissions paid in the categories specified, are unchanged. Updated figures for those sales and the figures for subsequent sales are given below:
| Share sale | Fees and Commissions (£000 including VAT) |
| British Telecom | 97,650 |
| British Aerospace 1985 | 9,381 |
| Britoil 1985 | 8,100 |
| Total income £ million | Total deductions1 £ million | Total income tax2 £ million | Number of tax units Thousands | Number of tax paying units Thousands | |
| United Kingdom | 191,000 | 2,790 | 37,300 | 21,900 | 20,500 |
| England | 163,000 | 2,470 | 32,100 | 18,600 | 17,400 |
| Wales | 7,650 | 103 | 1,380 | 961 | 875 |
| Scotland | 16,600 | 177 | 3,130 | 1,900 | 1,770 |
| Northern Ireland | 3,790 | 47 | 702 | 467 | 439 |
| North | 9,130 | 97 | 1,620 | 1,170 | 1,060 |
| Yorkshire and Humberside | 14,500 | 164 | 2,640 | 1,750 | 1,620 |
| North West | 19,700 | 258 | 3,650 | 2,380 | 2,200 |
| East Midlands | 12,400 | 137 | 2,280 | 1,440 | 1,340 |
| West Midlands | 15,600 | 147 | 2,860 | 1,960 | 1,820 |
| East Anglia | 5,940 | 107 | 1,130 | 698 | 671 |
| South East | 68,300 | 1,300 | 14,500 | 7,050 | 6,710 |
| South West | 14,600 | 233 | 2,700 | 1,780 | 1,660 |
| 1 Deductions do not include relief on mortgage interest given at source. | |||||
| 2 Income tax liabilities have been calculated without deduction for reliefs given at source at basic rate, but after allowance for relief due in excess of basic rate. | |||||
Family Taxation
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer what is the present income tax bill of a married man with average earnings with two children.
A married man on average earnings in 1986–87 pays income tax of £41·50 per week.
Share sale
| Fees and Commissions (£000 including VAT)
|
| Cable and Wireless 1985 | 10,313 |
| British Gas | 180,314 |
| British Airways | 112,803 |
1 Estimates: final accounts not yet available. | |
Personal Incomes
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer how many persons, compiled in terms of tax units and after contributions to occupational pension schemes have been deducted, have a gross earned income of (a) £80,000 per annum and (b) £100,000 or more per annum in the United Kingdom.
In 1984–85, the latest year for which information is available from the survey of personal incomes, it is estimated that 17,000 single people and married couples had gross earned incomes (after contributions to occupational pension schemes) of £80,000 or more, of whom 9,000 had incomes of £100,000 or more.
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer whether he will publish in the Official Report data from the most recent survey of personal incomes on (a) total income, (b) total deductions, (c) total income tax, (d) total tax units and (e) total tax units paying tax for each country in the United Kingdom and each standard region in England.
[pursuant to his reply, 19 February 1987]: I regret that incorrect estimates for total deductions were contained in the table shown in my reply. The corrected information is included in the revised table.His income tax bill would be unaffected by having two children, but child benefit would be payable at current rates of £14·20 per week.
Overseas Remittances
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer whether he will publish in the Official Report his estimate of the gross amount of rent, interest dividends, royalties, profits and so on remitted from the United Kingdom to private and other persons not normally resident in the United Kingdom in the coming financial year by category of income showing the amount likely to evade tax, the amount exempt from tax and the amount of tax collected.
I regret that this information is not available.
Stamp Duty
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer whether he will publish in the Official Report his forecast for the revenue from stamp duty in the next financial year on (i) stocks and shares and (ii) dwellings, together with his estimate for the outturn this year.
The information is as follows:
| £ million | ||
| Estimated Outturn 1986–87 | Forecast 1987–88 | |
| Stamp Duty on: | ||
| stocks and shares (including Stamp Duty Reserve Tax) | 840 | 890 |
| residential property | 570 | 700 |
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer whether he will publish in the Official Report his estimate of the amount of stamp duty payable on share transactions (a) since deregulation in the stock markets and (b) in a comparable period the previous year; and what is the implied rate at which the share capital of the listed companies is being turned over annually.
I shall let the hon. Member have a reply as soon as possible.
Premium Bonds
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer what methods are used to publicise the premium bond numbers of unclaimed prizes.
Details of all prizes unclaimed for 18 months or longer are included in the January, April, July and October supplements to the London Gazette. Copies of the supplement are available for inspection at larger post offices.
Mortgage Interest Payments
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer (1) whether he will publish in the Official Report his estimate of the number of cases in which tax relief will be given through MIRAS or otherwise on mortgage interest payments in the next financial year, together with (a) the estimated cost to the Exchequer and (b) the number of recipients of working age and their distribution by personal category gross and by range of gross income together with the average amount of relief given;(2) whether he will publish in the
Official Report a table showing his estimate of the number of cases in which higher rate tax relief will be given on mortgage interest payments in the current and in the next financial year, together with (a) the gross amount of interest qualifying for relief, (b) the amount of higher rate relief payable and
(c) the number of recipients of working age and their distribution by personal category and by range of gross income, together with the average amount of relief given at the standard and higher rates.
I shall let the hon. Member have a reply as soon as possible.
Wife's Earned Income Allowance
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer whether he will publish in the Official Report a table showing the numbers and estimated cost of the wife's earned income allowance in the next financial year by range of the wife's income and of the joint incomes of husband and wife.
I shall let the hon. Member have a reply as soon as possible.
Married Women (Taxation)
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer whether he will publish in the Official Report a table showing by personal category and range of income for elderly and for other taxpayers the gross and net cost to the Exchequer of separate taxation, without aggregation, of married women in the coming financial year on the assumption that each spouse has a transferable allowance equal to the single allowance and that the wife's earned income allowance will be abolished; and how much of the loss would be in respect of higher rate tax on earned income and of standard rate and higher rate tax, respectively, on unearned income.
I shall let the hon. Member have a reply as soon as possible.
Taxation
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer whether he will publish in the Official Report a table showing the estimated loss of (a) income tax (b) higher rate tax and (c) capital gains tax in the next financial year on, respectively, life assurance premiums, retirement annuity premiums and lump sum payments to pensioners, distinguishing between non-contributory schemes which provide a maximum pension of 50 per cent. of eligible earnings and other schemes and the investment income of occupational pension schemes, distinguishing between employees and the self-employed.
I shall let the hon. Member have a reply as soon as possible.
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer if he will update the answer to the hon. Member for Birmingham, Perry Barr (Mr. Rooker) and the hon. Member for Stockton (Mr. Wrigglesworth) of 28 April 1986, Official Report, column 329, to cover 1987–88 as well as 1985–86 and 1986–87, in comparison to 1978–79.
I shall let the hon. Member have a reply as soon as possible.
Married Couples (Taxation)
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer whether he will publish in the Official Report a table showing in the case of the wife's earnings election the estimated cost to the Exchequer in the next financial year, together with tables showing (a) the estimated loss of tax in terms of each combined gross income band and (b) for (i) husbands and (ii) wives, the numbers assessed separately by range of income together with the gross amount of income and the gross amount of unearned income.
I shall let the hon. Member have a reply as soon as possible.
Unearned Income
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer whether he will publish in the Official Report a table showing by personal category and range of income the number of women with gross unearned income of £1,000 a year or more, and those with less, together with the average amount of unearned income in each category.
I shall let the hon. Member have a reply as soon as possible.
Ice-Cream
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer if he will seek to eliminate value added tax from ice-cream that actually contains milk products.
No.
National Economic Development
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer what discussions he has had with the National Economic Development. Council following the Budget; and if he will make a statement.
The Budget will be discussed at the next meeting of the National Economic Development Council on Wednesday 1 April.
Mv Silver Sea
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer, pursuant to his reply of 13 March, Official Report, columns 319–20, about MV Silver Sea, on what date Her Majesty's Customs and Excise began their inquiries; when he expects the inquiries to be completed; and whether he will place a copy of any report on the conclusion of the inquiries in the Library.
I shall let the hon. Member have a reply as soon as possible.
Personal Income (Rates And Taxation)
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer if he will publish in the Official Report tables showing (a) the proportion in percentage terms, (b) the amount in current prices and (c) the amount in constant 1985–86 prices of personal income taken by taxation and rates for the year 1986–87, taking account of any changes announced in his Budget statement and any previously announced changes, and for each of the years 1978–79, 1979–80, 1980–81, 1981–82, 1982–83, 1983–84. 1984–85, 1985–86 and 1986–87 for each level of average earnings, each category of taxpayer, and each category of taxation and rates, in the manner of the answers of 3 April 1985, Official Report, column 676, 2 July 1985, Official Report, column 112 and of 26 March 1986, Official Report, column 530.
I shall let the hon. Member have a reply as soon as possible.
Self-Employment (Taxation)
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer whether he will publish in the Official Report a table showing for 1957, 1961, 1971, 1981 and the latest year for which figures are available, the number of tax units taxed as self-employed compared to the number classified in the employment statistics and population censuses as self-employed, the amount of income assessed to tax, and the amount of income and the amount of tax paid per head in terms of 1980 prices; and if he will provide an estimate for the current financial year.
[pursuant to his reply, 18 March 1987, c. .536]: The number of tax units (married couples counted as one unit) and the corresponding number of individuals with any income (or losses) assessable to income tax under case I or II of schedule D (that is, self-employment income) is shown below for 1981–82 and 1984–85 (the latest year for which information is available). Comparable information for 1957, 1961, 1971 and the current financial year is not available.Also shown are the Department of Employment's estimates of numbers classified as self-employed at June each year, based in the 1981 census of population updated by the annual labour force survey. Those included are confined to people with their main job as self-employed.
| Year | Numbers with any income assessable to case I or II of Sch. D (thousands) | Numbers with main job as self employed, at June (thousands) | |
| Tax Units | Individuals | Individuals | |
| 1981–82 | 2,175 | 2,416 | 2,118 |
| 1984–85 | 2,478 | 2,755 | 2,496 |
| Tax units with income assessable to case I or II of schedule D | |||
| Year | Total income £billion | Total income per tax unit at 1980 prices (£) | Tax per tax unit at 1980 prices (£) |
| 1981–82 | 18·5 | 7,420 | 1,650 |
| 1984–85 | 26·0 | 7,750 | 11,640 |
| 1 Excluding mortgage interest relief at source. | |||
Property Income
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer (1) whether he will publish in the Official Report a table showing for the years 1958, 1964, 1969, 1974, 1979 and 1985 the gross overseas income for tax purposes of the companies and financial institutions as defined on page 168 of the annual supplement to Economic Trends 1987, the amount set off against tax of other countries under double taxation relief, and the amount of tax collected;(2) whether he will publish in the
Official Report a table showing the greater detail than table 1.10 in the edition of
the United Kingdom "National Accounts" 1986, for the years 1975, 1979 and 1985 the property income from abroad net of foreign taxes and the property income paid abroad less United Kingdom taxes for each sector, including financial institutions, together with the totals of United Kingdom tax and foreign tax payable and the amount of double taxation relief on income from abroad.
[pursuant to his replies, 18 March 1987, c. 537]: The closest estimate, available for a run of years, of gross overseas income for tax purposes of companies and financial institutions is provided by the series "Property income from abroad net of foreign taxes" in table 1.10 of United Kingdom "National Accounts" (1986 Edition). Figures are as follows:
| £ million | |
| Year | Number |
| 1958 | 682 |
| 1964 | 900 |
| 1969 | 1,374 |
| 1974 | 6,209 |
| 1975 | 6,563 |
| 1979 | 17,523 |
| 1985 | 52,639 |
Shareholders
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer if he will list, region by region, including Scotland and Wales, the numbers and proportions of shareholders identified in his survey; and if he will list shareholders by income groups.
[pursuant to his reply, 20 March 1987, c. 647]: I have placed a copy of the survey report in the Library of the House; the information requested is to be found in tables 30 and 31.
Russell David Construction Ltd
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer if he will investigate the loss of the 714C tax exemption certificate awarded to Russell David Construction Ltd., of Crabtree park, Worksop, by the Retford tax office which was sent but lost in the post; and if he will issue another certificate forthwith.
[pursuant to his reply, 19 March 1987, c. 592]: The Inland Revenue is pursuing with the Post Office the loss of a document sent by registered post. Meanwhile, a replacement certificate has been authorised and should be in the hands of the company shortly.
Environment
Energy Conservation
25.
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment what measures he proposes to introduce to improve the conservation of energy within present and projected buildings within his responsibility.
Many energy conservation measures have been introduced either as specific schemes or integrated into other projects over the past few years, and there is a continuing programme of work.
Play Schemes
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment what action he plans to take to increase the provision of holiday play schemes by each local authority.
It is for individual local authorities to determine which projects to support from their own resources or from resources allocated to them through specific programmes such as the urban programme, within any relevant guidelines. In 1986–87 support for children's play projects through the urban programme totalled about £6·6 million.
London Docklands Development Corporation
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment if he will tabulate in the Official Report the breakdown of the 8,000 jobs referred to in the 1985–86 annual report of the London Docklands Development Corporation as having been created in its area under categories, transferred from outside the area, development completed or initiated prior to 1981, employment by the corporation, and any other major category listed on an annual basis.
I will write to the hon. Member.
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment if he will state the sums spent by the London Docklands Development Corporation since 1981 on training initiatives, stating the sums spent on each main project.
The London Docklands Development Corporation has spent £2,218,000 on training initiatives, between July 1981 and February 1987. the sums spent on the main projects are as follows:
| Project Title | Spent at February 1987 £000 |
| Information Technology Centre (ITEC) | 458 |
| Skillnet | 538 |
| Stepney Green Furniture Workshop | 135 |
| Shadwell Pierhead | 321 |
| Rotherhithe Community Workshop | 106 |
| Technical Regeneration of Docklands | 158 |
| Other Training Initiatives under £100,000 | 502 |
| TOTAL | £2,218 |
First-Time Buyers' Scheme
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment how much money is at present allocated to the first-time buyers' scheme.
Expenditure on the Homeloan scheme is determined by the level of demand. Estimated expenditure on grants and loans under the scheme in 1987–88 is £2·1 million.
Women's Computer Centre (Camden)
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment if he will direct the London residuary body to allow Camden borough council to secure the work of the women's computer centre by transferring the lease of Wesley house to the council.
No. I understand that the council of the London borough of Camden has offered to acquire Wesley house from the London residuary body, which has resolved to dispose of it to the council at market value.
Homelessness
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment if he will publish in the Official Report figures for the numbers of households accepted as homeless in the London borough of Southwark for each year since such figures were first compiled.
The numbers of households accepted as homeless are as follows:
| Year | Number |
| 1978 | 558 |
| 1979 | 651 |
| 1980 | 680 |
| 1981 | 1700 |
| 1982 | 808 |
| 1983 | 1,337 |
| 1984 | 1,527 |
| 1985 | 1,443 |
| 21986 | 1,170 |
| 1 Estimated. | |
| 2 Nine months. | |
Bed-And-Breakfast Accommodation
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment what is the total number of people in bed-and-breakfast accommodation in the London borough of Southwark in January 1987 and the equivalent dates for 1986, 1985, 1984 and 1983; and what information he has as to the present cost to the London borough of Southwark of keeping people in bed-and-breakfast accommodation.
The latest date for which information on bed-and-breakfast accommodation is available is September 1986. The number of households accommodated in bed-and-breakfast accommodation at the end of September in each year since 1983 is as follows:
| At end September | Number |
| 1983 | 0 |
| 1984 | 32 |
| 1985 | 52 |
| 1986 | 101 |
Urban Programme (Lambeth)
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment why the urban programme resources for the London borough of Lambeth have been reduced from an estimated outturn of £13·2 million in 1986–87 to art allocation of £12·8 million in 1987–88.
There is strong competition for urban programme resources. They are allocated to local authorities on the basis both of their needs, and of their performance in delivering programmes which meet ministerial priorities. Lambeth still has the largest allocation in London.
Local Authority Current Expenditure
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment by how much local authority current expenditure has risen in real terms since 1978–79.
Local authority net current expenditure in England has risen by 13 per cent. in real terms (based on net current expenditure in cash terms, adjusted to constant prices using the GDP deflator) over the period 1978–79 to 1986–87.
Housing Finance
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment whether he will publish in the Official Report his estimate of the cost or receipts to public funds at the local and national level in the current financial year of (a) subsidies to local authority and new town housing net of rents receivable before any remission to tenants on account of housing benefit and other remissions, (b) receipts from the sale of local authority and new town housing, (c) mortgage interest tax relief on private housing and (d) housing and other benefits to tenants of local authority and private landlords, respectively.
I shall answer this question shortly.
Empty Houses
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment what information he has as to (a) how many and (b) what percentage of houses in (i) the public and (ii) the private sector in each local housing authority area are empty at the latest available date.
The latest information is for April 1986, from the English authorities' housing investment programme returns, and it is included in the table which follows. All authorities provided figures for their own stock and these have been shown separately; they exclude
| Vacant dwellings, England: April 1986 Numbers and percentage of stock | ||||||
| Region 1: North including Cumbria | ||||||
| Local Authority | Local Authority | Other Public plus Housing Association | Private | |||
| Number | Per cent. | Number | Per cent. | Number | Per cent. | |
| County—Cleveland | ||||||
| Hartlepool | 194 | 1·7 | 15 | 0·9 | 780 | 3·5 |
| Langbaurgh | 505 | 3·0 | 29 | 2·2 | 1,490 | 3·8 |
| Middlesbrough | 428 | 2·4 | 27 | 1·0 | 1,030 | 3·0 |
| Stockton-on-Tees | 476 | 2·5 | 41 | 2·1 | 1,494 | 3·2 |
| County—Cumbria | ||||||
| Allerdale | 118 | 1·8 | 170 | 3·3 | 1,863 | 6·9 |
| Barrow-in-Furness | 77 | 1·6 | 7 | 2·1 | 801 | 3·3 |
| Carlisle | 379 | 3·2 | 62 | 5·4 | 1,559 | 5·6 |
| Copeland | 148 | 2·3 | 74 | 2·0 | 990 | 5·6 |
| Eden | 41 | 1·6 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| South Lakeland | 26 | 0·5 | n.a. | n.a. | 1,145 | 3·3 |
| County—Durham | ||||||
| Chester-le-Street | 175 | 2·3 | n.a. | n.a. | 273 | 2·1 |
| Darlington | 177 | 2·1 | 0 | 0·0 | 1,656 | 5·5 |
| Derwentside | 302 | 2·4 | 72 | 6·8 | 1,192 | 5·4 |
| Durham | 144 | 1·3 | 76 | 5·2 | 798 | 4·0 |
| Easington | 760 | 4·1 | 362 | 9·1 | 707 | 4·1 |
| Sedgefield | 575 | 3·8 | 44 | 3·4 | 562 | 2·9 |
| Teesdale | 33 | 2·5 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Wear Valley | 72 | 0·9 | 18 | 1·5 | 632 | 3·6 |
| County—Northumberland | ||||||
| Alnwick | 35 | 1·2 | 0 | 0·0 | 0 | 0·0 |
| Berwick-upon-Tweed | 7 | 0·2 | 0 | 0·0 | n.a. | n.a. |
| Blyth Valley | 218 | 2·2 | 39 | 2·0 | 550 | 3·0 |
| Castle Morpeth | 35 | 0·9 | n.a. | n.a. | 247 | 1·8 |
| Tynedale | 7 | 0·2 | 26 | 5·1 | n.a. | n.a. |
| Wansbeck | 130 | 1·4 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| County—Tyne and Wear | ||||||
| Gateshead | 1,825 | 5·1 | n.a. | n.a. | 1,419 | 3·0 |
| Newcastle upon Tyne | 1,336 | 2·9 | 244 | 3·9 | 2,931 | 4·7 |
| North Tyneside | 1,310 | 4·6 | 106 | 3·3 | 2,040 | 4·0 |
| South Tyneside | 298 | 1·0 | 47 | 1·4 | 808 | 2·6 |
| Sunderland | 1,527 | 2·9 | 117 | 2·1 | 2,606 | 4·4 |
| Region 2: Yorks and Humberside | ||||||
| Local Authority | Local Authority | Other Public plus Housing Association | Private | |||
| Number | Per cent. | Number | Per cent. | Number | Per cent. | |
| County—Humberside | ||||||
| Beverley | 22 | 0·4 | 0 | 0·0 | 1,097 | 3·1 |
| Boothferry | 81 | 1·7 | 20 | 12·0 | 1,300 | 6·7 |
| Cleethorpes | 22 | 0·6 | 0 | 0·0 | n.a. | n.a. |
| East Yorkshire | 46 | 0·9 | n.a. | n.a. | 1,400 | 5·0 |
| Glanford | 27 | 0·7 | 0 | 0·0 | 1,116 | 5·0 |
| Great Grimsby | 111 | 1·3 | 28 | 4·4 | 833 | 3·2 |
| Holderness | 6 | 0·2 | 12 | 4·8 | 1,135 | 6·9 |
| Kingston upon Hull | 800 | 1·7 | 50 | 2·2 | 3,150 | 5·6 |
| Scunthorpe | 184 | 2·0 | 7 | 2·0 | 478 | 3·2 |
| County—North Yorkshire | ||||||
| Craven | 34 | 1·5 | 0 | 0·0 | 540 | 3·0 |
| Hambleton | 12 | 0·2 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Harrogate | 68 | 1·1 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Richmondshire | 77 | 2·8 | 300 | 13·8 | 335 | 2·6 |
| Ryedale | 15 | 0·4 | 4 | 0·3 | 1,403 | 4·8 |
| Scarborough | 117 | 1·6 | 23 | 2·7 | 1,605 | 4·2 |
| Selby | 44 | 0·8 | 13 | 3·2 | n.a. | n.a. |
closed dwellings, of which there were 1,700 in England. Authorities' information about other vacant housing is generally less accurate and some authorities were unable to provide estimates.
Local Authority
| Local Authority
| Other Public plus Housing Association
| Private
| |||
Number
| Per cent.
| Number
| Per cent.
| Number
| Per cent.
| |
| York | 82 | 0·8 | 5 | 0·5 | 800 | 2·7 |
County—South Yorkshire
| ||||||
| Barnsley | 598 | 1·9 | 71 | 2·8 | 1,674 | 3·1 |
| Doncaster | 595 | 1·7 | 28 | 2·9 | 2,104 | 2·8 |
| Rotherham | 672 | 2·0 | 113 | 2·5 | n.a. | n.a. |
| Sheffield | 3,027 | 3·4 | 183 | 4·3 | 5,539 | 4·5 |
County— West Yorkshire
| ||||||
| Bradford | 1,795 | 4·8 | n.a. | n.a. | 5,523 | 4·1 |
| Calderdale | 796 | 5·1 | 10 | 0·5 | 3,465 | 5·8 |
| Kirklees | 981 | 2·7 | 29 | 1·4 | 6,777 | 6·0 |
| Leeds | 1,076 | 1·2 | 120 | 1·6 | 6,120 | 3·3 |
| Wakefield | 512 | 1·1 | 312 | 8·1 | 1,866 | 2·6 |
Region 3: East Midlands
| ||||||
Local Authority
| Local Authority
| Other Public plus Housing Association
| Private
| |||
Number
| Per cent.
| Number
| Per cent.
| Number
| Per cent.
| |
County—Derbyshire
| ||||||
| Amber Valley | 78 | 1·0 | 36 | 5·0 | 1,451 | 4·0 |
| Bolsover | 153 | 1·8 | 40 | 8·9 | 665 | 3·4 |
| Chesterfield | 206 | 1·5 | 30 | 3·9 | 1,261 | 5·0 |
| Derby | 549 | 2·6 | 114 | 2·6 | 3,470 | 5·6 |
| Erewash | 122 | 1·5 | 27 | 5·5 | 1,509 | 4·6 |
| High Peak | 49 | 0·8 | n.a. | n.a. | 1,574 | 6·0 |
| North East Derbyshire | 119 | 1·1 | 11 | 5·2 | 350 | 1·3 |
| South Derbyshire | 29 | 0·6 | 10 | 3·5 | 1,388 | 6·5 |
| West Derbyshire | 10 | 0·2 | 16 | 11·8 | 1,587 | 6·9 |
County—Leicestershire
| ||||||
| Blaby | 12 | 0·4 | 18 | 4·3 | 591 | 2·3 |
| Charnwood | 30 | 0·4 | 0 | 0·0 | 1,570 | 3·5 |
| Harborough | 20 | 0·6 | 7 | 3·0 | 571 | 2·8 |
| Hinckley and Bosworth | 49 | 1·0 | 0 | 0·0 | 1,084 | 3·6 |
| Leicester | 947 | 2·8 | n.a. | n.a. | 4,568 | 6·6 |
| Melton | 49 | 1·8 | 42 | 12·5 | 572 | 4·1 |
| North West Leicestershire | 53 | 0·9 | 41 | 4·1 | 1,180 | 5·0 |
| Oadby and Wigston | 32 | 1·7 | n.a. | n.a. | 404 | 2·3 |
| Rutland | 8 | 0·4 | 0 | 0·0 | 314 | 3·5 |
County—Lincolnshire
| ||||||
| Boston | 20 | 0·3 | 13 | 2·5 | 839 | 5·5 |
| East Lindsey | 75 | 1·3 | 127 | 10·0 | 2,531 | 6·4 |
| Lincoln | 343 | 3·3 | 37 | 4·6 | 960 | 4·5 |
| North Kesteven | 42 | 0·8 | 697 | 40·6 | 1,200 | 4·9 |
| South Holland | 37 | 0·7 | 0 | 0·0 | 804 | 4·0 |
| South Kesteven | 121 | 1·3 | 90 | 13·5 | 1,831 | 6·0 |
| West Lindsey | 92 | 1·9 | 217 | 17·1 | 0 | 0·0 |
County—Northamptonshire
| ||||||
| Corby | 259 | 2·6 | 2 | 2·0 | 398 | 4·1 |
| Daventry | 72 | 1·5 | 2 | 1·2 | 545 | 3·0 |
| East Northamptonshire | 21 | 0·4 | n.a. | n.a. | 745 | 3·6 |
| Kettering | 93 | 1·6 | 13 | 3·5 | 943 | 4·1 |
| Northampton | 445 | 2·5 | 50 | 4·3 | 2,105 | 4·5 |
| South Northamptonshire | 22 | 0·5 | 0 | 0·0 | 1,002 | 4·7 |
| Wellingborough | 99 | 1·4 | 0 | 0·0 | 754 | 4·1 |
County—Nottinghamshire
| ||||||
| Ashfield | 205 | 1·9 | 63 | 5·2 | 1,249 | 4·2 |
| Bassetlaw | 81 | 0·8 | 72 | 5·3 | 1,726 | n.a. |
| Broxstowe | 90 | 1·3 | n.a. | n.a. | 803 | 2·4 |
| Gedling | 104 | 1·8 | 54 | 3·1 | 839 | 2·4 |
| Mansfield | 209 | 2·0 | 60 | 3·6 | n.a. | n.a. |
| Newark and Sherwood | 109 | 1·3 | 72 | 3·1 | 1,169 | 3·8 |
| Nottingham | 1,348 | 3·0 | 326 | 5·7 | 3,666 | 6·1 |
| Rushcliffe | 76 | 1·7 | 40 | 7·2 | 0 | 0·0 |
Region 4: East Anglia
| ||||||
Local Authority
| Local Authority
| Other Public plus Housing Association
| Private
| |||
Number
| Per cent.
| Number
| Per cent.
| Number
| Per cent.
| |
County—Cambridgeshire
| ||||||
| Cambridge | 151 | 1·4 | 35 | 2·0 | 64 | 0·2 |
| East Cambridgeshire | 28 | 0·6 | 13 | 4·2 | 883 | 5·1 |
| Fenland | 28 | 0·5 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Huntingdonshire | 93 | 1·1 | 217 | 8·8 | 1,931 | 5·0 |
| Peterborough | 243 | 2·5 | 233 | 2·4 | 1,778 | 4·8 |
| South Cambridgeshire | 62 | 0·8 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
County—Norfolk
| ||||||
| Breckland | 233 | 3·1 | n.a. | n.a. | 2,280 | 7·0 |
| Broadland | 10 | 0·3 | n.a. | n.a. | 1,460 | 4·1 |
| Great Yarmouth | 69 | 0·9 | 26 | 5·3 | 1,395 | 5·2 |
| Kings Lynn and West Norfolk | 70 | 0·7 | 117 | 5·9 | 1,800 | 4·4 |
| North Norfolk | 62 | 1·0 | 400 | 30·8 | 1,977 | 6·1 |
| Norwich | 570 | 2·4 | 54 | 2·4 | 1,676 | 6·2 |
| South Norfolk | 17 | 0·3 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
County—Suffolk
| ||||||
| Babergh | 39 | 0·7 | n.a. | n.a. | 1,430 | 5·8 |
| Forest Heath | 5 | 0·1 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Ipswich | 167 | 1·4 | 49 | 2·0 | 941 | 2·7 |
| Mid Suffolk | 28 | 0·6 | 5 | 1·3 | 1,005 | 4·3 |
| St Edmundsbury | 71 | 0·8 | 20 | 1·4 | n.a. | n.a. |
| Suffolk Coastal | 90 | 1·5 | n.a. | n.a. | 1,326 | 3·7 |
| Waveney | 88 | 1·4 | 40 | 3·0 | 1,677 | 4·6 |
Region 5: Greater London
| ||||||
Local Authority
| Local Authority
| Other Public plus Housing Association
| Private
| |||
Number
| Per cent.
| Number
| Per cent.
| Number
| Per cent.
| |
Inner London
| ||||||
| City of London | 28 | 1·8 | 0 | 0·0 | 35 | 2·1 |
| Camden | 957 | 2·8 | 139 | 2·4 | 4,857 | 11·0 |
| Hackney | 2,872 | 6·3 | 577 | 6·8 | 2,232 | 9·9 |
| Hammersmith and Fulham | 654 | 3·5 | n.a. | n.a. | 4,552 | 10·8 |
| Haringey | 670 | 2·8 | 205 | 3·5 | 3,588 | 6·8 |
| Islington | 2,271 | 5·5 | 484 | 5·5 | 3,200 | 12·9 |
| Kensington and Chelsea | 378 | 4·3 | 691 | 6·1 | 8,080 | 14·5 |
| Lambeth | 1,328 | 2·7 | 695 | 7·1 | n.a. | n.a. |
| Lewisham | 1,568 | 3·8 | 328 | 5·5 | 2,038 | 4·2 |
| Newham | 2,420 | 7·8 | 362 | 8·9 | 2,127 | 4·4 |
| Southwark | 1,900 | 3·1 | 483 | 5·8 | 2,707 | 11·3 |
| Tower Hamlets | 3,200 | 6·6 | 277 | 5·0 | 405 | 5·0 |
| Wandsworth | 1,397 | 3·7 | 233 | 3·2 | 2,560 | 4·0 |
| Westminster | 739 | 3·2 | 504 | 4·9 | 7,000 | 10·1 |
Outer London
| ||||||
| Barking and Dagenham | 588 | 1·8 | n.a. | n.a. | 525 | 2·0 |
| Barnet | 354 | 2·0 | 116 | 2·0 | 2,884 | 3·1 |
| Bexley | 124 | 1·1 | 107 | 2·0 | 3,367 | 5·1 |
| Brent | 844 | 4·0 | 386 | 5·4 | 3,370 | 5·2 |
| Bromley | 201 | 1·2 | n.a. | n.a. | 3,200 | 3·2 |
| Croydon | 392 | 2·0 | n.a. | n.a. | 3,267 | 3·2 |
| Ealing | 523 | 2·6 | n.a. | n.a. | 2,123 | 2·6 |
| Enfield | 467 | 2·4 | n.a. | n.a. | 2,423 | 3·0 |
| Greenwich | 912 | 2·5 | 212 | 4·5 | 2,362 | 5·1 |
| Harrow | 164 | 2·0 | 96 | 6·1 | 1,068 | 1·6 |
| Havering | 321 | 1·9 | 64 | 4·4 | 1,651 | 2·3 |
| Hillingdon | 501 | 2·8 | 74 | 2·0 | 2,866 | 4·0 |
| Hounslow | 479 | 2·4 | 71 | 1·9 | 2,630 | 4·7 |
| Kingston upon Thames | 99 | 1·5 | 2 | 0·1 | 1,433 | 3·0 |
| Merton | 301 | 2·4 | 115 | 6·6 | 3,779 | 7·0 |
| Redbridge | 326 | 2·9 | 62 | 3·4 | 2,612 | 3·4 |
| Richmond upon Thames | 132 | 1·3 | 30 | 1·3 | 3,124 | 5·1 |
| Sutton | 179 | 1·5 | n.a. | n.a. | 844 | 1·6 |
| Waltham Forest | 462 | 2·3 | 121 | 3·8 | 2,520 | 4·0 |
Region 6: South East excluding London
| ||||||
Local Authority
| Local Authority
| Other Public plus Housing Association
| Private
| |||
Number
| Per cent.
| Number
| Per cent.
| Number
| Per cent.
| |
County—Bedfordshire
| ||||||
| Luton | 102 | 0·9 | 62 | 4·2 | 1,665 | 3·4 |
| Mid Bedfordshire | 26 | 0·3 | n.a. | n.a. | 1,268 | 4·0 |
| North Bedfordshire | 327 | 4·0 | 133 | 6·8 | 2,440 | 6·0 |
| South Bedfordshire | 109 | 1·4 | 130 | 16·8 | 699 | 2·2 |
County—Berkshire
| ||||||
| Bracknell | 91 | 0·9 | 27 | 1·5 | 400 | 1·9 |
| Newbury | 57 | 0·7 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Reading | 318 | 3·3 | 8 | 0·7 | 1,224 | 3·0 |
| Slough | 149 | 1·4 | 5 | 1·3 | 1,000 | 4·0 |
| Windsor and Maidenhead | 53 | 0·7 | 103 | 6·2 | 583 | 1·3 |
| Wokingham | 69 | 1·9 | 56 | 3·6 | 711 | 1·8 |
County—Buckinghamshire
| ||||||
| Aylesbury Vale | 80 | 0·7 | n.a. | n.a | 1,386 | 3·6 |
| Chiltern | 107 | 2·1 | n.a. | n.a | 0 | 0·0 |
| Milton Keynes | 129 | 1·8 | 331 | 2·3 | n.a. | n.a. |
| South Bucks | 38 | 1·0 | n.a. | n.a | n.a. | n.a. |
| Wycombe | 217 | 2·1 | 48 | 4·0 | 1,655 | 3·5 |
County—East Sussex
| ||||||
| Brighton | 143 | 1·3 | 71 | 4·9 | 2,991 | 5·8 |
| Eastbourne | 32 | 0·6 | 9 | 0·7 | n.a. | n.a. |
| Hastings | 50 | 1·0 | 6 | 0·8 | 1,525 | 5·4 |
| Hove | 50 | 1·1 | n.a. | n.a | 3,121 | 8·9 |
| Lewes | 64 | 1·5 | 6 | 0·7 | 1,264 | 4·3 |
| Rother | 100 | 2·5 | 3 | 0·6 | 952 | 3·0 |
| Wealden | 67 | 1·5 | 4 | 0·4 | 1,280 | 2·9 |
County—Essex
| ||||||
| Basildon | 77 | 1·3 | 294 | 1·8 | n.a. | n.a. |
| Braintree | 173 | 1·5 | n.a. | n.a. | 1,800 | 5·6 |
| Brentwood | 40 | 1·1 | 27 | 1·7 | 650 | 2·9 |
| Castle Point | 23 | 1·0 | 0 | 0·0 | 670 | 2·2 |
| Chelmsford | 294 | 3·0 | 81 | 7·0 | 0 | 0·0 |
| Colchester | 68 | 0·7 | 197 | 6·6 | 1,685 | 4·0 |
| Epping Forest | 224 | 2·4 | 41 | 7·6 | 1,153 | 3·2 |
| Harlow | 164 | 0·9 | 6 | 1·7 | 258 | 2·3 |
| Maldon | 10 | 0·4 | 11 | 3·1 | 466 | 2·7 |
| Rochford | 6 | 0·2 | 0 | 0·0 | 0 | 0·0 |
| Southend-on-Sea | 73 | 0·9 | 0 | 0·0 | 2,392 | 4·1 |
| Tendring | 14 | 0·3 | 43 | 3·2 | 2,160 | 4·2 |
| Thurrock | 292 | 1·9 | n.a | n.a. | 918 | 3·0 |
| Uttlesford | 35 | 0·9 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
County—Hampshire
| ||||||
| Basingstoke and Deane | 111 | 0·9 | 47 | 2·2 | 789 | 2·1 |
| East Hampshire | 71 | 1·4 | 131 | 12·7 | 840 | 2·7 |
| Eastleigh | 115 | 2·2 | 5 | 0·6 | 1,170 | 3·7 |
| Fareham | 19 | 0·6 | 50 | 12·5 | 735 | 2·3 |
| Gosport | 37 | 0·7 | 460 | 9·7 | 710 | 3·5 |
| Hart | 9 | 0·3 | 10 | 0·8 | 930 | 3·8 |
| Havant | 69 | 1·7 | 101 | 1·2 | 800 | 2·4 |
| New Forest | 38 | 0·5 | 31 | 2·6 | 2,290 | 4·1 |
| Portsmouth | 675 | 4·6 | 282 | 8·0 | 1,704 | 3·1 |
| Rushmoor | 115 | 2·1 | 344 | 10·7 | 815 | 4·1 |
| Southampton | 536 | 2·5 | 125 | 4·3 | 2,200 | 4·0 |
| Test Valley | 437 | 5·8 | 251 | 15·0 | 449 | 1·7 |
| Winchester | 92 | 1·4 | 32 | 2·8 | 1,230 | 4·1 |
County—Hertfordshire
| ||||||
| Broxbourne | 85 | 1·7 | n.a. | n.a. | 952 | 4·0 |
| Dacorum | 237 | 1·5 | 35 | 2·0 | 928 | 2·8 |
| East Hertfordshire | 93 | 1·1 | 84 | 13·3 | 1,042 | 3·1 |
| Hertsmere | 90 | 1·1 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| North Hertfordshire | 121 | 1·0 | 16 | 1·0 | 1,135 | 3·8 |
| St. Albans | 39 | 0·5 | 60 | 4·7 | 800 | 21 |
| Stevenage | 125 | 0·9 | 0 | 0·0 | 268 | 2·0 |
| Three Rivers | 120 | 2·0 | 50 | 4·6 | 486 | 2·2 |
| Watford | 55 | 0·9 | 3 | 0·7 | 0 | 0·0 |
| Welwyn Hatfield | 209 | 1·4 | n.a. | n.a. | 825 | 4·0 |
Isle of Wight
| ||||||
Local Authority
| Local Authority
| Other Public plus Housing Association
| Private
| |||
Number
| Per cent.
| Number
| Per cent.
| Number
| Per cent.
| |
| Medina | 25 | 0·8 | 106 | 10·7 | 769 | 3·0 |
| South Wight | 7 | 0·3 | 0 | 0·0 | n.a. | n.a. |
County—Kent
| ||||||
| Ashford | 164 | 1·9 | 3 | 0·6 | 1,044 | 4·0 |
| Canterbury | 88 | 1·2 | 15 | 1·0 | 1,397 | 3·4 |
| Dartford | 116 | 1·7 | 23 | 3·4 | 686 | 3·2 |
| Dover | 104 | 1·3 | 39 | 1·8 | 1,563 | 4·9 |
| Gillingham | 75 | 1·7 | n.a. | n.a. | 1,226 | 4·0 |
| Gravesham | 133 | 1·6 | 15 | 3·5 | 1,023 | 3·7 |
| Maidstone | 102 | 1·1 | 71 | 6·2 | 703 | 1·8 |
| Rochester upon Medway | 361 | 3·4 | 43 | 4·8 | 2,100 | 4·8 |
| Sevenoaks | 122 | 1·6 | 0 | 0·0 | 850 | 2·5 |
| Shepway | 27 | 0·6 | 43 | 4·0 | 1,145 | 3·4 |
| Swale | 78 | 0·9 | n.a. | n.a. | 1,987 | 5·5 |
| Thanet | 42 | 0·6 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Tonbridge and Mailing | 45 | 0·6 | 19 | 2·5 | 743 | 2·5 |
| Tunbridge Wells | 26 | 0·4 | 57 | 4·7 | 1,428 | 4·5 |
County—Oxfordshire
| ||||||
| Cherwell | 72 | 0·9 | 0 | 0·0 | 1,270 | 4·0 |
| Oxford | 160 | 1·9 | 14 | 1·1 | 1,281 | 4·6 |
| South Oxfordshire | 77 | 1·0 | 24 | 0·9 | 566 | 1·4 |
| Vale of White Horse | 76 | 1·2 | 38 | 2·0 | 492 | 1·6 |
| West Oxfordshire | 38 | 0·8 | 52 | 2·9 | 666 | 2·6 |
County—Surrey
| ||||||
| Elmbridge | 127 | 2·2 | 33 | 3·0 | 1,280 | 3·2 |
| Epsom and Ewell | 30 | 1·3 | n.a. | n.a. | 540 | 2·3 |
| Guildford | 132 | 1·8 | 16 | 0·9 | 1,226 | 3·1 |
| Mole Valley | 21 | 0·5 | 42 | 5·1 | 900 | 3·6 |
| Reigate and Banstead | 128 | 1·8 | 71 | 3·8 | 1,034 | 2·9 |
| Runnymede | 32 | 0·7 | 12 | 1·7 | 830 | 3·5 |
| Spelthorne | 31 | 0·7 | n.a. | n.a. | 0 | 0·0 |
| Surrey Heath | 35 | 1·0 | 138 | 13·7 | 1,057 | 4·4 |
| Tandridge | 36 | 0·9 | 35 | 7·0 | 268 | 1·1 |
| Waverley | 53 | 0·8 | 0 | 0·0 | 754 | 2·1 |
| Woking | 211 | 4·4 | n.a. | n.a. | 499 | 1·8 |
County—West Sussex
| ||||||
| Adur | 31 | 0·8 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Arun | 41 | 0·8 | 0 | 0·0 | 898 | 1·8 |
| Chichester | 64 | 0·9 | 42 | 3·7 | n.a. | n.a. |
| Crawley | 119 | 1·0 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Horsham | 52 | 0·8 | 5 | 0·5 | 893 | 2·6 |
| Mid Sussex | 32 | 0·6 | n.a. | n.a. | 1,200 | 3·1 |
| Worthing | 28 | 0·9 | 11 | 0·9 | 1,700 | 4·5 |
Region 7: South West
| ||||||
Local Authority
| Local Authority
| Other Public plus Housing Association
| Private
| |||
Number
| Per cent.
| Number
| Per cent.
| Number
| Per cent.
| |
County—Avon
| ||||||
| Bath | 156 | 2·1 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Bristol | 448 | 1·1 | 50 | 0·8 | 5,137 | 4·6 |
| Kingswood | 70 | 1·4 | 13 | 2·0 | 966 | 3·5 |
| Northavon | 64 | 1·1 | 66 | 8·5 | 1,024 | 2·7 |
| Wansdyke | 41 | 0·8 | n.a | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Woodspring | 229 | 2·6 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
County—Cornwall and Isles of Scilly
| ||||||
| Caradon | 16 | 0·3 | 0 | 0·0 | 1,438 | 5·6 |
| Carrick | 7 | 0·1 | 44 | 17·5 | 1,150 | 4·2 |
| Kerrier | 44 | 1·1 | n.a. | n.a. | 1,198 | 4·0 |
| North Cornwall | 26 | 0·6 | 45 | 5·4 | 839 | 3·4 |
| Penwith | 49 | 1·2 | 5 | 3·5 | 1.311 | 6·0 |
| Restormel | 1 | 0·0 | 0 | 0·0 | 1,275 | 4·4 |
| Isles of Scilly | 4 | 2·8 | 1 | 100·0 | n.a. | n.a. |
County—Devon
| ||||||
| East Devon | 60 | 1·0 | 47 | 8·0 | 1,153 | 2·7 |
| Exeter | 96 | 1·2 | 26 | 1·3 | n.a. | n.a. |
| Mid Devon | 41 | 0·8 | 0 | 0·0 | 862 | 4·6 |
Local Authority
| Local Authority
| Other Public plus Housing Association
| Private
| |||
Number
| Per cent.
| Number
| Per cent.
| Number
| Per cent.
| |
| North Devon | 32 | 0·7 | 20 | 31 | 553 | 2·0 |
| Plymouth | 254 | 1·1 | 204 | 2·8 | 3,146 | 4·9 |
| South Hams | 37 | 0·9 | 0 | 0·0 | 1,161 | 4·2 |
| Teignbridge | 77 | 1·5 | n.a. | n.a. | 1,360 | 3·7 |
| Torbay | 50 | 1·1 | 44 | 4·1 | 2,125 | 4·6 |
| Torridge | 12 | 0·5 | 0 | 0·0 | 400 | 2·2 |
| West Devon | 31 | 1·7 | 44 | 10·2 | 803 | 5·2 |
County—Dorset
| ||||||
| Bournemouth | 76 | 1·1 | 0 | 0·0 | 1,316 | 2·4 |
| Christchurch | 19 | 1·1 | 6 | 1·9 | 520 | 2·4 |
| North Dorset | 31 | 0·9 | 34 | 3·1 | 447 | 2·9 |
| Poole | 21 | 0·3 | 18 | 1·4 | 1,613 | 3·5 |
| Purbeck | 16 | 0·7 | n.a. | n.a. | 820 | 5·5 |
| West Dorset | 32 | 0·5 | n.a. | n.a. | 1,046 | 3·8 |
| Weymouth and Portland | 36 | 0·9 | 160 | 14·3 | 360 | 1·9 |
| Wimbourne | 15 | 0·6 | n.a. | n.a. | 889 | 3·1 |
County—Gloucestershire
| ||||||
| Cheltenham | 59 | 0·9 | 20 | 1·9 | 1,826 | 6·4 |
| Cotswold | 27 | 0·5 | 2 | 0·2 | 1,700 | 7·3 |
| Forest of Dean | 42 | 0·8 | n.a. | n.a. | 1,388 | 6·1 |
| Gloucester | 74 | 1·1 | 26 | 3·3 | 1,286 | 4·7 |
| Stroud | 98 | 1·3 | n.a. | n.a. | 1,633 | 4·8 |
| Tewkesbury | 54 | 1·3 | n.a. | n.a. | 813 | 3·0 |
County—Somerset
| ||||||
| Mendip | 37 | 0·6 | n.a. | n.a. | 1,248 | 4·4 |
| Sedgemoor | 46 | 0·7 | n.a. | n.a. | 1,151 | 3·8 |
| South Somerset | 62 | 0·5 | 153 | 18·2 | 2,065 | 4·8 |
| Taunton Deane | 43 | 0·5 | 67 | 7·8 | 1,307 | 4·8 |
| West Somerset | 19 | 0·9 | n.a. | n.a. | 400 | 3·5 |
County—Wiltshire
| ||||||
| Kennet | 50 | 0·9 | 387 | 11·4 | 764 | 4·5 |
| North Wiltshire | 78 | 10 | 343 | 12·7 | 1,138 | 3·7 |
| Salisbury | 65 | 0·8 | 100 | 3·0 | 1,242 | 4·2 |
| Thamesdown | 294 | 2·0 | 27 | 1·3 | 1,966 | 4·1 |
| West Wiltshire | 96 | 1·4 | 41 | 3·2 | 1,251 | 4·0 |
Region 8: West Midlands
| ||||||
Local Authority
| Local Authority
| Other Public plus Housing Association
| Private
| |||
Number
| Per cent.
| Number
| Per cent.
| Number
| Per cent.
| |
County—Hereford and Worcester
| ||||||
| Bromsgrove | 87 | 2·0 | n.a. | n.a. | 581 | 2·3 |
| Hereford | 27 | 0·5 | 38 | 5·6 | 342 | 2·5 |
| Leominster | 18 | 0·9 | 9 | 7·0 | 636 | 4·8 |
| Malvern Hills | 116 | 2·1 | n.a. | n.a. | 1,472 | 4·7 |
| Redditch | 210 | 2·1 | 6 | 1·2 | 443 | 2·6 |
| South Herefordshire | 5 | 0·2 | 0 | 0·0 | 836 | 5·1 |
| Worcester | 31 | 0·5 | 9 | 10 | 780 | 3·5 |
| Wychavon | 98 | 1·2 | 0 | 0·0 | 979 | 3·3 |
| Wyre Forest | 91 | 1·2 | 0 | 0·0 | 1,062 | 3·8 |
County—Shropshire
| ||||||
| Bridgnorth | 29 | 0·8 | 99 | 14·3 | 613 | 4·2 |
| North Shropshire | 14 | 0·4 | n.a. | n.a. | 640 | 4·2 |
| Oswestry | 15 | 0·5 | 0 | 0·0 | 670 | 6·9 |
| Shrewsbury and Atcham | 60 | 0·8 | 59 | 8·8 | 936 | 3·4 |
| South Shropshire | 44 | 2·3 | 0 | 0·0 | 1,250 | 9·4 |
| The Wrekin | 208 | 1·9 | 560 | 5·8 | 1,465 | 5·1 |
County—Staffordshire
| ||||||
| Cannock Chase | 105 | 1·2 | 28 | 1·6 | 748 | 3·6 |
| East Staffordshire | 118 | 1·7 | 25 | 3·8 | 1,804 | 6·1 |
| Lichfield | 118 | 1·9 | 4 | 0·4 | 730 | 2·9 |
| Newcastle-under-Lyme | 189 | 1·5 | 79 | 6·8 | 1,096 | 3·2 |
| South Staffordshire | 88 | 1·4 | 22 | 2·5 | 848 | 2·7 |
| Stafford | 147 | 1·8 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Staffordshire Moorlands | 46 | 1·1 | n.a. | n.a. | 1,274 | 4·0 |
| Stoke-on-Trent | 521 | 1·8 | 144 | 4·7 | 3,655 | 5·4 |
| Tamworth | 355 | 4·6 | 1 | 0·1 | 596 | 3·7 |
Local Authority
| Local Authority
| Other Public plus Housing Association
| Private
| |||
Number
| Per cent.
| Number
| Per cent.
| Number
| Per cent.
| |
County— Warwickshire
| ||||||
| North Warwickshire | 60 | 1·2 | 14 | 2·4 | 829 | 4·9 |
| Nuneaton and Bedworth | 171 | 1·8 | 26 | 1·4 | 1,108 | 3·5 |
| Rugby | 106 | 1·9 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Stratford-on-Avon | 82 | 1·1 | n.a. | n.a. | 992 | 3·0 |
| Warwick | 61 | 0·8 | 25 | 1·3 | 1,118 | 3·1 |
County—West Midlands
| ||||||
| Birmingham | 3,106 | 2·6 | 1,110 | 5·0 | 6,150 | 2·5 |
| Coventry | 957 | 3·8 | 91 | 2·1 | 3,370 | 3·7 |
| Dudley | 739 | 2·0 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Sandwell | 2,485 | 4·5 | 90 | 3·3 | 2,772 | 4·5 |
| Solihull | 354 | 2·2 | 23 | 2·0 | 1,175 | 2·0 |
| Walsall | 929 | 2·4 | 43 | 1·8 | 1,100 | 1·9 |
| Wolverhampton | 1,926 | 4·9 | 160 | 4·8 | 1,846 | 3·3 |
Region 9: North West excluding Cumbria
| ||||||
Local Authority
| Local Authority
| Other Public plus Housing Association
| Private
| |||
Number
| Per cent.
| Number
| Per cent.
| Number
| Per cent.
| |
County—Cheshire
| ||||||
| Chester | 116 | 1·4 | 78 | 6·9 | 1,547 | 4·3 |
| Congleton | 41 | 0·8 | 26 | 12·9 | 1,262 | 4·8 |
| Crewe and Nantwich | 205 | 2·4 | 30 | 4·6 | 1,529 | 5·0 |
| Ellesmere Port and Neston | 79 | 0·9 | 18 | 5·2 | 510 | 2·4 |
| Halton | 154 | 1·6 | 409 | 4·0 | 1,118 | 4·4 |
| Macclesfield | 223 | 2·6 | 22 | 0·7 | 2,250 | 4·7 |
| Vale Royal | 162 | 1·7 | 19 | 4·3 | 1,423 | 4·3 |
| Warrington | 276 | 2·1 | 251 | 4·5 | 2,170 | 4·3 |
County—Greater Manchester
| ||||||
| Bolton | 542 | 2·1 | 60 | 1·9 | 2,926 | 3·9 |
| Bury | 350 | 3·0 | 120 | 3·6 | 1,627 | 3·0 |
| Manchester | 4,939 | 6·2 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Oldham | 1,419 | 5·5 | 61 | 2·5 | n.a. | n.a. |
| Rochdale | 848 | 3·9 | 530 | 6·5 | 2,500 | 4·8 |
| Salford | 1,908 | 4·6 | 102 | 3·2 | 0 | 0·0 |
| Stockport | 365 | 2·2 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Tameside | 455 | 2·2 | 208 | 3·2 | 2,761 | 4·7 |
| Trafford | 283 | 2·1 | 156 | 3·1 | 2,657 | 4·0 |
| Wigan | 577 | 1·7 | 104 | 7·6 | 3,200 | 3·8 |
County—Lancashire
| ||||||
| Blackburn | 362 | 2·6 | 97 | 6·0 | 2,555 | 6·5 |
| Blackpool | 154 | 2·1 | 0 | 0·0 | 1,590 | 2·9 |
| Burnley | 557 | 7·6 | 56 | 6·1 | 1,600 | 5·4 |
| Chorley | 97 | 2·2 | 119 | 7·8 | 1,598 | 5·4 |
| Fylde | 20 | 0·8 | 59 | 9·3 | 1,450 | 5·5 |
| Hyndburn | 206 | 4·5 | 37 | 8·0 | 1,415 | 5·3 |
| Lancaster | 86 | 1·6 | n.a. | n.a. | 1,372 | 3·2 |
| Pendle | 97 | 1·9 | 25 | 8·0 | 1,340 | 4·5 |
| Preston | 305 | 2·8 | 173 | 4·9 | 2,091 | 5·7 |
| Ribble Valley | 28 | 1·5 | 0 | 0·0 | 896 | 5·3 |
| Rossendale | 196 | 3·3 | 47 | 10·2 | 1,525 | 7·6 |
| South Ribble | 72 | 1·7 | 16 | 0·6 | 1,340 | 4·4 |
| West Lancashire | 185 | 1·7 | 13 | 3·6 | 1,102 | 3·9 |
| Wyre | 56 | 1·4 | 0 | 0·0 | 1,131 | 3·2 |
County—Merseyside
| ||||||
| Knowsley | 368 | 1·4 | 20 | 1·8 | 1,202 | 3·9 |
| Liverpool | 7,704 | 11·9 | 1,177 | 6·3 | 5,159 | 4·5 |
| St. Helens | 251 | 1·2 | 61 | 2·3 | 2,393 | 5·1 |
| Sefton | 237 | 1·3 | n.a. | n.a. | 6,438 | 7·0 |
| Wirral | 694 | 2·8 | 150 | 3·4 | 5,003 | 4·7 |
| n.a. = Not available. | ||||||
Rates
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment whether a grant will be made to local authorities to publicise the means of payment of rates by those who will receive income support; and if he will make a statement.
Such a grant is not necessary. The rate demands and notice of rates and precepts rules 1985 provide that each rate demand note shall contain a statement about the rights of ratepayers to elect to pay rates by instalments; and shall also give a general indication of the right to a rebate, and contain a statement that the rating authority will, on request, provide further information about the availability of such a rebate.
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment (1) if he will give the total figure that he now expects to provide in rate support grant to English counties in 1987–88; and if he will also list the amount payable to each county;(2) if he will list county by county the population figures upon which the 1987–88 rate support grant has been based.
The total amount available for block grant for counties in England in 1987–88 is £3,814 million for total expenditure equal to the settlement assumption. Details of individual authorities' grant entitlement and information about population data are included in tables which were made available in the Vote Office and Libraries of the House on 20 March 1987.
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment if he will consider establishing a national weekly collection system for rates payments by persons on income support through the Post Office; and if he will make a statement.
All ratepayers have the right to pay their annual rates bills in at least 10 instalments. It is for individual local authorities to decide whether they wish to allow more than ten instalments, and to establish payment arrangements appropriate to their areas.
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment if he will list by authority what projected rate fund balances appear in their rates estimates for 1987–88.
The information is currently being returned and is not yet available for most authorities. The return date for the inquiry is 1 April.
Salcombe Estuary
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment (1) what information he has as to the degree of consultation with the local harbour board undertaken by the Nature Conservancy Council prior to the designation of the entire Salcombe estuary as a site of special scientific interest;(2) what representations he has received on the designation of the entire Salcombe estuary as a site of special scientific interest in the light of the proposed dredging of the low-water and other channels for fishing vessels.
I shall answer these question shortly.
London Authorities (Expenditure)
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment what efforts are made by his Department to determine the amounts spent by London authorities on policies concerned with women's rights, gay rights, local economic development and support for ethnic minorities.
Those necessary for the work of the Department, and consistent with the fact that the primary responsibilities for discretionary spending by local authorities rests with those authorities.
Local Government Reform (Detriment Payments)
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment when he expects that all eligible staff of the abolished authorities will have received their full entitlements to detriment payments.
Entitlements to financial detriment compensation are payable on a continuing basis for a period of eight years from the date when the loss or dimunution of emoluments occurs. Such entitlements cannot be paid in full until this period has expired.
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment what are the reasons for the delay in determining the detriment payments to the 388 eligible staff from the Greater London council.
This is a matter for the London residuary body.
Youth Centres, Bradford
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment when he is to take a decision on an application, submitted by Brad ford corporation, under the urban programme, for a Bangladeshi youth centre in Bradford; and if he will make a statement.
A decision will be made as soon as possible.
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment if, pursuant to his answer of 12 March, Official Report, column 269, he can now announce his decision on the application submitted by Bradford council under the urban programme to replace the West Bowling youth centre; and if he will make a statement.
This project was approved on 13 March.
Mv St Giles
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment if he will make a statement on the future of the MV St. Giles at Rosyth naval base.
Dredging services at Rosyth naval base are undertaken partially by contract and partially by the PSA's own vessel, the St. Giles. The National Audit Office recommended that there was no special need to retain an in-house dredger at Rosyth and that all dredging should be undertaken by contract. The recommendation is at present under consideration by the Department.
Landscape Conservation
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment whether he will list the organisations that have responded to his Department's document entitled "Protecting the Countryside: the Government's Consultation Proposals for Landscape Conservation Orders"; and if he will make a statement about the responses received.
I shall answer this question shortly.
Ammonia Emissions
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment if he will give the latest figures for annual emissions of ammonia in the United Kingdom; and what has been the trend in emission levels since 1960.
The university of Utrecht calculated that annual emissions of ammonia in the United Kingdom in 1982(from animals, fertilisers and industry) were of the order of 405,000 tonnes. A similar study undertaken by Imperial college, London in 1980 calculated that there had been a slow increase in emissions of ammonia arising from livestock (which make up some 80 per cent, of total national emissions) from 321,000 tonnes in 1960, through 336,000 tonnes in 1970 to 366,000 tonnes in 1980.
Marine Pollution
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment (1) if he will estimate the input of inorganic nitrogen to the North sea from the atmosphere and originating from United Kingdom sources; and what assessment he has made as to the significance of this input in a whole sea context;(2) if he will estimate total United Kingdom inputs to the North sea for 1983, 1984 and 1985 of lead, cadmium, mercury, zinc, arsenic and copper; and if he will indicate the proportions of the overall inputs to the North sea that these figures represent.
I will write to the hon. Member.
Unleaded Petrol
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment what percentage of the United Kingdom petrol market he estimates will be given over to unleaded petrol by 31 December.
The recent announcement, by my right hon. Friend the Chancellor of the Exchequer, of a reduction in the tax on unleaded petrol can be expected to stimulate a still wider availability of this new fuel, which is already on sale at more than 200 stations throughout the United Kingdom. It is too early yet to estimate how quickly this change will prompt demand by the motorist for unleaded petrol.
Lord Dowding (Statue)
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment if it is intended to erect a statue to the memory of the late Air Chief Marshal, Lord Dowding, for his leading contribution in the battle of Britain; and if he will make a statement.
I shall answer this question shortly.
Property Services Agency
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment whether he has yet reached decisions on the proposed reorganisation of the United Kingdom territorial organisation of the Property Services Agency.
My right hon. Friend and I have decided to proceed with the PSA reorganisation from 1 April 1987, although in a number of cases closure will be effected over time and some staff may remain outstationed in the interim. We are satisfied that the proposals to merge the regional and area tiers of management will yield considerable managerial and cost benefits.The pattern of regional offices in England and Wales will be unchanged and the effect on existing area offices and area estates offices is given in the table. This excludes the south-east region, where reorganisation has already begun, and the London region, which is the subject of a separate study.Although in Scotland the Aberdeen and Glasgow area offices will close, we have decided to retain a substantial PSA presence in both locations to handle maintenance and estates functions. All design work will ultimately be concentrated in Edinburgh.The current area office at Rosyth will close with essential functions being transferred to Edinburgh.
| PSA region/ directorate and headquarters | Area office | Remarks |
| Scotland | ||
| Edinburgh | Aberdeen1 | Retained as an outstation |
| Glasgow1 | Retained as an outstation | |
| Rosyth | To close | |
| North West | ||
| Manchester | Lisburn1 | Retained as an outstation |
| Preston1 | Retained as an outstation (Note 1) | |
| North East | ||
| Leeds | Newcastle1 | Retained as an outstation |
| Leeds | To close | |
| York | To close | |
| Midland | ||
| Birmingham | Nottingham1 | To close |
| Shrewsbury1 | To close | |
| Birmingham1 | To close | |
| Wales | ||
| Cardiff | Colwyn Bay1 | Retained as an outstation |
| Haverfordwest | Retained as an outstation (Note 2) | |
| Cardiff | To close | |
| Eastern | ||
| Cambridge | Cambridge/USAF | Merged with Region (Note 3) |
| Newmarket | Retained as an outstation (Note 4) | |
| Colchester | Retained as an outstation | |
| Southern | ||
| Reading | Aldershot1 | Retained as an outstation |
| Bournemouth1 | Retained as an outstation | |
| Abingdon1 | To close (Note 5) | |
| South West | ||
| Bristol | Cheltenham | To close |
| Plymouth1 | Retained as an outstation | |
| Bulford | Retained as an outstation (Note 6) | |
| Bristol | To close | |
| 1 Also an Estates Office. | ||
Notes:
Inner Urban Areas
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment if he will list all those local authorities in England and Wales which are designated or include areas that are designated under the Inner Urban Areas Act 1978; and in respect of which of these authorities arrangements have been made with him under section 7 of the Act.
[pursuant to his reply, 20 March 1987]: The following districts have been specified as designated districts under the Inner Urban Areas Act 1978. Under the Act, the council of both the district and the county which includes the designated district are designated district authorities. The districts indicated 1 are those in relation to which special arrangements have been entered into under section 7 of the Act.
- Barnsley
- Birmingham1
- Blackburn
- Blaenau Gwent
- Bolton
- Bradford
- Brent
- Burnley
- Cardiff
- Coventry
- Cynon Valley
- Doncaster
- Ealing
- Gateshead1
- Greenwich
- Hackney1
- Hammersmith and Fulham
- Haringey
- Hartlepool
- Islington1
- Kingston upon Hull
- Knowsley
- Lambeth1
- Langbaurgh
- Leeds
- Leicester
- Lewisham
- Liverpool1
- Manchester1
- Merthyr Tydfil
- Middlesbrough
- Newcastle
- Newham
- Newport
- North Tyneside
- Nottingham
- Ogwr
- Oldham
- Port Talbot
- Rhondda
- Rhymney Valley
- Rochdale
- Rotherham
- St. Helens
- Salford1
- Sandwell
- Sefton
- Sheffield
- South Tyneside
- Southwark
- Sunderland
- Swansea
- Tower Hamlets
- Walsall
- Wigan
- Wirral
- Wolverhampton
Compulsory Purchase Orders
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment if he has any plans to extend the terms of compulsory purchase orders to include adequate compensation for any inconvenience experienced by the owner of a property.
[pursuant to his reply, Friday 20 March 1987]: In accordance with the Land Compensation Acts, the compensation payable for compulsorily purchased land already consists in most cases of the market value of the land (without taking into account the effect on that value of the scheme for which the land is being taken), a disturbance payment, and a home loss payment where the claimant is displaced from a home where he has lived for at least five years. The disturbance payment covers such items as the claimants's legal and surveyors' fees, removal costs and reconnection charges.
New Build Housing Schemes
asked the Secretary of State for the Environment what was the share respectively of (a) public direct labour schemes and (b) private contractors' schemes in local authority house-building for the years 1985 and 1986, respectively, in (i) England and Wales and (ii) Greater London.
[pursuant to his reply, Friday 20 March 1987]: The numbers of local authority new build housing schemes, based on returns made to the Department by local authorities of tenders accepted, are as follows:
| (i) England and Wales | (ii) Greater London | |||
| 1985 | 1986 | 1985 | 1986 | |
| (a) Public direct labour schemes | 37 | 35 | 4 | 3 |
| (b) Private contractors' schemes | 541 | 515 | 39 | 23 |
Northern Ireland
Warning Devices (Republic Territory)
asked the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland if details have been furnished to the Government of the Irish Republic of the disciplinary action taken against the Army officers held responsible for the recent placing of warning devices on the territory of the Republic.
No.
Motor Vehicles (Offences)
asked the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland if he will publish in the Official Report figures for Northern Ireland corresponding to those published for England and Wales in "Offences Relating to Motor Vehicles England and Wales" issued by the Secretary of State for the Home Department; and if he will make a statement.
I shall reply to my hon. Friend as soon as possible.
Agriculture, Fisheries And Food
Food (Alternative Sources)
asked the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food if he will initiate a publicity campaign to inform the public of the availability and use of alternative sources of food from hedgerows and uncultivated land.
No.
Butter
asked the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food what alternative methods of supporting the market are to be used by the European Economic Community Commission in place of intervention buying of butter.
The Council regulations modifying the intervention regime in the dairy sector provide that, in the event of permanent intervention being suspended, buying in by intervention agencies may continue on the basis of competitive tenders and that other measures will be taken to maintain market stability. There is also provision for support measures for other dairy products such as cream. It is up to the Commission, taking account of the advice of the milk management committee, to decide what action is appropriate. By way of illustration, the Commission has suggested that existing schemes for the disposal of intervention stocks could be adapted to apply to current production. For butter, this would include sales to non profit-making organisations, concentrated butter for cooking and use in food manufacture.
asked the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food what was the per capita butter consumption of the United Kingdom in the last year for which figures are available; and what percentage of this butter was produced in New Zealand.
Consumption of butter in the United Kingdom is estimated at 5 kg per capita in 1985. The quota for imports pf butter from New Zealand was equivalent to 28 per cent, of United Kingdom consumption in that year.
Pesticides
asked the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food whether his Department has obtained toxicological data prepared by the International Bio Test Laboratory in Illinois and submitted by a pesticide manufacturer.
My Department receives toxicological data from a number of sources in support of applications for pesticide approvals. Where these include data originating from the international bio test laboratory, we require independent validation of the methodology and results of the tests involved.
Food Aid
asked the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food where residents in the London borough of Wandsworth should make inquiries to find out the distribution point for the collection of surplus European Economic Community foods; and if he will make a statement.
Inquiries should be made with a local branch of one of the charitable organisations on the list which I gave on 29 January in my reply to the hon. Member for Carrick, Cumnock and Doon Valley (Mr. Foulkes).
asked the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food whether he will list those organisations in Birmingham, by each parliamentary constituency, responsible for the distribution of surplus European Economic Community butter, cheese and beef; and on what dates distribution of each commodity began in each constituency.
[pursuant to his reply, 19 March, 1987 c. 601]: As I made clear in my reply of 11 March to the hon. Members for Walthamstow (Mr. Deakins) and for Birkenhead (Mr. Field), I do not have information on distributions by geographical area, nor do I plan to have such information compiled.
Nato Food And Agriculture Planning Committee
asked the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, pursuant to the reply of 13 February 1986, Official Report, column 527, if he will make the minutes of the meetings of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation Food and Agriculture Planning Committee available in the Library.
That is not possible, because the proceedings of the NATO Food and Agriculture Planning Committee are security classified by NATO.
Ice-Cream
asked the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food what proportion of ice-cream (a) manufactured and (b) sold in the United Kingdom contains (i) mainly milk products, (ii) some milk products and (iii) no milk products.
The information requested is not readily available in the form requested. However, under the Ice-Cream Regulations 1967, ice-cream must contain not less than 5 per cent, fat, and not less than 7·5 per cent, milk solids other than fat. "Dairy" type ice-cream must contain not less than 5 per cent, milk fats, not less than 7·5 per cent, milk solids other than fat and may contain no fat other than milk fats, unless present as a result of another ingredient.
asked the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food if he will estimate the effect on current surplus United Kingdom milk production of requiring that all ice-cream currently (a) sold and (b) manufactured in the United Kingdom be made of milk products supplied from the United Kingdom fanning industry; and if he will seek to make this his policy.
Under European Community law, it would not be possible to require that ice-cream sold or manufactured in the United Kingdom be made of milk products supplied by the United Kingdom farming industry.
asked the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food if he will make it his policy to prohibit the sale of ice-cream unless it contains a substantial percentage of milk products; and if he will make a statement.
Under the Ice-Cream Regulations 1967 ice cream must contain at least 5 per cent, fat and 7·5 per cent, milk solids other than fat. "Dairy ice cream" must contain only milk fat (other than that present as a result of the use of egg, flavours, emulsifying or stabilising agents). I understand that a good quality dairy ice cream will contain a considerably higher proportion of milk products than the minimum laid down. Consumers are therefore able to make a choice, according to the price they are prepared to pay, between ordinary ice cream, and dairy ice cream. I have no plans to amend these regulations.
Salcombe Estuary
asked the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food (1) if he will make a grant towards the cost of dredging the low-water channel in the Salcombe estuary for commercial shellfish vessels working the shellfish quays;(2) when he issued a consent for the dumping of the dredged soil from the low-water channel in the Salcombe estuary; and if there were any conditions attached to this consent;(3) if he will make funds available to the Salcombe Harbour Board to fund the costs of the proposed monitoring by the Nature Conservancy Council of the disposal of the dredged soil from the low-water channel in the licensed dumping ground.
I shall reply to my hon. Friend as soon as possible.
Milk
asked the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food what was the per capita milk consumption of the United Kingdom in the last year which figures are available; and what are the comparable figures in other European Economic Community countries.
Estimates of per capita consumption of liquid milk for nine member states are published by the Milk Marketing Board in "EEC Dairy Facts and Figures, 1986". The latest published figures for 1985 are as follows:
| Consumption of Liquid Milk in EC Member States1 | |
| kg/head | |
| Germany | 71·5 |
| France | 82·8 |
| Italy | 277·7 |
| Netherlands | 93·7 |
| Belgium | 75·9 |
| Luxembourg | 83·6 |
| United Kingdom | 126·7 |
| Irish Republic | 190·5 |
| Denmark | 130·2 |
| 1 Excluding Spain, Portugal and Greece | |
| 2 Estimate | |
Source: EEC Dairy Facts and Figures 1986, Milk Marketing Board.
Cheese
asked the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food what was the per capita cheese consumption in the United Kingdom in the last year for which figures are available; and what percentage of this cheese was produced in France.
Consumption of cheese in the United Kingdom is estimated at 6·5 kg per capita in 1985. There are no statistics on the consumption of cheese produced in France but imports of cheese from France in 1985 were equivalent to 3 per cent, of consumption in that year.
Outgoers Scheme
asked the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food if he will consider increasing the level of compensation under the outgoers scheme for dairy farmers.
I shall reply to my hon. Friend as soon as possible.
North Sea Fisheries (Disease Levels)
asked the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food if he will give the numbers of marine vertebrate fish sampled in 1983, 1984 and 1985 with the specific objective of monitoring the disease levels in the populations present in the North sea; and if he will list the species involved.
I shall reply to the hon. Member as soon as possible.
Freezer Trawlers
asked the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food whether, pursuant to his answer to the hon. Member for St. Helens, North (Mr. Evans) 17 February, Official Report, columns 601–602, he will state the factors which he treats as relevant in determining the allocation of the additional licences for freezer trawlers for the pelagic fisheries.
[pursuant to his reply, 19 March c. 598]: It would be difficult to draw up an exhaustive list of such factors and I do not think that it would be useful to do so while the applications are still under consideration.
Food Subsidies
asked the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food if he will state the quantities of whole milk, semi-skimmed milk, whole milk yoghurt, semi-skimmed milk yoghurt, buttermilk, natural cheese and processed cheese, supplied to each local education authority in Great Britain on which an EEC subsidy was claimed for the 1984–85 and 1985–86 school years.
[pursuant to his reply, 19 March, c. 613]: This information is not readily available and could only be provided at disproportionate cost.
Surplus Food (Quality)
asked the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food how many instances have occurred where supplies of surplus European Economic Community food have been withdrawn after distribution due to doubts regarding its quality.
[pursuant to his reply, 19 March, c. 612]: Only two such instances have been notified to my Department, both of them relating to the hon. Member's constituency. In either case, the product concerned was cheese purchased from commercial sources.
Social Services
Alzheimer's Disease
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services what research has been carried out into the relationship between flouridation of water supplies and the aluminium content of water and the implications of this for the incidence of Alzheimer's disease; and if he will make a statement.
The Department is aware of a recent study into the effect of boiling fluoridated water in aluminium cookware. There is no evidence that aluminium by itself is the cause of Alzheimer's disease and much evidence points to the contrary. Nor is there any conclusive evidence that aluminium is a contributory factor. An initial epidemiological investigation into the relationship of water quality to Alzheimer's disease is being conducted by the Medical Research Council neuroendocrinology unit in Newcastle. The first results are expected in 1988.
Aids
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services (1) whether he intends to introduce further screening for the AIDS-related virus HTLV I;(2) whether his Department is monitoring the number of people in Britain with the AIDS-related virus HTLV I; and if he will make a statement.
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services (1) what figures he has for the number of people carrying the HTLV I virus;(2) what plans he has to test blood supplies for the HTLV I virus;(3) what plans he has to combat the spread of the HTLV I virus; what facilities he is making available to screen people for the HTLV I virus; and if he will make a statement.
I shall let the hon. Members have replies as soon as possible.
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services (1) if he will estimate the current cost of screening blood donations for the AIDS virus;(2) whether he has any plans to review the current screening programme for the AIDS virus in blood donations; and if he will make a statement;(3) if he will make a statement outlining the procedures currently adopted for the screening of blood donations for the AIDS virus;(4) what efforts are made to trace the donors of blood which is found through the screening process to contain the AIDS virus;(5) whether he is satisfied with the current level of confidentiality with which the screening of donated blood for the AIDS virus is carried out.
There is no need at present to review the current programme for screening blood donations for HIV.The safety of the blood supply in this country is maintained in two ways. First, all potential donors are given a leaflet which asks those who are at risk of AIDS not to donate blood. Secondly, all blood donations are tested for antibodies to HIV.
Initial tests are carried out in the laboratories of the regional transfusion centres and donations are only released for use when all the tests have been completed and found negative.
Where an initial test is positive, it is repeated by the RTC. Samples of repeatedly positive donations are sent to one of the reference laboratories of the Public Health Laboratory Service for confirmation. In the rare event of a confirmed positive test, the donor is informed by a doctor from the RTC and given counselling help.
A donor's test results and medical history are always kept in the strictest confidence.
Of nearly 3·5 million donations tested for antibodies to HIV since screening began, only a tiny number (002 per cent.) have been found positive. The estimated cost of screening all blood donations for antibodies to HIV in 1986–87 is £2·75 million.
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services (1) whether he has made any estimate of the total cost of introducing a national blood screening programme to identify carriers of the AIDS virus;(2) what assessment he has made of the feasibility of introducing a national screening programme to identify carriers of the AIDS virus.
Testing for anti-bodies to AIDS virus is already available nationally on a voluntary basis. The Government are not persuaded that a national screening programme would be a sensible public health measure at the present time, and consequently no detailed assessment of the feasibility and costs have been undertaken.
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services (1) what detailed laboratory evidence is available to his Department that the cell-free human immunodeficiency virus which gives rise to AIDS has been identified in human semen; and if he will make a statement;(2) what detailed laboratory evidence is available to his Department suggesting that a number of cells which contain either AIDS-related viral RNA or pro-viral DNA have been isolated in semen; and if he will make a statement;(3) whether it remains the view of the Government's Chief Medical Officer that the AIDS virus is present in semen in very high concentrations; and if he will make a statement outlining the published laboratory data from which this conclusion was drawn.
There is no evidence to suggest that whether or not HIV in semen is cell-free or cell-associated is relevant to the transmission of infection from semen. Nor are the number of cells in semen containing AIDS-related viral RNA or pro-viral DNA known to be relevant. The quantification of HIV in semen is not an exact science, but the available epidemiological evidence confirms the views of experts worldwide that the virus is present in high enough concentrations in the semen of infected individuals so that transmission of infection can occur if this semen enters another person's rectum or vagina. I also refer my hon. Friend to my reply to the hon. Member for Great Grimsby (Mr. Mitchell) on 19 March at column 626 and to the references made available there.
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services if he will make a statement outlining the published data upon which the Government have based their conclusions that prevention of semen transmission in sexual contact by use of a condom will lower the risk of AIDS transmission.
It is well established that the use of condoms protects substantially against sexually transmitted disease. The value of condoms in providing protection against HIV infection in particular was discussed in an editorial in the British Medical Journal on 15 November 1986 which quoted the literature available at that time. Further data was published in the Journal of the Americanl Medical Association in Vol. 257 p. 640–44 (1987) and in the New England Journal of Medicine in Vol. 316 p. 345 (1987).
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services (1) what research data are available to him about the alleged correlation between the widespread promotion of barrier contraceptives and the level of unprotected sexual activity among the young in the United Kingdom; and if he will make a statement;(2) what account was taken in formulating the Government's AIDS advertising programme of the report in
British Medicine about Swedish research into the correlation between the availability of contraceptives and the level of sexual activity, a copy of which has been sent to him; and if he will make a statement.
(3) what consideration was given in the formation of the policy underlying the Government's AIDS advertising programme to the statement of Dr. Judith Bury of the Brook Advisory Centres regarding the alleged correlation between the provision of contraceptives and the incidence of unprotected sexual intercourse.
We are not aware of any good evidence to suggest that the wider availability or promotion of condoms or other contraceptives leads to higher levels of unprotected sexual activity. Our own surveys amongst young people reveal a high level of understanding that reduction in the number of sexual partners can reduce the risk of catching the AIDS virus and that the use of condoms can also do so.
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services if he plans any review of his anti-AIDS policy in the light of the views expressed by Dr. John Seale in the British Medical Journal, a copy of which has been sent to him, regarding the effectiveness of the Government's advertising and public education campaign as a contribution to the control of AIDS.
We have no such plans.
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services what guidance the Chief Medical Officer at his Department has given on the professional position of doctors suffering from AIDS; what information he has as to the number of (a) general practitioners, (b) hospital doctors and (c) other doctors suffering from AIDS; and if he will make a statement.
I shall let my hon. Friend have a reply as soon as possible.
Pensioners (Food Allocations)
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services whether he will consider an additional page in the state pension book to enable an entry to be made to register that the pensioner has received his or her allocation of free European Community butter, cheese, meat, and so on.
It is desirable to restrict entries in state pension order books to those necessary for the operation of the pension payment system. Entries in order books by other bodies could lead to confusion and difficulty. For this reason, it would not be appropriate to include an additional page to record receipt of food from the current Economic Community distribution scheme. Moreover, release of stocks of butter etc. from the short-term assistance scheme will terminate on 31 March.
Solvent Abuse
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services if he is planning any new initiatives to prevent solvent abuse, especially aimed at young abusers.
No new central initiatives are planned by the Department although we shall continue to keep the need for such initiatives under review.
Benefits
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services what would be the cost of doubling child benefit (a) if the increase was offset against all other child additions for which claimants drawing social security benefits were entitled, (b) if it was offset, additionally, where the increase was larger than any child addition entitlement, against any supplementary benefit entitlement, (c) if it was further offset against any entitlement to national insurance benefits and (d) if the increase was taxed (i) at the rate for higher rate taxpayers at their marginal rate of tax and (ii) at the standard rate where this was applicable.
Based on benefit rates coming into effect in April 1987, the approximate cost, in Great Britain, would be as follows:
| £ million | |
| (a) | 3,850 |
| (b) | 3,600 |
| (c) | 3,500 |
| (d) (i) | 3,350 |
| (d) (ii) | 2,400 |
Severe Weather Payments
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services what provision will be made under the income support scheme for claimants needing help in paying fuel bills in exceptionally severe weather.
The exceptionally cold weather provision will be reviewed in the light of this winter's experience. It is too early to say what the outcome of that consideration will be.
Limited List Prescribing
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services what savings have resulted from the introductions of the selected list scheme of National Health Service drugs; and if he will make a statement.
Information from the Prescription Pricing Authority indicates that the Selected List Scheme saved £75 million on the drugs bill in 1985–86. The savings in each of the seven therapeutic groups was:
| £ million | |
| Cough and Cold remedies | 22 |
| Analgesics for mild to moderate pain | 19 |
| Indigestion remedies | 8 |
| Vitamins | 7½ |
| Laxatives | 2 |
| Bitters and tonics | 1 |
| Benzodiazepine Sedatives and Tranquillisers | 15½ |
Waiting Lists
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services if he will give for each waiting list return since 1 January 1974 the numbers of (a) urgent cases, (b) urgent cases waiting more than a month, (c) non-urgent cases, (d) non-urgent cases waiting more than a year and (e) the total number of urgent cases waiting.
I am sorry I cannot give the hon. Member the information he seeks. For information from September 1983 I refer the hon. Member to the hospital in-patient waiting list summary booklets, copies of which have been placed in the Library. Information, first collected centrally on statistical return SBH203 in September 1975, could be provided for earlier years only at disproportionate cost.
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services (1) if he will set out region by region, district health authority in-patient waiting lists, the total population living in each district, the percentage which the former represents of the latter and their national ranking by that percentage;(2) if he will set out region by region, the hospital urgent in-patient waiting list in each district, together with the number of urgent cases waiting more than a month, the percentage the latter presents of the former and their national ranking by that percentage;(3) if he will set out region by region, the hospital non urgent in-patient waiting list in each health district together with the number of non-urgent cases waiting more than a year, the percentage the latter represents of the former and their national ranking by that percentage.
I shall let the hon. Member have replies as soon as possible.
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services if, pursuant to his answer of 25 February, Official Report, column 317, he will list in the Official Report those health authorities which have decided, or are considering whether, to use allocations from the waiting list funds for projects involving the private sector indicating (a) the specialties involved, (b) the cost and (c) the private sector participants; and if he will make a statement.
[pursuant to his reply, 4 March 1987, c. 625]: The health authorities listed have decided, or are considering whether, to use resources from within their allocations from the waiting list fund for projects involving the private sector:
| Region | District |
| Yorkshire | Scunthorpe |
| Trent | Sheffield |
| Leicestershire | |
| Doncaster (three projects) | |
| North West Thames | Hounslow and Spelthorne |
| North East Thames | Southend |
| South East Thames | Hastings |
| Bromley | |
| Dartford and Gravesham | |
| Tunbridge Wells | |
| Wessex | East Dorset |
| Portsmouth | |
| Oxford | Milton Keynes |
| Mersey | Crewe |
| North Western | Blackburn |
| Barnsley (two projects) | |
| Bolton | |
| Stockport | |
| Bury |
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services if he will state the numbers of operations of each kind that he expects to be achieved in each district health authority as a result of the allocation of the extra £25 million to reduce the waiting lists.
The information is not available in precisely the form requested. I have today placed in the Library full details of the schemes planned by Regional Health Authorities for the improvement of waiting lists and times in their districts supported from the waiting list fund of £25 million for 1987–88.
Hospital Car Service
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services whether drivers in the hospital car service are reimbursed for using their cars at the same rate as administrative staff of the National Health Service who use their own cars on official business.
Health authorities are free to reimburse drivers in the hospital car service either at rates agreed by the General Whitley Council for NHS staff or at a rate determined in the light of local circumstances.
Medical Staff
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services if he will list the number of consultant medical staff per unit in each regional health authority in England and Wales at the latest available date.
I shall let my hon. Friend have a reply as soon as possible.
Diet Costs
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services if he will make a statement regarding the calculation of the additional expense of whole diet costs in "S Manual" clause 4736 from 1980 onwards, indicating from what data base within the 1979 "Family Expenditure Survey" the indications on average expenditure on food for different age groups used in the calculations was derived.
These figures are provided by the Chief Adjudication Officer as part of his guidance to the independent adjudication officers. I understand that the original figure of £9 quoted in 1981 as the average expenditure on food for an adult was derived from unpublished data from the 1979 "Family Expenditure Survey" in respect of single pensioners, married couple pensioners and single adults under 65 in the lowest 20 per cent, household income bracket. The figures in respect of children were based on a percentage of the relevant scale rates similar to that for adults. The figures have been increased in subsequent guidance in line with the food element of the retail prices index. They were last increased in November 1985 and will be increased again next month to coincide with the general uprating of benefits.
Hackney Hospital (Psychiatric Wards)
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services (1) if he will make a statement on conditions in psychiatric wards in Hackney hospital in the light of the report of the City and Hackney community health council;(2) if he will hold discussions with the City and Hackney district health authority about conditions in psychiatric wards in Hackney hospital;(3) if he will set up an inquiry into conditions in psychiatric wards in Hackney hospital.
I have seen a copy of a newsletter produced by Hackney community health council, which reported a number of allegations about conditions in psychiatric wards in Hackney hospital. Such allegations are matters for City and Hackney health authority to investigate in the first instance and take any action if appropriate.
Attendance Allowance
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services what categories of disabled people his counsel informed the Court of Appeal might be able to claim attendance allowance as a result of the judgment of the court in the Moran case.
In his address to the Court of Appeal following delivery of the judgment in the Moran case, counsel for the Secretary of State indicated that the judgment could affect the attendance allowance entitlement of people who suffer from epilepsy, diabetes, haemophilia, heart attacks and angina, or multi-sensory handicaps; elderly people who suffer attacks of confusion; and children who are mentally handicapped or hyperactive, or who suffer from asthma or cystic fibrosis.How the judgment might be applied is a matter for the independent Attendance Allowance Board, taking account of the references in the judgment to the importance of the facts of the individual case. We shall be considering our response to the judgment in the light of advice from the Board.
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services what steps he is taking to ensure that disabled people who may be entitled to attendance allowance or to the higher rate of attendance allowance in the light of the judgment of the Court of Appeal in the Moran case receive the allowance to which they are entitled, and that arrears are paid in respect of any underpayment resulting from the interpretation of the law prior to that judgment.
The application of the judgment is a matter for the independent Attandance Allowance Board who will be issuing guidelines to delegated medical practitioners. We are considering the questions which the hon. Member raises.
Wistons Nursing Home, Brighton
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services how many occasions during the last 12 months officials of his Department have visited Wistons nursing home, Dyke Road, Brighton, Sussex, in order to monitor the implementation of the Abortion Act and the Infant Life (Preservation) Act.
Wistons nursing home has received two visits of inspection under the Abortion Act during the past 12 months.
Childline
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services (1) if he will make it his policy to consult the charity Childline to assess the extent to which the demand for help for children who have been sexually abused exceeds the supply in terms of both of the amount and the nature of the help;(2) what financial support has so far been given to the charity Childline by his Department; and what assurances of support he has given for the future.
My right hon. Friend the Secretary of State announced on 30 October 1986 that ?50,000 was being made available to help launch Childline; no undertakings have been given for the future, since no further grant application has been received. An official of the Department is an observer on the council set up by Childline to advise the project and a close link is maintained with the organisation.
Prescription Charges
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services what is the annual cost of administering the system of exemptions from prescription charges.
I regret that the information required to make a reliable estimate is not available.
Nurses
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services if he will consider increasing the availability of courses for mothers returning to nursing; if he will further consider what measures he can take to encourage mothers to return to nursing before their children are of school age; and if he will make a statement.
It is for health authorities to match the provision of courses for mothers returning to nursing with the need. Every encouragement is given to authorities to attract qualified nurses to return, but whether mothers with children under school age should be sought particularly is a matter for each authority to decide.
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services if he is satisfied that sufficient consideration is given to advances in technology and patient care in back-to-nursing courses; and if he will make a statement.
It is for health authorities to ensure that the content of such courses is appropriate to the needs of the participants, and we would expect them to recognise the importance of advances in technology and patient care.
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services what consideration has been given to operating a flexible working hours system in the Health Service, enabling nurses with children to work during school hours; and if he will make a statement.
Health authorities already offer opportunities to nursing staff who are unable to work full time. Some 34 per cent, of such staff are employed on a part-time basis. We agree that there my be scope for employing more part-time staff and last June the Acting Chairman of the National Health Service Management Board wrote to Regional General Managers asking them to consider giving more opportunities to part-time working and job sharing. There are however limitations on the extent to which professional jobs can be broken into part-time components and the numbers of staff who can be employed only during school holidays.
Income Support
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services what representations he has received concerning the identification of an element equal to a person's rates payment within income support; and if he will make a statement.
We have received a number of representations on the effect on income support recipients of the proposal that people should pay a proportion of their general rates. Final decisions about the level of income support have not yet been taken.
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services if he is in a position to make a statement about the nature of rate assessment forms for people on income support.
I shall let my hon. Friend have a reply as soon as possible.
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services what discussions he has had with local authority associations concerning the calculation of net income of people on income support; to what effect; and if he will make a statement.
The housing benefit standing committee, which consists of representatives of the local authority associations and officials of the Department meets regularly. The committee commissioned a sub-group of its members to examine approaches to the calculation of net income for people receiving housing benefit under the reformed scheme. The sub-group met five times and produced a report setting out options for the treatment of net income. Draft regulations for the reformed scheme taking into account the majority preference for an actual net income approach, were issued to the local authority associations for formal consultation at the beginning of the year. The associations' responses are being considered at present.
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services how many representations he has received from local authorities seeking 100 per cent, assistance with rates for those who will receive income support, where the authorities meet spending targets set by the Government; and if he will make a statement.
I am not aware of any representations specifically making this point. People whose local authorities keep spending down will benefit from having to make a lower contribution towards rates. An arrangement such as that set out in my hon. Friend's question would not be in keeping with our objectives of greater accountability of local authorities to their electorates, equity between people on and off income support or living in different parts of the country, and operational simplicity.
Irradiated Food
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services when the Government will be announcing their decision on food irradiation following the report from the Advisory Committee on Irradiated and Novel Foods; and if he will make a statement.
I refer my hon. Friend to my reply to my hon. Friend the Member for Basingstoke (Mr. Hunter) on 12 January at column 120. We are still awaiting the further advice of the Advisory Committee on Irradiated and Novel Foods.
Hospitals (Accommodation Sales)
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services if he will list the number of units of accommodation attached to hospitals that have been sold by each district health authority over the last two years, and the price obtained in each case.
The Department collects information about sales of residential accommodation only by region. Sales in 1985–86 are set out in the following table. Comparable figures for 1986–87 should be available in May.
| Region | Number of Residential Units sold | Total proceeds £ |
| Northern | 67 | 1,039,000 |
| Yorkshire | 49 | 844,465 |
| Trent | 263 | 2,660,641 |
| East Anglian | 59 | 1,348,083 |
| North West Thames | 14 | 793,140 |
| North East Thames | 134 | 2,213,200 |
| South East Thames | 207 | 5,900,010 |
| South West Thames | 186 | 5,519,240 |
| Wessex | 37 | 1,174,469 |
| Oxford | 35 | 1,560,539 |
| South Western | 61 | 1,420,696 |
| West Midlands | 111 | 1,953,743 |
| Mersey | 120 | 1,140,808 |
| North Western | 50 | 1,290,616 |
| SHAs | Nil | Nil |
| ENGLAND | 1,393 | 28,858,650 |
Local Offices (Claims)
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services what was the back-log of claims at the Apollo house office of his Department in Coventry in January 1986, July 1986 and January 1987, respectively.
I shall let the hon. Member have a reply as soon as possible.
Nhs (Hospital And Community Services)
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services when he will answer the question on National Health Service hospital and community services from the hon. Member for Southwark and Bermondsey to which the Minister for Health, the hon. Member for Braintree (Mr. Newton), gave a holding reply on 27 February, Official Report, column 449.
The information requested in the hon. Member's earlier question is not readily available and is taking some time to compile. Work is in progress and I shall let the hon. Member have as full a reply as is possible as soon as I can.
Hepatitis B
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services if he has plans to encourage all health care staff to be vaccinated against hepatitis B.
We are considering the advice to be issued to health authorities on the vaccination of their staff against hepatitis.
Blood Sugar Test Strips
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services if he has yet decided whether to make blood sugar test strips available on prescription; and if he will make a statement.
Blood testing strips will not be made available on general practitioner prescription at present, although that is something we would like to do in due course.
Blood Products
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services if he will state the dale when his Department gave instructions that all Factor VIII blood products should be heat treated.
I shall let the hon. Member have a reply as soon as possible.
Severe Weather Payments
asked, the Secretary of State for Social Services if he will list the numbers in Dunfermline and Kirkcaldy district social security offices who have received exceptionally severe weather allowances in the current year.
[pursuant to his reply, 20 March 1987, c. 667]: Up to 10 March 1987, the latest date for which information is available, the Department's local office in Dunfermline had made 1,913 exceptionally cold weather ?5 payments, and the Kirkcaldy office had made 2,929.
National Insurance
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services if he will estimate (i) the revenue effect to the National Insurance Fund of abolition of the upper earnings limit and (ii) the loss to the fund of counting personal allowances for income tax purposes against the employee's liability to contributions.
[pursuant to his reply, 12 March 1987, c. 294–95]: If the upper earnings limit for employees' class 1 contributions were removed, but retained for the contracted out rebate, then the National Insurance Fund's income from National Insurance contributions would have been £690 million higher in 1986–87.If all personal tax allowances, including the married man's allowance, counted against the employee's liability for National Insurance contributions, then the National Insurance Fund's contribution income would have been about £3·75 billion lower in 1986–87.
Nuclear Installations (Cancer)
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services whether he can yet give a firm date for the publication by the Office of Population, Censuses and Surveys of the statistical study of cancer incidence and mortality in the vicinity of nuclear installations in England and Wales.
[pursuant to his reply, 18 February 1987, c. 724]: The report "Cancer Incidence and Mortality in the Vicinity of Nuclear Installations England and Wales, 1959–80" was published earlier today in its final form including microfiche tables. Copies are available in the Library.