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Written Answers

Volume 148: debated on Friday 10 March 1989

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Written Answers To Questions

Friday 10 March 1989

Prime Minister

Csce (Scottish Representations)

To ask the Prime Minister if she will indicate what attitude the Government intend to adopt towards the submission made by the Scotland United Nations Committee to the Conference on Security and Co-operation in Europe regarding the Scottish governmental situation.

The Government do not consider the subject of devolution for Scotland relevant in the CSCE context.

"Our Future World"

To ask the Prime Minister if, pursuant to her answer of 6 March to the hon. Member for Barrow and Furness, (Mr. Franks), Official Report, column 388, she will place in the Library a full copy of the Natural Environment Research council report on global environmental research, the abridged version of which, entitled "Our Future World," was placed in the Library on 6 March.

No. The Natural Environment Research Council report on global environmental research was commissioned by the advisory council on science and technology which decided that an abridged version should be published.

Official Duties (Rail Travel)

To ask the Prime Minister on how many occasions since May 1979 she has travelled by rail in the United Kingdom while carrying out official duties; and what are the considerations taken into account when deciding what form of transport is to be used when travelling outside London.

I regret that for reasons of practicality and security it is difficult for me to travel by rail on official business. I do so when a suitable opportunity arises, the last being in February 1987.

Refrigerants

To ask the Prime Minister if she will instruct all Government Departments to specify wherever possible the refrigerant R22 in preference to R12 or R502 when purchasing refrigeration equipment; if she will take steps within the European Community Council of Ministers to provide for similar guidance to be given in other Community countries; and if she will make a statement.

Government Departments have been asked to review their policies, specifications and practices with a view to promoting the objective of reducing use of chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) to the maximum possible extent. The Government's policies are aimed at ensuring that production and consumption of CFCs, whether in the public or the private sector, are eliminated as quickly as possible, and that all possible steps are taken to minimise emissions of CFCs currently in use.

Education And Science

Child Care Facilities

To ask the Secretary of State for Education and Science whether he will ensure that the local education authorities' development programmes for further education provision outlined in the White Paper, "Employment for the 1990s" provide child care facilities which allow (i) parents and (ii) mothers, to attend colleges, further education institutes, polytechnics and universities.

Under the Education Reform Act, my right hon. Friend approves LEAs' schemes for the planning of further education provision. But he will not approve the individual plans themselves. Approval of LEA development plans for work-related further education is a matter for my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State for Employment.

Centre For Religious Education

To ask the Secretary of State for Education and Science if he is now able to announce the results of his discussions about the future of the Centre for Religious Education after the abolition of the Inner London education authority.

The future of the Inner London education authority's specialist teachers' centres, one of which is the Centre for Religious Education, is being discussed by the Inner London councils.

St Anne's Primary School, Worksop

To ask the Secretary of State for Education and Science why his Department has not approved St. Anne's primary school, Worksop, from the recent submissions by Nottinghamshire county council for an aided sector grant under the reorganisation of primary education in south Worksop, Nottinghamshire.

St. Anne's Church of England primary school did not feature in Nottinghamshire's published proposals approved in October last year to reorganise primary education in south Worksop.

Under-Fives

To ask the Secretary of State for Education and Science what was the total public expenditure on (a) local authority day nurseries, (b) local authority playgroups, (c) grants to the voluntary sector for provision for under-fives, (d) local authority nursery schools, (e) local authority nursery classes and (f) the under-fives in primary reception classes for each year from 1975 to 1988 in (i) cash and (ii) real terms; and what was the total number of children participating in each type of provision for each year, together with the total numbers in the three to four years age group for each year.

Local authority day nurseries and playgroups and other facilities for day care are the responsibility of my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State for Health. Otherwise, the relevant expenditure is:

London education authority expenditure (£ millions)
Financial year(c) DES grants to national voluntary organisations £ thousands(d) Nursery schools(e) Nursery classes(f) Under fives in primary classes
Cash1987–88 real termsCash1987–88 real termsCash1987–88 real termsCash1987–88 real terms
1975–76n/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/a
1976–77n/an/a2154n/an/an/an/a
1977–7822502148n/an/an/an/a
1978–7918372245n/an/an/an/a
1979–8035612544508887153
1980–81314630446495108160
1981–823953344677104120162
1982–835468354490113134169
1983–8460723745100120159192
1984–8560693945106122177203
1985–8663694145113123186202
1986–8771754547131138205216
1987–88113113n/an/an/an/an/an/a

Note: The cash prices for the earlier years have been converted into 1987–88 real terms using the Gross Domestic Product (market prices) deflator.

Related numbers of children are:

Pupils under five as at January (thousands)

All 3 to 4 year olds as at previous August (thousands)

(d)

(e)

(f)

Nursery schools

Nursery classes

Under fives in primary classes

19751,434n/an/an/a
1976n/a45111282
19771,27548139245
19781,19648153214
19791,13548162218
19801,09148167213
19811,06448173206
19821,07849186201
19831,14250198210
19841,19749209236
19851,19950217246
19861,18049223236
19871,18050227241
19881,19050235248

To ask the Secretary of State for Education and Science if he will publish a table showing by local authority area the latest figures for (a) estimated population of up to four year-olds, (b) the number of pupils in nursery schools and nursery classes and (c) the full-time equivalent number of pupils in nursery classes.

The information requested is given in the table.

Children under five in each local education authority
January 1988
Estimated population of 3 and 4 year oldsUnder 5's in nursery schools and classesFTE under 5's in nursery classes
Barking3,9001,197613
Barnet7,6002,214912
Bexley5,400728277
Brent7,0002,2831,153
Bromley6,60012462
Croydon8,40057688
Ealing8,1002,7121,098
Enfield6,8001,430715

Estimated population of 3 and 4 year olds

Under 5's in nursery schools and classes

FTE under 5's in nursery classes

Haringey5,3002,1261,098
Harrow5,200827433
Havering5,400220110
Hillingdon6,0002,7421,311
Hounslow5,5003,7732,717
Kingston upon Thames3,100956367
Merton4,2001,645833
Newham6,7003,8751,488
Redbridge5,500555290
Richmond upon Thames3,600619278
Sutton4,100805283
Waltham Forest6,0002,3961,080
Inner London59,00022,36812,323
Birmingham28,6009,2844,514
Coventry8,3001,973845
Dudley7,4002,3981,058
Sandwell8,0003,6681,849
Solihull4,8001,412706
Walsall6,8003,8981,602
Wolverhampton6,6003,8271,492

Estimated population of 3 and 4 year olds

Under 5 's in nursery schools and classes

FTE under 5's in nursery classes

Knowlsey5,0001,909965
Liverpool12,3006,0493,079
St. Helens4,7001,436686
Sefton7,1002,042881
Wirral8,7001,620681
Bolton7,4002,7831,296
Bury4,5001,062558
Manchester12,2007,0805,170
Oldham6,2002,0991,430
Rochdale6,2001,849537
Salford5,9003,0401,924
Stockport7,4001,089174
Tameside5,7002,3511,043
Trafford5,400772387
Wigan8,1002,081954
Barnsley5,7002,7831,320
Doncaster7,7003,0011,536
Rotherham6,8002,7331,345
Sheffield11,8004,9822,276
Bradford14,5005,2492,493
Calderdale5,1001,377860
Kirklees10,3004,0711,723
Leeds17,5005,9472,956
Wakefield8,0003,7811,710
Gateshead4,9001,682831
Newcastle-upon-Tyne7,0002,7921,492
North Tyneside4,7002,4561,124
South Tyneside3,8001,939618
Sunderland8,4002,9411,020
Avon22,6003,3991,290
Bedfordshire15,1004,4981,767
Berkshire20,4004,9451,516
Buckinghamshire17,1002,053771
Cambridgeshire16,6001,940695
Cheshire24,3005,0392,137
Cleveland15,9008,4744,168
Cornwall and Isles of Scilly10,4001,449676
Cumbria11,5002,419856
Derbyshire22,6006,3862,951
Devon22,5002,2141,055
Dorset13,300797399
Durham14,9005,7271,666
East Sussex14,400994361
Essex38,1002,2181,048
Gloucestershire112,50000
Hampshire38,6001,895824
Hereford and Worcester16,100974552
Hertfordshire25,2007,4572,893
Humberside21,7007,1053,450
Isle of wight2,50014181
Kent37,5001,907916
Lancashire36,2006,1291,405
Leicestershire23,6005,0703,274
Lincolnshire13,200991377
Norfolk16,500853227
North Yorkshire15,6002,7721,337
Northamptonshire14,5002,5351,134
Northumberland7,6001,965980
Nottinghamshire25,10011,8055,757
Oxfordshire14,7001,857714
Shropshire9,7001,119477
Somerset10,5008164
Staffordshire26,3005,8602,790
Suffolk16,2002,2811,095

Estimated population of 3 and 4 year olds

Under 5's in nursery schools and classes

FTE under 5's in nursery classes

Surrey23,8002,6951,143
Warwickshire11,6002,052669
West Sussex15,50053447
Wiltshire14,000285144
England1,195,800284,542132,349

1 There are no nursery schools or primary schools with designated nursery classes in Gloucestershire. All pupils under five attend infant classes in primary schools.

Home Department

Race Relations

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department why he has not yet replied to the two letters from Mr. Day, the chairman of the Commission for Racial Equality, of 31 August and 21 December 1988.

Consumers (Consultation)

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department what arrangements there are for consulting consumers on the work and decisions of his Department.

The Home Office is regularly in touch with a wide variety of groups representing consumers of the services it manages.

Jamaican Citizens

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department how many Jamaican citizens were removed or refused entry to the United Kingdom as not being genuine citizens in (a) the first six weeks of 1988 and (b) the first six weeks of 1989; and if he will make a statement.

The information is not available in the form requested. At the major ports, 46 Jamaican citizens were initially refused entry during the first six weeks of 1988. The figure for the corresponding period in 1989 was 81.

Illegal Immigrants

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department how many people were arrested as being illegal immigrants in the first six weeks of (a) 1988 and (b) 1989; and what were their nationalities.

The available information is as follows:

First Six Weeks of
19881989
Nationality(i)(ii)(i)(ii)
Afghanistan11
Algeria442623
Australia111
Austria111
Bangladesh21173228
Barbados11
Brazil6566

First Six Weeks of

1988

1989

Nationality

(i)

(ii)

(i)

(ii)

Bulgaria1
Cameroon1
Canada21
China143
Colombia11654
Congo1
Cyprus522
Czechoslovakia22
Ecuador111
Egypt12
Finland11
France3231
Gambia2
Ghana52393523
Holland11
Hong Kong8564
India26182924
Indonesia11
Iran511
Israel222
Italy1
Ivory Coast11
Jamaica62106
Japan351
Jordan1
Kenya21
Korea12
Libya3
Malaysia443
Mauritius223
Mexico11
Morocco6343
Nepal33
Nigeria53415939
Pakistan1672520
Peru122
Philippines31
Poland2244
Portugal99168
Romania11
Saudi Arabia11
Sierra Leone121
Singapore111
Spain6174
Sri Lanka25171
St Lucia1
Sudan111
Sweden11
Syria1
Thailand2111
Togo11
Tunisia33
Turkey59434929
USA421
Yugoslavia594
Zaire13
Zimbabwe1
Stateless/Nationality Uncertain7251
376227403259

Note: For each year column (i) gives the number of illegal entrants dealt with; column (ii) records the number of those in column (i) who were detained.

Passports

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department when he expects to provide passports for Mrs Penelope Eve Brooke, née Butler, born 6 July 1942, and her son James Richard Henry Ormonde Brooke, born 10 November 1972, applications for which were sent to the Passport Office on 6 November 1987 and 13 December 1987 by recorded delivery.

The passports are being sent by registered post today. The application form for Mrs. Brooke's son was not fully completed, and although a second partly completed application was subsequently provided, some queries remained, about which the Passport Office wrote to Mrs. Brooke on 31 January 1988. I very much regret that the applications were not dealt with after she had replied to that letter.

Trade And Industry

Computerised Information (Confidentiality)

To ask the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster what contingency plans he has available to deal with distortions of the balance of payments figures by the work of computer hackers.

The design of the computer system used by my Department for calculating the United Kingdom visible balance of trade is such that it is impossible for access to be gained by external hackers.

To ask the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster whether the security of his Department's computer files is regularly checked for breaches by internal or external unauthorised access.

Where appropriate, the computer systems in use in my Department which hold sensitive information incorporate audit trails which record all accesses made to the system. These audit trails are used to check whether unauthorised attempts have been made to access information held.

Environment

Housing Capital Investment

To ask the Secretary of State for the Environment (1) if he will list at 1987–88 outturn prices, local authorities' housing capital investment (a) in Greater London, (b) in the south-east outside London, (c) in the south-west, (d) in East Anglia, (e) in the east midlands, (f) in the west midlands, (g) in the north, (h) in the north-west, (i) in Yorkshire and Humberside and (j) in England as a whole: (1) during 1981–82, (2) during 1983–84, (3) during 1985–86 and (4) during 1987–88 and (i) on mandatory renovation grants, (ii) on discretionary renovation grants, (iii) on enveloping, (iv) on other environmental works in HAAs or GIAs, (v) on slum clearance, and (vi) on lending to private persons for renovation activity.(2) if he will list at 1987 outturn prices, local authorities' housing capital investment

(a) in Greater London, (b) in other metropolitan areas, (c) in non-metropolitan areas, (d) in non-metropolitan areas in the south-east and (e) in England as a whole: (i) during 1981–82, (ii) during 1983–84, (iii) during 1985–86 and (iv) during 1987–88 and (1) on new building, (2) on renovation of local authority stock, (3) on renovation grants, (4) on loans to housing associations and (5) on other housing activities.

I have today laid tables giving the relevant information in the Library.

River Pollution

To ask the Secretary of State for the Environment if he will list how many miles of rivers have been downgraded from each grade to the one below, and to a lower grade in each region for each year since 1980.

Changes in the lengths of rivers and canals in each quality class recorded between the 1980 and 1985 river quality surveys are shown, by water authority, in appendix V to the report of the 1985 river quality survey of England and Wales. A copy of the report has been placed in the Library of the House.The 1985 river quality survey showed that rivers in England and Wales continued to be of a high quality with 90 per cent. assessed as of good or fair quality. For those lengths of rivers surveyed in both 1980 and 1985, a total of 4,490 km (12 per cent.) improved in quality, while 5,440 km (14 per cent.) were downgraded. However, because of differences in the methods used between authorities and changes between surveys, it is uncertain whether this small apparent net deterioration represents a real change. But it did appear that the hitherto upward trend of improvements in river quality had, at least for the time being, been checked. Details of changes between quality classes recorded in individual years between 1980 and 1985 are not held by the Department.The lengths of rivers and canals recorded in each class in the years 1985–87 have been published in the "Digest of Environmental Protection and Water Statistics" (No. 11, 1988) a copy of which has been placed in the Library. This information indicates that since 1985 there has been some increase in the length of good and fair quality rivers and a reduction in the length of poor and bad quality rivers. The improving trend thus appears to have been resumed. However these results are not directly comparable with the results from the river quality survey because they are based on more limited surveys carried out by the water authorities.The next comprehensive river quality survey is planned to take place in 1990.

County Councils (Statistics)

To ask the Secretary of State for the Environment if he will give for each county council (i) the net expenditure in each year since 1977–78, (ii) the domestic and business precept in each year since 1977–78, (iii) the percentage rise in the precept in each year since 1977–78, (iv) the percentage rise in the precept in the periods 1977–78 to 1980–81, 1981–82 to 1985–86, 1986–87 to 1989–90 and 1977–78 to 1989–90, (v) the change in the number of staff employed at the end of the periods 1977–78 to 1980–81, 1981–82 to 1985–86, 1986–87 to 1989–90 and 1977–78 to 1989–90 expressed in numbers and percentage terms, (vi) the political composition of the councils in 1977 to 1981, 1981 to 1985, 1985 to 1989; and if he will list the councils in rank order by largest increase in precept over the period 1985–86 to 1989–90 starting with the council with the highest increase in that period.

Water Meters

To ask the Secretary of State for the Environment what reviews are being considered in respect of installing water meters in all new homes due to be constructed; and if he will make a statement.

We have no plans to review the installation of water meters in new properties. Under paragraph 1 of schedule 1 to the Public Utility Transfers and Water Charges Act 1988, water undertakers have the right to insist either that a meter is installed, or that the plumbing is such as to allow a meter to be installed at a later date in connecting all new supplies from 1 April. The exercise of this power will be a matter for individual water undertakers.

Mortgage Defaults

To ask the Secretary of State for the Environment if he will make a statement on recent trends in the level of building society arrears and repossessions.

The latest building society figures show a continued downward trend in levels of mortgage arrears and possessions, which we welcome. Nevertheless, each mortgage possession is distressing for those involved. It is important that borrowers who find themselves in difficulties should contact their lender at the earliest opportunity.

Council Of Environment Ministers

To ask the Secretary of State for the Environment if he will make a statement on the outcome of the European Council of Environment Ministers' meeting held on 2 March.

I refer the hon. Member to the answer I gave to my hon. Friend the Member for Birmingham, Hall Green (Mr. Hargreaves) on Monday 6 March at column 480.

Ozone Layer

To ask the Secretary of State for the Environment what measures the Government intend to take to render more equitable the burdens of conforming to the Montreal protocol between industrialised nations and developing nations; and if he will make a statement.

A clear message of the London "Saving the Ozone Layer" conference held on 5–7 March was that ways of helping developing countries should be a major feature of the review of the Montreal protocol—which will be initiated at the first meeting of the contracting parties in Helsinki in May—and should be urgently examined in all appropriate international contexts. The protocol already gives low consuming developing countries more time to comply with its controls on chlorofluorocarbons and halons and includes provisions to help developing countries to implement the protocol and gain access to environmentally safe alternative substances and technologies. At the Helsinki meeting, the United Kingdom, the European Community and the other parties will consider how to take these provisions forward.

Council House Sales

To ask the Secretary of State for the Environment when he now expects to announce the result of his deliberations about an increase in the present level of the maximum discount allowed under the right-to-buy scheme.

I refer the hon. Member to the answer I gave yesterday to my hon. Friend the Member for Battersea (Mr. Bowis).

To ask the Secretary of State for the Environment if he will take steps to help council tenants exercise their right to buy their homes.

Sales remain buoyant, and are expected to exceed 150,000 in England in the current financial year, the second highest annual total since the right to buy was introduced. The tenants of some local authorities, however, suffer serious and inexcusable delays in exercising their right to buy. Section 124 of the Housing Act 1988 gives such tenants a new power to have the rent they pay while the delay continues set against the purchase price of their homes. There will also be a corresponding reduction in the period during which there is a liability to repay discount on resale. This new procedure comes into operation on 10 March. It will bring welcome help for tenants prevented from buying their homes by incompetent or obstructive landlords.

Travellers' Children

To ask the Secretary of State for the Environment if he will publish the numbers of travellers' children of school age as detailed in the statistics gathered by his Department's gipsy sites branch.

[holding answer 9 March 1989]: The latest estimates (extrapolated from an 85 per cent. rate of return from local authorities) indicate approximate numbers of 8,000 traveller children of school age.

Transport

London Underground (Security)

To ask the Secretary of State for Transport how many police personnel have been deployed on the London Underground in each of the last 20 years.

Police officers in post in the division of the British Transport police responsible for London Underground at the end of each of the last 10 years were:

Number
1979134
1980156
1981264
1982278
1983266
1984242
1985261
1986319
1987306
1988319

Drink-Driving

To ask the Secretary of State for Transport what are the current figures for drinking and driving in Great Britain; and what information he has as to what the figures are for those countries where random breath testing has been introduced.

At the moment, the most reliable measure of drinking and driving in Great Britain over the last 10 years is the percentage of drivers killed in road accidents who had a blood alcohol content above the legal limit. The following tables show this percentage, for motor cycle riders and car drivers separately, for the years 1978 to 1987. The table also includes similar figures, for all drivers or riders, for the Australian states of Victoria and New South Wales, except that a blood alcohol content of more than 50mg/ml, the legal limit for Australia, is used.

Percentage of rider/drivers killed with a blood alcohol content above the legal limit.
Great Britain (legal limit 80mg/ml): Australia (limit 80mg/ml): 1978–1987.
Great Britain
YearMotor-cycle ridersCar driversVictoria1New South Wales2
1978293348
1979313240
1980293244
1981283138
198229363740
198323313736
198427263333
198522283833
198622253834
19872523

Note: 1987 figures are provisional.

1 RBT introduced in 1976.

2 RBT introduced in 1982.

These figures show an overall ten percentage point decline in the number of car drivers killed over the legal limit in both Great Britain and Victoria. In New South Wales, a decline of only six points has occurred since introduction of RBT in 1982, compared with 11 points in the United Kingdom over the same period. We understand the rate in NSW may now be rising again slightly. It should be borne in mind that the legal limits are different. Nevertheless, the proportion of such cases in the Australian states remains higher than in Great Britain.

International comparisons are difficult because of the lack of standard measures of drinking and driving. The United Nations publishes figures of "accidents involving one or more persons under the influence of alcohol". This is interpreted differently by different countries. For Great Britain, the figures given are for the number of accidents in which an involved driver subsequently failed a breath test. For other countries the accidents where a driver died and was found to be over the legal limit are also included. In some countries, the influence of alcohol is reported by the police on a subjective basis, and in others a blood test may be required. A number of countries include accidents involving drunken pedestrians in their figures.

Traffic Examiners

To ask the Secretary of State for Transport what proposals he has for improving the management of the traffic examiners and their resources.

Special emphasis is being placed on improving the deployment of traffic examiners and in further developing the effectiveness of enforcement.

Management of traffic examiners and their resources is being significantly improved following the implementation of the recommendations made by an efficiency review of traffic examiners and enforcement.

The introduction of an annual national enforcement plan provides for traffic examiner resources to be concentrated on major areas of enforcement including overloading, drivers hours and tachographs. Budgets and the personal objectives of the traffic examiners can be aligned more closely with the national enforcement plan targets. A restructuring of the supervisory and senior traffic examiner grades is in hand.

It is proposed to appoint an enforcement manager in each traffic area office and headquarters with increased responsibilities for planning and directing enforcement and the more effective use of resources to support the national enforcement plan.

Senior traffic examiners will also have increased responsibilities for local enforcement of their geographical sectors and for the management of their teams, which are being increased in size.

To ask the Secretary of State for Transport if he has any proposals for traffic examiners to prosecute guilty plea cases against HGV/PSV operators and drivers without using solicitors.

Yes. That was one of the accepted recommendations of an efficiency review of traffic examiners and enforcement.Trials have been carried out which have proved the efficiency and cost effectiveness of this method. From 1 April, all traffic examiners in England and Wales will prosecute a proportion of guilty plea cases. In Scotland prosecutions will continue to be handled by the procurator fiscal.

To ask the Secretary of State for Transport if he will make a statement on the responsibilities and duties of the traffic examiners.

Traffic examiners are appointed by the Secretary of State under section 56 of the Road Traffic Act 1972. They enforce road safety legislation governing the use of United Kingdom based and foreign operated HGVs and PSVs, including the requirements of goods and passenger operator licensing, vocational drivers licensing, tachographs and drivers' records, vehicle weights and construction and use regulations. Their work is a much valued contribution to road casualty reduction. Traffic examiners are departmental staff deployed and managed locally in the traffic areas. They support the Secretary of State and the traffic commissioners by ensuring that the targets set out in the Department's annual national enforcement plan are met and that resources are used effectively in meeting the priorities contained in the enforcement plan.

To ask the Secretary of State for Transport if any traffic area offices have had to limit prosecutions of HGV operators and drivers because of financial constraints.

Only in the Leeds traffic area office were some cases not presented to solicitors between October and December 1988. This was because a number of large and costly cases absorbed a large part of the budget allocation. Despite that, three times more cases were prosecuted between April and December 1988 than in the corresponding period of 1987.

To ask the Secretary of State for Transport if the Leeds traffic area office has sufficient resources to allow offences reported by traffic examiners to be prosecuted.

Yes. Extra resources have now been made available to the Leeds Office, and cases a re either being referred to solicitors, or being presented in court by traffic examiners. Warning letters are also being sent to operators and drivers by the traffic area office.

To ask the Secretary of State for Transport how many heavy goods and passenger vehicles will be examined by traffic examiners in the current year; and if he will make a statement about the levels of enforcement proposed for 1990.

The Department's national enforcement plan for 1988–89 provides for 285,000 United Kingdom and foreign-registered goods and passenger vehicles to be examined by traffic examiners. Of these 100,000 United Kingdom and foreign goods vehicles will be weighed. Over 1,100,000 HGV and PSV drivers' tachograph charts will be checked, and nearly 32,000 visits to operators made.We are well set to meet or exceed these targets. Results for the first nine months of the year show that 91 per cent. of the year's target for vehicles examined, 93 per cent. for vehicle weighings, 99 per cent. for tachographs screening and 81 per cent. for operator visits had already been achieved.Further increases in the main areas of traffic examiner enforcement activity are proposed in the national enforcement plan for 1989–90. A further 16 per cent. United Kingdom and foreign-registered HGV and PSYs will be examined and 15 per cent. more HGVs will be weighed; 16 per cent. more tachograph charts will be checked and 9 per cent. more operator visits will be made.

House Of Commons

Changes And Achievements

To ask the Lord President of the Council if he will list the changes and achievements in his areas of responsibility as (a) Lord President of the Council and (b) Leader of the House, since June 1987.

My responsibilities as Lord President since January 1988 and as Lord Privy Seal before that have not changed during this period. My office has continued to discharge its constitutional and statutory functions efficiently, whilst making significant economies in staff and administrative costs.Similarly, my responsibilities as Leader of the House have not changed. The rights and privileges of the House as a whole have been upheld and the passage through the House of the Government's legislative programme arid other business has been effectively supervised and facilitated.

House Passes

To ask the Lord President of the Council how many House passes are currently issues for each of the categories of pass.

For reasons of security, it is not possible to provide this information.

To ask the Lord President of the Council how many passes are available for research assistants with access to the Library; and how many hon. Members have (a) one, (b) two or more and (c) none of these passes issued on behalf of their staff.

The Services Committee has ruled that a maximum of 200 places are available for right hon. and hon. Members' research assistants who may have access to the main House of Commons Library. The breakdown is as follows:

  • (a) 196
  • (b) 2
  • (c) 450
  • To ask the Lord President of the Council if he will give the number of photo-passes to the Press Gallery held by staff of each Government Department.

    [holding answer 9 March 1989]: The latest pass office figures show that a total of six photo-passes have been issued to departmental press officers giving them access to the Press Gallery on a permanent basis. A breakdown is as follows:

    Number
    Prime Minister's Office2
    Central Office of Information2
    Home Office1
    Ministry of Defence1
    In addition, 160 departmental press officers hold photo-passes which enable them to apply, on a day-to-day basis, for a pass to admit them to the Parliamentary Press Gallery when their official duties require it. A breakdown is as follows:
    Number
    Prime Minister's Office4
    Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food3
    Cabinet Office3
    Local authority capital allocations 1981–82 to 1989–90
    £000
    Local authority1981–821982–831983–841984–851985–861986–871987–881988–891989–90
    Alyn and Deeside3,5284,0183,7883,2453,2423,5673,9382,7102,774
    Colwyn2,5903,8623,1272,6752,5952,3602,8312,2502,365
    Delyn2,2663,5434,2004,4614,0874,8013,0772,5122,823
    Glyndwr1,3931,9572,6561,7701,9861,9831,9031,8091,616
    Rhuddlan1,8612,4642,5972,0771,9722,2654,2114,1922,995
    Wrexham Maelor5,7676,4805,3575,7245,3997,9367,7175,9217,080
    Carmarthen2,9404,3118,9244,1253,5473,9334,4323,0573,109
    Ceredigion2,7284,3815,1353,3162,7553,1583,4942,8582,868
    Dinefwr1,0091,7172,7431,6941,4561,6511,8672,2241,885
    Llanelli3,8955,7105,3954,2043,1753,3493,9193,3574,187
    Preseli2,0072,6994,6634,1703,2822,8913,3063,2672,590
    South Pembrokeshire1,4282,8254,4433,4392,9782,8035,0673,2872,196
    Blaenau Gwent5,26512,11112,1768,3156,72710,19712,8708,62910,933
    Islwyn3,4745,6925,8995,1305,6259,3248,2097,6814,439
    Monmouth2,1103,5635,1764,0263,9423,8544,1572,7032,779
    Newport8,35713,75011,0387,9968,4189,7139,2627,6426,928
    Torfean3,4415,3295,2664,6964,6656,2537,0006,3115,319
    Aberconwy2,0762,2232,5751,9421,8771,9082,3571,9873,645

    Number

    Customs and Excise2
    Ministry of Defence14
    Department of Education and Science9
    Department of Employment16
    Department of Energy14
    Department of the Environment17
    Foreign and Commonwealth Office7
    Department of Health
    Department of Social Security16
    Home Office18
    Northern Ireland Office1
    Office of Fair Trading1
    Scottish Office1
    Department of Trade and Industry22
    Department of Transport3
    Treasury6
    Welsh Office3

    Wales

    Capital Allocations

    To ask the Secretary of State for Wales if he will give the capital allocations for each Welsh county and district for each year since 1981 and capital allocations hypothecated to particular services between 1981–82 and 1984–85.

    [pursuant to his reply, 2 March 1989, c. 300]: Owing to a typing error an incorrect figure was quoted; the full reply is as follows.The information requested is given in the following tables. Capital allocations shown for 1988–89 and 1989–90 are provisional. Allocations form only part of local authority capital investment capacity. Gross spending provision (excluding provision for law and order services) for all district and county councils in Wales for 1989–90 is £450 million, an increase of 8.2 per cent. over 1988–89.

    Local authority

    1981–82

    1982–83

    1983–84

    1984–85

    1985–86

    1986–87

    1987–88

    1988–89

    1989–90

    Arfon3,5833,8104,2073,3562,6922,7613,4113,7503,210
    Dwyfor1,0861,5083,4602,1141,4352,2252,5392,0001,464
    Meirionnydd1,6251,6925,1752,4751,3131,4521,7281,9421,665
    Ynys Mon1,9543,1626,5592,9453,7014,6174,8473,7252,973
    Cynon Valley2,7673,5205,0354,2163,6804,8316,7937,2134,984
    Merthyr Tydfil3,9416,0065,6163,8063,1115,1166,1795,0905,477
    Ogwr5,3547,8817,4196,0165,4816,0518,4936,8055,475
    Rhondda5,5217,11713,7458,9438,55810,95912,73817,77112,706
    Rhymney Valley5,1627,7706,8565,7666,2388,54410,64810,1316,595
    Taff Ely6,37710,20110,1335,8865,0495,7827,6965,7515,143
    Brecknock1,7451,6023,0431,7152,0663,4443,2701,6892,120
    Montgomeryshire1,4111,6083,6851,7821,7411,9212,1192,1182,171
    Radnor8891,4971,7581,1089701,1091,4261,1871,042
    Cardiff17,02919,55924,79219,55115,92419,09421,06017,93315,289
    Vale of Glamorgan5,0825,7307,7764,6873,9035,2245,9814,5174,031
    Port Talbot2,2622,4892,6742,3151,8993,5094,3893,8433,544
    Lliw Valley3,4864,5694,4473,7823,1553,6924,0693,6383,603
    Neath2,1655,2394,8022,7793,1233,7314,4173,9783,512
    Swansea9,39818,84517,95714,11210,78812,31712,56312,23410,418
    Clwyd8,5619,50712,65312,01412,24914,09216,64916,79712,840
    Dyfed8,96713,18411,1759,11011,36916,61516,59415,45516,948
    Gwent20,67729,50624,85521,43713,00017,58221,46618,47924,019
    Gwynedd7,12410,9897,2228,35411,5288,5659,1977,9077,903
    Mid Glamorgan18,62419,35017,19319,98517,10222,70824,07723,11126,648
    Powys5,3046,3144,6343,7303,9046,9507,1116,0556,110
    South Glamorgan18,08021,45719,39514,06823,00826,76432,41129,60718,132
    West Glamorgan12,39813,78711,94911,07114,38919,23320,12418,16322,247
    Total Districts136,972200,440234,297170,359152,455188,325213,983189,570150,841
    Total Counties99,735124,094109,07699,769106,649132,509147,629135,589130,033
    Total Wales236,707324,534343,373270,128259,104320,834361,612323,286300,810

    Capital allocations hypothecated to services 1981–82

    £000

    Local Authority

    Education

    Transport

    PSS

    Housing

    Other Services

    Urban Programme

    Total Allocation

    Alyn and Deeside022902,520685943,528
    Colwyn0001,61098002,590
    Delyn0001,3505903262,266
    Glyndwr04701,00034601,393
    Rhuddlan000.8501,01101,861
    Wrexham Maelor04303,2301,8816135,767
    Carmarthen0002,030870402,940
    Ceredigion00371,740934172,728
    Dinefwr00085015901,009
    Llanelli00851,9501,4763843,895
    Preseli0001,74026702,007
    South Pembroke0001,140213751,428
    Blaenau Gwent024104,0103856295,265
    Islwyn031202,2806742083,474
    Monmouth0001,85026002,110
    Newport070206,5005456108,357
    Torfaen03402,8903591583,441
    Aberconwy0001,42065602,076
    Arfon0102,5008921903,583
    Dwyfor00077031601,086
    Meirionnydd0001,02060501,625
    Ynys Mon01601,370533351,954
    Cynon Valley0002,430248892,767
    Merthyr Tydfil030602,7047731583,941
    Ogwr010604,530645735,354
    Rhondda01181024,3104585335,521
    Rhymney Valley0353143,6509481975,162
    Taff Ely037875,830374496,377
    Brecknock0001,11063501,745
    Montgomeryshire031095043001,411
    Radnor0006402490889
    Cardiff0881010,6905,05040817,029
    Vale of Glamorgan0003,2001,88115,082
    Port Talbot09701,8002611042,262
    Lliw Valley0002,76072603,486
    Neath0001,720393522,165
    Swansea032006,6742,0673379,398

    Local Authority

    Education

    Transport

    PSS

    Housing

    Other Services

    Urban Programme

    Total Allocation

    Clwyd3,5213,49958506233338,561
    Dyfed2,7434,79257807251298,967
    Gwent3,75812,98872303,00320520,677
    Gwynedd2,2712,68541301,5362197,124
    Mid Glamorgan8,6096,1671,12202,51720918,624
    Powys2,2692,338303039405,304
    South Glamorgan2,55913,898692063229918,080
    West Glamorgan5,0503,62376502,956412,398
    Total Districts03,87432597,61829,7755,380136,972
    Total Counties30,78049,9905,181012,3861,39899,735
    Total Wales30,78053,8645,50697,61842,1616,778236,707

    Capital allocations hypothecated to services 1982–83

    £000

    Local Authority

    Education

    Transport

    PSS

    Housing

    Other Services

    Urban Programme

    Total Allocation

    Alyn and Deeside01302,8737843484,018
    Colwyn0002,3421,52003,862
    Delyn0001,6811,1357273,543
    Glyndwr010001,58127601,957
    Rhuddlan0001,2731,19102,464
    Wrexham Maelor0003,6161,5921,2726,480
    Carmarthen0003,82348444,311
    Ceredigion00523,63569314,381
    Dinefwr0001,2782392001,717
    Llanelli001003,1047721,7345,710
    Preseli03001,7837711152,699
    South Pembroke0002,3653001602,825
    Blaenau Gwent00010,1728531,08612,111
    Islwyn0004,6854605475,692
    Monmouth0002,917595513,563
    Newport0578010,9561,0751,14113,750
    Torfaen0004,3706702895,329
    Aberconwy0001,70851502,223
    Arfon0002,9364174573,810
    Dwyfor0601,11938301,508
    Meirionnydd0001,28940301,692
    Ynys Mon0002,471681103,162
    Cynon Valley0002,8305521383,520
    Merthyr Tydfil02502,8852,4186786,006
    Ogwr011306,1971,0375347,881
    Rhondda021205,5466816787,117
    Rhymney023606,2119343897,770
    Taff Ely05557,0203,121010,201
    Brecknock0001,28331901,602
    Montgomeryshire0001,292276401,608
    Radnor0001,37612101,497
    Cardiff0997013,6074,10085519,559
    Vale of Glamorgan0004,812895235,730
    Port Talbot0001,84264702,489
    Lliw Valley0004,07849104,569
    Neath0004,1187623595,239
    Swansea00010,7607,39768818,845
    Clwyd4,0162,75018402,3142439,507
    Dyfed3,7266,54572001,70548813,184
    Gwent4,21122,3701,16301,7006229,506
    Gwynedd2,1082,66071205,05045910,989
    Mid Glamorgan9,0467,7451,02201,24529219,350
    Powys2,7262,770319049906,314
    South Glamorgan4,21414,4301,08701,03369321,457
    West Glamorgan4,0484,74085104,143513,787
    Total Districts02,315207145,83439,56012,524200,440
    Total Counties34,09564,0106,058017,6892,242124,094
    Total Wales34,09566,3256,265145,83457,24914,766324,534

    Capital allocations hypothecated to services 1983–84

    Local authority

    Education

    Transport

    PSS

    Housing

    Other services

    Urban programme

    Total allocation

    £000

    £000

    £000

    £000

    £000

    £000

    £000

    Alyn and Deeside0002,9224624043,788
    Colwyn0002,483594503,127
    Delyn0002,0251,3578184,200
    Glyndwr0002,34531102,656
    Rhuddlan0001,1891,40802,597
    Wrexham Maelor0003,8337877375,357
    Carmarthen0008,1606521128,924
    Ceredigion0004,47865705,135
    Dinefwr0002,3342111982,743
    Llanelli00823,7459845845,395
    Preseli0003,5264776604,663
    South Pembroke0003,8042743654,443
    Blaenau Gwent00010,2368431,09712,176
    Islwyn09005,2154151795,899
    Monmouth0004,643472615,176
    Newport06009,1371,33151011,038
    Torfaen0004,3706212755,266
    Aberconwy0002,00656902,575
    Arfon0003,4694183204,207
    Dwyfor03503,03239303,460
    Meirionnydd0003,2821,804895,175
    Ynys Mon053005,2606501196,559
    Cynon Valley0004,3234512615,035
    Merthyr Tydfil013203,9931,0344575,616
    Ogwr07805,8701,2022687,419
    Rhondda0105012,03081679413,745
    Rhymney Valley020505,4658113756,856
    Taff Ely05808,8861,07711210,133
    Brecknock0002,85119203,043
    Montgomeryshire0003,39329203,685
    Radnor0001,59316501,758
    Cardiff02,038017,8353,9151,00424,792
    Vale of Glamorgan0005,3332,2192247,776
    Port Talbot05001,9823772652,674
    Lliw Valley0003,992410454,447
    Neath0003,8924194914,802
    Swansea00011,3655,5201,07217,957
    Clwyd4,7465,460820075986812,653
    Dyfed3,8175,04472001,32427011,175
    Gwent5,43016,1991,04001,56562124,855
    Gwynedd2,0353,51771607472077,222
    Mid Glamorgan7,3917,52785201,14927417,193
    Powys2,1022,073194025784,634
    South Glamorgan4,55711,92374101,60057419,395
    West Glamorgan4,2474,9431,47601,283011,949
    Total Districts03,38282184,29734,59011,946234,297
    Total Counties34,32556,6866,55908,6842,822109,076
    Total Wales34,32560,0686,641184,29743,27414,768343,373

    Capital allocations hypothecated to services 1984–85

    £'000s

    Local Authority

    Education

    Transport

    PSS

    Housing

    Other Services

    Special Projects

    Urban Programme

    Total Allocation

    Alyn and Deeside0002,23437006413,245
    Colwyn0002,08947501112,675
    Delyn0001,4597319001,3714,461
    Glyndwr0001,521249001,770
    Rhuddlan0009511,126002,077
    Wrexham Maelor0003,74663001,3485,724
    Carmarthen0003,5715390154,125
    Ceredigion0002,790526003,316
    Dinefwr0001,41416901111,694
    Llanelli00662,73778706144,204
    Preseli0002,8623822505764,170
    South Pembroke0002,3232193505473,439
    Blaenau Gwent0006,23867401,4038,315
    Islwyn0004,49933202995,130
    Monmouth0003,5993780494,026
    Newport0006,55473407087,996
    Torfaen0004,00249701974,696
    Aberconwy0001,635307001,942

    Local Authority

    Education

    Transport

    PSS

    Housing

    Other Services

    Special Projects

    Urban Programme

    Total Allocation

    Arfon0002,9403340823,356
    Dwyfor0001,800314002,114
    Meirionnydd0001,3521,123002,475
    Ynys Môn0002,3505200752,945
    Cynon Valley0003,09036107654,216
    Merthyr Tydfil0002,52182704583,806
    Ogwr0005,0119620436,016
    Rhondda0007,46865308228,943
    Rhymney Valley024004,41264904655,766
    Taff Ely02004,999862055,886
    Brecknock0001,32115402401,715
    Montgomeryshire0001,548234001,782
    Radnor000976132001,108
    Cardiff01,881012,5573,13201,98119,551
    Vale of Glamorgan0003,0801,37502324,687
    Port Talbot0001,58630204272,315
    Lliw Valley0003,22032802343,782
    Neath0002,06433503802,779
    Swansea01609,0733,2825001,24114,112
    Clwyd3,7976,1745000607093612,014
    Dyfed3,0544,05960001,05903389,110
    Gwent4,34414,41885001,252057321,437
    Gwynedd1,6285,390400059803388,354
    Mid Glamorgan5,51311,5511,200091950030219,985
    Powys1,6821,7421000206003,730
    South Glamorgan3,6467,52760001,28001,01514,068
    West Glamorgan3,3985,4371,00001,126011011,071
    Total Districts02,15766125,59225,0042,10015,440170,359
    Total Counties27,06256,2985,25007,0475003,61299,769
    Total Wales27,06258,4555,316125,59232,0512,60019,052270,128

    Attorney-General

    Public Record Office

    To ask the Attorney-General if he will list the scales of charges for services provided by the Public Record Office to commercial genealogists.

    The Public Record Office does not distinguish between commercial genealogists and other users in respect of fees and charges made for services it provides. The full range of fees currently charged, under section 2(5) of the Public Records Act 1958, is set out in the Public Record Office (Fees) Regulations 1988 (1988 No. 1385).

    The Arts

    Sponsorship (Tobacco Companies)

    To ask the Minister for the Arts what information he has on the current annual total of sponsorship of the arts by tobacco companies; if he will list these individually and in relation to other commercial sponsorship; and if he will make a statement.

    The total amount of sponsorship in 1988–89 by tobacco companies is not known. The business sponsorship incentive scheme has brought £5·7 million new sponsorship to the arts in the current financial year, of which £3,000 has come from tobacco interests. Arts organisations are free to decide what sponsorship to accept.

    Libraries (Charges)

    To ask the Minister for the Arts whether he intends that under his proposed new regulations library authorities should be able to charge students resident or studying within their areas to reserve books relevant to their studies; and if he will make a statement.

    [holding answer 9 March 1989]: As I said in my statement on 8 February at columns 987–88, I intend in the proposed regulations to give library authorities discretionary power to charge any person for obtaining and notifying the availability of an item reserved, subject to a limit which I shall prescribe. Subject to that limit on which I shall in due course consult, authorities will have total freedom to decide whom to charge and what concessions to give.

    Museums

    To ask the Minister for the Arts whether he will publish a table showing attendances of all the national museums in each of the last five years.

    [holding answer 8 March 1989]: The estimated number of visitors in each of the last five years to the 11 national museums and galleries (including their outstations) for which I am responsible is as follows:

    Estimated attendances

    1984

    1985

    1986

    1987

    1988

    British Museum3,467,0444,142,0923,869,6394,007,8854,172,472
    British Museum (Natural History)3,022,2543,354,3513,239,6851,999,1301,671,330
    Imperial War Museum1,365,8881,291,4351,175,8341,184,9591,086,587
    National Gallery2,936,9263,156,7253,182,3653,566,5683,228,153
    National Maritime Museum600,000600,000380,099442,005707,399
    National Museums and Galleries on Merseyside

    11,163,304

    1,328,8441,525,672
    National Portrait Gallery581,395516,148624,520590,841638,595
    Science Museum4,510,1034,607,8524,824,9064,732,7843,861,433
    Tate Gallery1,265,605996,5651,153,3551,742,156

    22,091,267

    Victoria and Albert Museum2,079,2042,067,2021,439,6361,398,6881,430,637
    Wallace Collection177,613178,770170,797168,109157,524
    Total20,006,03220,911,14021,224,14021,161,96920,571,119

    1The Office of Arts and Libraries became responsible for NMGM in 1986 following the dissolution of the Merseyside County Council. Figures for previous years are unavailable.

    2Figure includes Tate Gallery Liverpool which opened in May 1988.

    National Finance

    Hmso

    To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer, further to his written answer of 14 December 1988, Official Report, column 584, what financial and performance targets he has set Her Majesty's Stationery Office for 1989.

    My right hon. Friend has today laid a further Treasury minute setting HMSO the financial target for 1989 of achieving a profit after interest in current cost accounting (CCA) terms of £1·7 million. This compares with a CCA profit after interest of £0·8 million actually achieved in 1987–88.I have also set various performance targets designed to improve the efficiency and effectiveness with which HMSO delivers its services. These are:

    1987–88 Actual per cent.1989 Target per cent.
    Value for money
    Paper and stationery6·548·0
    Office machinery10·3911·5
    Printing and binding5·038·9
    Service and quality
    Supply
    Stock catalogue items87·0090·00
    within 5 working dayswithin 5 working days
    Publications
    Dispatch of orders by mailAverage of 6 days90·00
    within 5 working days
    Print procurement
    Orders delivered to time
    vital97·00100·0
    overall93·0095·0
    Delivered without fault99·30100·0
    Production
    Jobs delivered to time
    basic94·00100·0
    other92·0095·0
    Delivered without fault99·00100·0

    Computers (Security)

    To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer if he has any records of unauthorised entry into his Department's computer files.

    The Treasury has no evidence of any unauthorised entry or attempted unauthorised entry into the Department's computer files.

    To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer whether security of Treasury computer files is regularly checked for breaches by computer hackers.

    The Treasury takes all forms of security (including computer security) very seriously. The Department regularly reviews the security measures in place.

    Consumers (Cost Of Living)

    To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer if he will provide an index for the cost of living for consumers based on the retail price index but excluding indirect taxes, including value added tax, excise duties and rates, measured at December each year from 1973 to 1979 taking the value of the index as 1979 equals 100.

    [holding answer 9 March 1989]: The following are estimates of the movement in the RPI excluding VAT, excise duties and rates measured at December each year. Information before 1974 is not available.

    December 1979=100
    Index
    197451
    197562
    197672
    197780
    197887
    1979100

    Foreign And Commonwealth Affairs

    Consumers (Consultations)

    To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs what arrangements there are for consulting British consumers on the work and decisions of his Department.

    The Foreign and Commonwealth Office is in regular touch with a large number of individuals and groups which use our services and have an interest in the issues the Department handles.

    Defence

    Low-Level Flying, East Lothian

    To ask the Secretary of State for Defence (1) if he will make a statement on the speed, height and purpose of the low-level flights over Giffard, East Lothian, at (a) 2.30 pm on 6 February, (b) 3.35 pm on 8 February, (c) 11.50 am on 9 February, (d) 10.55 am and 12 noon on 10 February and (e) and 2.45 pm on 16 February;(2) if he will make a statement on the speed, height and purpose of the low-level flight over grid reference 66.8 x 45.9 near Pencaitland, East Lothian, at 8.20 pm on 15 February; and if he will also explain his policy for such flights during hours of darkness.

    Military aircraft are authorised as a matter of routine to carry out low-level flying training in the areas mentioned at heights no lower than 250 ft and at speeds normally not exceeding 450 knots. Pilots must be capable of operating in darkness and therefore some strictly limited night flying is necessary.Policy is that low-level flying training should be completed before 11 pm wherever possible because my Department recognises that aircraft noise can be particularly intrusive at night.

    Military Bases (Security)

    To ask the Secretary of State for Defence how many military bases in Britain employ private security firms to (a) guard entrances to the bases and (b) in any other capacity.

    Private security firms are employed at 27 military bases. It would not be in the interests of security to disclose the precise nature of the tasks which they perform.

    Hms Gannet (Helicopter Flight)

    To ask the Secretary of State for Defence if, pursuant to his reply of 27 February, Official Report, column 42, to the hon. Member for Cunninghame, North, he will name the three local residents taken on board a naval helicopter from HMS Gannet, and the criteria governing their selection for this facility.

    Radioactive Waste Conference (Gloucester Hotel)

    To ask the Secretary of State for Defence how many (a) officials of his Department, (b) officials from the Atomic Weapons Establishment at Aldermaston and (c) officials from the Royal Naval Establishment at Devonport attended the conference on radio active waste at the Gloucester hotel on 22 and 23 February.

    Thirteen Ministry of Defence officials attended the conference on radio-active waste. Ten were from the atomic weapons establishment at Aldermaston and two from the naval base at Devonport.

    Nuclear Submarines

    To ask the Secretary of State for Defence when he expects the next Royal Navy nuclear-powered submarine to be brought out of service.

    No firm decision has yet been taken on when the next Royal Navy nuclear-powered submarine will be brought out of service.

    Social Security

    Social Fund

    To ask the Secretary of State for Social Security what percentage of the social fund budget for the year has been spent to date.

    Information relating to expenditure of the social fund budgets for the period to 31 January 1989, the latest for which firm figures are available, is in the national summary tables placed monthly in the Library.

    Transitional Payments

    To ask the Secretary of State for Social Security when transitional payments will cease; and what will take their place.

    We have already announced that housing benefit transitional payments will be reduced by £2 a week from 10 April 1989, the date of the uprating of Social Security benefits. For those in receipt of £2 a week or less, the payments will terminate on that date. Some payments will have ceased during the year because of a change in the applicant's circumstances. Housing benefit transitional payments were introduced to help vulnerable groups at the changeover to the new scheme in April 1988. This help was intended to be only transitional and it was made clear at the outset that transitional payments would be withdrawn in due course, for example, as other benefits increased.

    Funeral Payments

    To ask the Secretary of State for Social Security when, pursuant to his reply to the right hon. Member for Stoke on Trent, South (Mr. Ashley), Official Report, column 294, he will lay the regulations needed to extend eligibility for social fund funeral payments.

    I have today laid before Parliament the Social Fund Maternity and Funeral Expenses (General) Amendment Regulations 1989. These regulations will extend eligibility for help with funeral expenses under the social fund to people who qualify for community charge rebate in Scotland from April 1989 and community charge benefit in England, Wales and Scotland from April 1990.

    Pensioners (Earnings)

    To ask the Secretary of State for Social Security what would be the cost of (a) ending the earnings limit to pension entitlement and (b) raising the earnings limit to £100 per week.

    [holding answer 28 February 1989]: The estimated public expenditure costs of (a) abolishing the retirement pension earnings rule and (b) increasing the level of permitted weekly earnings to £100 would be £355 million1 and £40 million1 respectively in 1989–90.

    1 These estimates are based on 1989–90 benefit rates, and do not take account of tax effects.

    Transitional Protection

    To ask the Secretary of State for Social Security if he will indicate (i) the number of claimants who were awarded transitional protection following the implementation of the Social Security Act, (ii) the number of claimants who are still in receipt of transitional protection within each category and (iii) the number of claimants whose overall benefit will not rise on uprating day as a result of transitional protection.

    [holding answer 6 March 1989]: Precise information is not available for income support claimants. An estimated 1·4 million income support claimants were awarded transitional protection when that benefit was introduced in April 1988. Estimated numbers in the categories used in the technical annex to the White Paper on the reform of social security (Cmnd. 9691), still receiving transitional protection at the end of March 1989 are as follows:

    Number
    Pensioners 80 +170,000
    Pensioners aged 60–79340,000
    All pensioners510,000
    Persons receiving the disability premium30,000
    Lone parents160,000
    Couples with children30,000
    Others470,000
    Total1,200,000
    An estimated 3·9 million income support claimants will receive a benefit increase at this year's uprating; approximately 570,000 are expected not to receive an increase.To date 176,529 people have received housing benefit transitional payments and 149 have received income support transitional payments from the transitional payments unit in Glasgow. At 1 March 1989, 169,409 applicants were still receiving housing benefit transitional payments and 59 were receiving income support transitional payments, broken down into the following categories:
    Housing benefitIncome support
    Pensioners128,54625
    Families with children19,79625
    Sick and disabled11,5859
    Widows8,636
    Industrial Injury Benefit recipients454
    War Pensioners392
    An estimated 1,200 people receiving housing benefit transitional payments and 59 people receiving income support transitional payments are expected to receive no overall increase in their benefit income at uprating.Sixty-five former family income supplement claimants received a protected amount following the change to family credit. A small proportion may still be receiving it. No one will still be receiving protection by the time of the April uprating.

    Income Support

    To ask the Secretary of State for Social Security (1) what would be the additional cost in Halifax if full uprating was awarded to all those in receipt of income support irrespective of payment of transitional additions;(2) how many claimants in Halifax were awarded a transitional addition in April 1988; and how many of these will as a result receive this April

    (a) reduced uprating and (b) no uprating;

    (3) what percentage of the following categories of claimants in Halifax in receipt of income support will receive no increase in their benefit payments as a result of this year's uprating because of the effect of transitional additions (a) pensioners, (b) persons in receipt of a disability premium, (c) single parents, (d) unemployed married, (e) unemployed single, (f) unemployed with children and (g) others.

    I refer the hon. Member to my reply to the hon. Member for Holborn and St. Pancras (Mr. Dobson) on 6 March at column 445.

    To ask the Secretary of State for Social Security what the additional cost of uprating would have been if full uprating was awarded to all those in receipt of income support irrespective of payment of transitional additions.

    [holding answer 6 March 1989]: Precise information is not available. The estimated additional cost would have been around £70 million.

    Health

    Protein Fractionation Centre

    To ask the Secretary of State for Health whether the medicines inspectorate has recently visited the protein fractionation centre; and if he is satisfied that this manufacturing facility has adequate accommodation to justify the issue of a manufacturing licence.

    I refer the right hon. Member to the reply to him yesterday by my right hon. and learned Friend the Secretary of State for Scotland.

    Consultation Exercises

    To ask the Secretary of State for Health what was the cost in (a) real and (b) cash terms for each of the last five years to his Department and its predecessors producing and distributing printed material pertaining to consultation exercises on matters within his present. responsibilities as (i) Green Papers and (ii) White Papers

    Green and White Papers are generally published by HMSO. The Department, as did its predecessor the Department of Health and Social Security, purchase the number of copies they require of each paper for distribution internally, and to certain other recipients, from HMSO. The information on the costs of such purchases can be produced only at disproportionate cost. Records of distributions are not retained and retrospective distribution costs cannot therefore be calculated.

    Counterfeit Products

    To ask the Secretary of State for Health (1) what steps, following the product recall in respect of the import of counterfeit Zantac tablets, his Department is taking to ascertain the extent of penetration of these or other counterfeit products into use by patients in the United Kingdom;(2) what safeguards he is now preparing under the product licences (parallel imports) scheme to ensure that there is no repetition, in the case of any other product, of the importation of counterfeit Zantac tablets, apparently of Greek origin; and if he will make a statement.

    No evidence has appeared to show that any such counterfeit tablets actually reached United Kingdom pharmacists or patients.Tests carried out on retained samples suggested that all supplies with the suspect batch number distributed within the United Kingdom may have been genuine. A batch of counterfeit Zantac tablets was rejected by a parallel importer and returned to his Greek suppliers. These counterfeits were accordingly discovered under existing safeguards.Surveillance operations already carried out by the Department include a sampling and testing programme by the medicines inspectorate, requirements for licensed importers to verify the identity of each batch of imported material and close co-operation with the Royal Pharmaceutical Society inspectors.We are still investigating the background to the counterfeit material and will be considering whether any changes may be necessary to the United Kingdom parallel import scheme. We also maintain close co-operation with our colleagues in the European Community.

    Life Support Systems

    To ask the Secretary of State for Health what measures are undertaken to protect intensive care or other patients from electronic interference in the normal operation of automated life support systems in the light of patient deaths in France.

    Patients are fully protected by the requirement that all such equipment in use in the NHS is constructed to the standard of BS 5724 (IEC 601–1) and the manufacturers are subject to approval under the Department's manufacturer registration scheme. Our central defect centre has no reports of difficulties arising of the kind experienced in France.

    Child Abuse (Greenwich)

    To ask the Secretary of State for Health what recent representations he has received about allegations of sexual and other abuse of children at homes run by the London borough of Greenwich; and what action he is taking in the matter.

    The attention of the Department has been drawn to a number of alleged matters of serious concern in community homes in the London borough of Greenwich. The social services inspectorate has discussed these issues with senior officers of the council and has been assured that all allegations are thoroughly investigated by the authority. The inspectorate also discussed the action being taken following its report on the management review of residential child care in the borough in 1987 and will continue to monitor the situation.

    Aids

    To ask the Secretary of State for Health if he will set out the numbers by country of birth for each of the last three years for the following categories as recorded by the Parkside health authority (a) AIDS patients, (b) HIV positive patients and (c) drug dependency patients.

    We do not hold this information centrally. My hon. Friend may wish to contact the chairman of Parkside health authority for this information.

    To ask the Secretary of State for Health what is the total budget spent on AZT for each of the years for which figures are available; and what the estimated budget for AZT for the next five years will be.

    We do not hold information centrally on the total costs of prescribing Zidovudine (formerly known as AZT). Some general practitioners are known to be prescribing the drug, but information about these prescriptions is not yet available. Zidovudine is also prescribed in the hospital service. In 1988–89, a total of £58·6 million has been made available to health authorities in England specifically as a contribution to the extra costs in providing AIDS and HIV related services, including the cost of Zidovudine. This figure will increase in 1989–90 to nearly £130 million.

    Under-Fives

    To ask the Secretary of State for Health if he will publish a table showing by local authority area the latest figures for (a) estimated population of up to four-year-olds, (b) local authority day nursery places provided and (c) full-time equivalent local authority day nursery places provided.

    The latest information on estimated population of children aged up to four years old and local authority day nursery places provided in each local authority in England are published in "Children's Day Care Facilities at 31 March 1987, England", copies of which are available in the Library.We cannot identify the number of full-time equivalent local authority day nursery places provided in figures we collect centrally.

    Travelling Expenses

    To ask the Secretary of State for Health when he intends to amend the National Health Service (Travelling Expenses in Remission of Charges) Regulations 1988, so that he can deal with the cases of people wanting help with National Health Service costs stockpiled at Newcastle.

    I intend to lay regulations amending the National Health Service (Travelling Expenses and Remission of Charges) Regulations, to take effect from 10 April. The amendments will apply only to claims made after that date. Claims currently stockpiled will be assessed under the existing regulations when the problem referred to in my reply to the hon. Member on 7 March, at column 491, has been resolved.

    Sight Tests

    To ask the Secretary of State for Health when the new arrangements for sight testing are to come into effect.

    I have today laid two sets of regulations. The first will extend the National Health Service voucher scheme for glasses. The second will restrict National Health Service sight tests to the following groups:

    Children under 16
    Full time students under age 19
    People or their partners who are receiving Income Support or Family Credit
    People entitled to full remission of National Health Service charges
    The registered blind or partially sighted
    Those who are prescribed complex lenses
    Diagnosed diabetic and glaucoma sufferers
    Parents, brothers, sisters and children age 40 and over of glaucoma sufferers.
    Financial assistance will be available through the voucher scheme towards the cost of their sight test for those on low income who are not eligible for a National Health Service test.The regulations will also extend the current voucher scheme to provide help for adults with the cost of the repair or replacement of their spectacles where the loss or damage was the result of the person's disability, injury or illness.We are consulting further on regulations which will set out the duties to be undertaken when a person's sight is tested.I would like to make it clear that the second set of regulations to which I have referred does not impose a new charge for sight testing: it simply removes the National Health Service subsidy from people other than those in the groups listed in the table.

    Dhss (Partition)

    To ask the Secretary of State for Health if he will give details of the partition of the Department of Health and Social Security as it affects the Civil Service.

    [holding answer 9 March 1989]: With effect from 1 April 1989 there will be separate administration votes for the two Departments details of which have already been published in this year's public expenditure White Paper. Each Department will employ its own staff, but a few internal management services will be administered by one Department on behalf of the other on a common service basis where this is cost effective.

    Agriculture, Fisheries And Food

    Woodlands

    To ask the Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Food if he will list the names, locations and areas of woodland grant scheme applications in excess of 100 hectares submitted since the start of the scheme in England, showing those for which an environmental assessment has been requested by the Forestry Commission; and if he will give the reasons why environmental assessment has not been requested in other cases.

    There have been no applications under the woodland grant scheme for more than 100 hectares of new planting in England.

    Badgers

    To ask the Minister of Agriculture. Fisheries and Food if he will make a statement on the Government's policy towards badgers.

    The welfare of badgers as a protected species is the responsibility of my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State for the Environment, while the Badgers Act is the responsibility of my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State for the Home Department. However, I am required under section 9 of the Badgers Act (as amended by the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981) to deal with applications to take badgers which are causing serious damage to land, crops, poultry or other forms of property. The Government's policy for dealing with badgers to control tuberculosis in cattle is that recommended by Professor Dunnet following his review in 1986. Action taken against badgers is limited to those farms where badgers have been implicated in a tuberculosis breakdown in cattle and consists of trapping and humanely killing the badgers, except those identified as lactating sows, which are released unharmed. In both such cases damage to agriculture has to be demonstrated beyond any reasonable doubt before action is authorised.

    Beef Premium

    To ask the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food what administrative arrangements will be applied in connection with the payment of the Community special beef premium at livestock markets for slaughter and at slaughterhouses to comply with the condition that the premium may not be paid on more than 90 male animals from any farm; and if he will take any steps to ensure that cattle breeders in the less favoured areas will benefit from this scheme.

    In reply to my hon. Friend the Member for Harborough (Sir J. Farr) my right hon. Friend announced on 6 March that the Community special premium for beef would in the first instance be applied in Great Britain when cattle are sold at live markets for slaughter and at slaughterhouses. Each beef producer may apply for premium on up to 90 head of male animals per year; this condition will be controlled centrally through computer systems on which the scheme will be run. Farming and trade interests see advantage in applying the premium on-farm, which would help to ensure that breeders in the less favoured areas would benefit directly from the scheme. Agriculture Ministers will review the practicability and cost effectiveness of moving in due course to an on-farm basis.

    Dairy Produce Quotas Regulations

    To ask the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food what plans he has to amend the Dairy Produce Quotas Regulations 1986.

    My right hon. Friend laid before Parliament today the Dairy Produce Regulations 1989, which replace similar regulations made in 1986 and amended in 1988 and earlier this year.The new regulations introduce changes to the quota transfer rules, including new procedures for the appointment of arbitrators in cases of dispute. They take into account changes in European Community legislation which affect the calculation of liability to supplementary levy. A number of redundant provisions, most of them relating to the allocation of new quota rights, have not been re-enacted. Other changes have been made to clarify the meaning of certain provisions in the light of experience.

    Employment

    Select Committee Recommendations

    To ask the Secretary of State for Employment how many Select Committee recommendations have been made about, and how many accepted by, his Department since June 1987.

    The five recommendations made about this Department contained in the reports of the Select Committee on Employment issued since June 1987, to which Government responses have been published, have been accepted in whole or in part by the Government, or have covered ground where the Government are already taking action.

    Consumers (Consultation)

    To ask the Secretary of State for Employment what arrangements there are for consulting consumers on the work and decisions of his Department.

    My Department maintains close contact with its clients. In the course of evaluating departmental programmes and activities surveys are undertaken of scheme participants and, where relevant, their employers or other intermediaries. The employment service collects information about customer attitudes through a wide range of surveys and due account is taken of their findings in planning future developments. Our proposals for training and enterprise councils will pass responsibility to employer-led groups at a local level. Our measures for assisting small firms and encouraging enterprise reflect demand from the small business sector and the views of participants in departmental schemes and representative organisations. All our health and safety proposals are subject to extensive public consultation and are submitted by the tripartite Health and Safety Commission. My Department also has regular discussions with business and client groups at regional and area level.

    Career Development Loans

    To ask the Secretary of State for Employment what proportion of the people who obtained career development loans since the scheme was launched in 1986 were women; and how many of these women had children (a) in the under-fives age group and (b) in the five to 16 age group.

    Since career development loans were launched in 1986, a total of 2,431 loans have been approved, of which 949, or approximately two out of every five loans, have been taken out by women. At the time of application, 35 of these women had children only in the under-five age group, 103 had children only in the five to 16 age group and a further 20 had children in both age groups.

    Training Schemes

    To ask the Secretary of State for Employment what is the total Government expenditure on all Government-funded training schemes for each year since 1970, at 1988 prices.

    The Manpower Services Commission was established in 1974 and expenditure figures can be provided only from the financial year 1974–75 onwards.The total expenditure on training schemes by the Manpower Services Commission, and the Training Commission at 1988 prices was as follows:

    £ million
    1974–75318·5
    1975–76468·2
    1976–77598·1
    1977–78625·3
    1978–79728·6
    1979–80735·1
    1980–81810·4
    1981–82981·7
    1982–831,087·8
    1983–841,249·0
    1984–851,283·5
    1985–861,352·7
    1986–871,491·5
    1987–881,613·1

    To ask the Secretary of State for Employment what steps he intends to take to ensure that training schemes offer training and do not consist of simple labouring.

    All YTS and employment training follows a laid-down design framework; trainees are wherever possible offered the opportunity to obtain recognised vocational qualifications; and staff of my Department's Training Agency, including the training standards advisory service, oversee the provision.

    To ask the Secretary of State for Employment what opportunities are offered by training agencies in Glasgow to udertake training in landscape gardening.

    At present in Glasgow there are 146 training opportunities available in landscape gardening under YTS and 393 under employment training.

    Workplaces (Inspections)

    To ask the Secretary of State for Employment what percentage of workplaces and workers' terms and conditions of employment were inspected by the wages inspectorate divisions covering (a) Greenock and Port Glasgow, (b) Strathclyde and (c) Scotland as a whole in the last year for which figures are available.

    Wages inspectorate statistics are not compiled for areas smaller than the inspectorate's nine divisions. Scotland is one division. The percentage of workplaces checked in Scotland in 1988 is included in a reply given in the Official Report of 1 March at columns 201–6.No information is available on the percentage of workers whose pay was checked in individual wages inspectorate divisions. Terms and conditions of employment, other than statutory requirements on minimum pay, are not a matter for the wages inspectorate.

    Earnings

    To ask the Secretary of State for Employment (1) how many and what percentage of full-time female workers earned less than the Council of Europe's decency threshold at the latest available date in (a) Greenock and Port Glasgow, (b) Strathclyde and (c) Scotland as a whole;(2) how many and what percentage of the full-time male work force earned less than the Council of Europe's decency threshold at the latest available date in

    (a) Greenock and Port Glasgow, (b) Strathclyde and (c) Scotland as a whole.

    I refer the hon. Member to the answer I gave to the hon. Member for Glasgow, Rutherglen (Mr. McAvoy) on 8 March 1989, Official Report, columns 569–70.

    Construction Workers (Head Protection)

    To ask the Secretary of State for Employment if he proposes to allow a religious exemption for Sikh construction workers in respect of head protection.

    We recently received proposals from the Health and Safety Commission for regulations to require head protection to be worn by persons in construction work. These are being given careful consideration, together with the question whether an exemption should be allowed for turban-wearing Sikhs.

    To ask the Secretary of State for Employment what has been the incidence of head injuries to construction workers wearing turbans in the past 12 months.

    No separate statistics are kept by the Health and Safety Executive for head injuries to construction workers wearing turbans.

    National Training Task Force

    To ask the Secretary of State for Employment how many places on the national training task force have been allocated to women.

    Two women have agreed to serve on the national training task force. They are Sophie Mirman, chairman and joint managing director of Sockshop International plc and Prudence Leith, managing director of Prudence Leith Ltd. Members have been appointed in an individual capacity because of their personal commitment to training.

    Work-Related Further Education

    To ask the Secretary of State for Employment whether he has received any representations about the 1989–90 level of funding for the work-related further education programme; and if he will make a statement.

    [holding answer 9 March 1989]: The Association of Metropolitan Authorities has written to the Secretary of State about the funding for work-related further education shown in the recent public expenditure White Paper.

    A decrease in allocations to local education authorities is partially offset by an increase in the work-related further education development fund.

    Scotland

    Blood Products

    To ask the Secretary of State for Scotland what sums are currently outstanding to the blood transfusion service from the private sector for the supply of blood products.

    I am informed by the Common Services Agency, of which the Scottish national blood transfusion service is a division, that its policy is that invoices should be paid by the end of the month following the month of issue. As at 8 March 1989, three invoices, the largest being for £2,225, were outstanding beyond that period. The Common Services Agency is pursuing prompt payment of the outstanding accounts.

    Protein Fractionation Centre

    To ask the Secretary of State for Scotland whether Her Majesty's Government have completed the new building works required to ensure that the protein fractionation centre of the Scottish national blood transfusion service meets the standards of good manufacturing practice proposed by the medicines inspectorate in 1980–81.

    The medicines inspectorate visited the protein fractionation centre in June 1988 and made recommendations in October 1988, including one relating to the expansion of storage areas. My hon. Friend the Under-Secretary of State for Education and Health gave approval in principle last month for new building works at the protein fractionation centre. The Common Services Agency will arrange for the building works to be carried out as quickly as practicable.

    Select Committees (Recommendations)

    To ask the Secretary of State for Scotland how many Select Committee recommendations have been made about, and how many accepted, by his Department since June 1987.

    The Agriculture and Energy Select Committees have each completed reports since June 1987 involving 12 recommendations falling within my field or responsibility. Eight of these have been accepted in whole or in part, or noted where no further action by Government was sought.

    Consumers (Consultation)

    To ask the Secretary of State for Scotland what arrangements there are for consulting consumers on the work and decisions of his Department.

    In the Scottish Office there are extensive formal and informal arrangements to ensure that the views of interested parties including consumers are known and taken fully into account both in relation to existing work and the development and implementation of new initiatives. In particular, views on new initiatives are canvassed widely through consultation documents. In response to a recommendation by the Scottish Consumer Council, comments received are placed on a public file (unless respondents request confidentiality) for the benefit of interested parties.

    Health Service (Grading)

    To ask the Secretary of State for Scotland what is the present position on grading of sisters at the Institute of Neurological Sciences at Southern General hospital.

    As a result of the regrading exercise 22 sisters have been graded F, 20 G, and one H.

    Forestry

    To ask the Secretary of State for Scotland under what circumstances the Forestry Commission requires an environmental assessment of a forestry proposal to convert native woodland or scrub into plantations of non-native trees.

    The Environmental Assessment (Afforestation) Regulations 1988 apply only to new planting. Proposals to convert existing woodland or scrub would therefore not require an environmental assessment.Under the Government's broadleaved policy, woodland which is now broadleaved is expected to remain so, and special attention is given to ancient semi-natural broadleaved woodlands to ensure continuance of their special features.

    To ask the Secretary of State for Scotland if he will list the rates of return on investment achieved by each conservancy of the Forestry Commission for its commercial forestry holdings at the time of the last quinquennial review; what was the date of that review; and if he will explain the costing depreciation and accounting proceedures used in making his assessment of return.

    The last quinquennial review was undertaken by the Forestry Commission as at 31 March 1987. The rates of return on new planting and restocking for each conservancy are listed in special note 3 of the financial statements and accounts published in the Forestry Commission's 67th annual report and accounts 1986–87, copies of which are in the Library. The Forestry Commission's accounting policies are explained in note I to these accounts.

    Labour Statistics

    To ask the Secretary of State for Scotland if he will list the number of people who were classified as long-term unemployed in (a) Greenock and Port Glasgow, (b) Strathclyde and (c) Scotland as a whole in December 1979, December 1982 and December 1988.

    As the duration analysis of unemployed claimants is calculated quarterly, the information in the table relates to January in each of the years 1980, 1983 and 1989 due to changes in the coverage of the statistics during the period the figures are not directly comparable. (Parliamentary constituency figures were not compiled before June 1983.)

    Claimants unemployed for over one year
    January 1980January 1983January 1989
    Greenock and Port Glasgow Parliamentary constituencyn.a.n.a.3,123
    Strathclyde Region29,39375,24263,515
    Scotland46,915119,874106,190
    This information is available in the Library.

    To ask the Secretary of State for Scotland what was the level of unemployment, expressed as a percentage, according to the latest available figures for (a) the Greenock travel-to-work area, (b) Strathclyde and (c) Scotland as a whole; and what were the comparable figures 10 years ago.

    The unemployment rates for these areas on 12 January 1989 (the latest date for which information is available) are provided in the table, together with the data available for January 1979. Due to changes in the coverage and compilation of the count the latest unemployment figures and those available for 1979 are not directly comparable.

    Unemployment percentages
    January 1979January 1989
    Greenock travel-to-work area12·016·5
    Strathclyde region9·814·4
    Scotland8·412·1
    This information is available in the Library

    Beef Premium

    To ask the Secretary of State for Scotland what administrative arrangements will be applied in connection with the payment of the Community special beef premium at livestock markets for slaughter and at slaughterhouses to comply with the condition that the premium may not be paid on more than 90 male animals from any farm; and if he will take any steps to ensure that cattle breeders in the less favoured areas will benefit from this scheme.

    My right hon. Friend the Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, in his answer to my hon. Friend the Member for Harborough (Sir J. Farr) on 6 March at column 433, announced that the Community special premium for beef would in the first instance be applied in Great Britain when cattle are sold at live markets for slaughter and at slaughterhouses. Each beef producer may apply for premium on up to 90 head of male animals per year; this condition will be controlled centrally through the computer systems on which the scheme will be run. Farming and trade interests see advantage in applying the premium on-farm, which would help to ensure that breeders in the less-favoured areas would benefit directly from the scheme. Agriculture Ministers will review the practicability and cost effectiveness of moving in due course to an on-farm basis.