daily report friday, 9 january 2015...

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Daily Report Friday, 9 January 2015 This report shows written answers and statements provided on 9 January 2015 and the information is correct at the time of publication (03:31 P.M., 09 January 2015). For the latest information on written questions and answers, ministerial corrections, and written statements, please visit: http://www.parliament.uk/writtenanswers/ CONTENTS ANSWERS 4 BUSINESS, INNOVATION AND SKILLS 4 Apprentices 4 Engineering: Females 5 Vocational Training 5 CABINET OFFICE 5 Beer: Industry 5 Civil Servants: Pensions 6 Furniture 6 Government Departments: Legal Opinion 7 Opinion Polls 7 Staff 7 Voluntary Work: Hertfordshire 8 COMMUNITIES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT 8 Non-domestic Rates 8 CULTURE, MEDIA AND SPORT 9 Film: Finance 9 Telephone Preference Service 9 UK City of Culture: Kingston upon Hull 10 DEFENCE 10 Falkland Islands 10 Gibraltar 10 Helicopters: Crew 11 Military Aircraft 11 Private Military and Security Companies 13 DEPUTY PRIME MINISTER 14 General Election 2015 14 EDUCATION 14 Children in Care 14 Children: Walking 15 GCSE: Disadvantaged 16 Pre-school Education: East of England 16 Regional School Commissioners 16 ENERGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE 17 Boilers 17 Committee on Climate Change 17 Heating: Carbon Emissions 18 Members: Correspondence 18 Public Expenditure 18 Solar Power 19 Solar Power: North Africa 20 ENVIRONMENT, FOOD AND RURAL AFFAIRS 20 Dogs: Animal Breeding 20 Lead Ammunition Group 20 Nature Conservation: Crime 21

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Page 1: Daily Report Friday, 9 January 2015 CONTENTSqnadailyreport.blob.core.windows.net/qnadailyreportxml/Written... · Daily Report Friday, 9 January 2015 This report shows written answers

Daily Report Friday, 9 January 2015

This report shows written answers and statements provided on 9 January 2015 and the information is correct at the time of publication (03:31 P.M., 09 January 2015). For the latest information on written questions and answers, ministerial corrections, and written statements, please visit: http://www.parliament.uk/writtenanswers/

CONTENTS ANSWERS 4

BUSINESS, INNOVATION AND SKILLS 4

Apprentices 4

Engineering: Females 5

Vocational Training 5

CABINET OFFICE 5

Beer: Industry 5

Civil Servants: Pensions 6

Furniture 6

Government Departments: Legal Opinion 7

Opinion Polls 7

Staff 7

Voluntary Work: Hertfordshire 8

COMMUNITIES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT 8

Non-domestic Rates 8

CULTURE, MEDIA AND SPORT 9

Film: Finance 9

Telephone Preference Service 9

UK City of Culture: Kingston upon Hull 10

DEFENCE 10

Falkland Islands 10

Gibraltar 10

Helicopters: Crew 11

Military Aircraft 11

Private Military and Security Companies 13

DEPUTY PRIME MINISTER 14

General Election 2015 14

EDUCATION 14

Children in Care 14

Children: Walking 15

GCSE: Disadvantaged 16

Pre-school Education: East of England 16

Regional School Commissioners 16

ENERGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE 17

Boilers 17

Committee on Climate Change 17

Heating: Carbon Emissions 18

Members: Correspondence 18

Public Expenditure 18

Solar Power 19

Solar Power: North Africa 20

ENVIRONMENT, FOOD AND RURAL AFFAIRS 20

Dogs: Animal Breeding 20

Lead Ammunition Group 20

Nature Conservation: Crime 21

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Nature Conservation: Cybercrime 21

Ragworms 22

FOREIGN AND COMMONWEALTH OFFICE 22

Afghanistan 22

Iraq 23

Russia 24

Syria 25

Thailand 26

Ukraine 27

HEALTH 27

Breasts: Plastic Surgery 27

Cancer 27

Clinical Commissioning Groups 29

Diabetes 32

Diabetes: South West 33

Digestive System: Older People 33

Doctors: Working Hours 34

Drugs: Scotland 34

Ebola 35

General Dental Council 35

Hepatitis: Drugs 35

Homeopathy 36

In Vitro Fertilisation 36

Liver Diseases 36

Locums 37

Lyme Disease 37

Medical Treatments 38

Mental Health Services 38

Mental Illness: Children 39

Neuromuscular Disorders 40

NHS: Costs 41

NHS: Equality 41

NHS: Per Capita Costs 42

NHS: Private Sector 43

Obesity 44

Social Services: Third Sector 44

Supermarkets 45

Tattooing 45

University Hospital of Hartlepool 45

Vulnerable Adults 46

JUSTICE 47

Indonesia 47

Interpreters 47

Secure Training Centres 48

PRIME MINISTER 50

Radicalism 50

TRANSPORT 51

Buses: Safety Belts 51

Christmas 51

Driving: Licensing 52

High Speed 2 Railway Line 52

Motorways: Air Pollution 53

Shrewsbury Station 53

TREASURY 54

Banks: Loans 54

Children: Day Care 54

Electronic Commerce: VAT 54

Electronic Publishing: VAT 55

Fossil Fuels: Tax Yields 55

Insurance: EU Law 56

Interest Rate Swap Transactions 56

Public Sector Debt 56

Solar Power: North Africa 57

Welfare Tax Credits 57

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Friday, 9 January 2015 Daily Report 3

WALES 57

Driving: Licensing 57

WORK AND PENSIONS 58

Atos Healthcare 58

Disability Living Allowance 59

Employment Schemes 59

Housing Benefit: Social Rented Housing 60

Social Security Benefits 60

Trussell Trust 60

Work Programme 60

MINISTERIAL CORRECTIONS 62

CABINET OFFICE 62

Civil Servants: Pensions 62

WRITTEN STATEMENTS 65

BUSINESS, INNOVATION AND SKILLS 65

Final Government Evidence for the Low Pay Commission's 2015 Report-National Minimum Wage 65

DEFENCE 65

Libya Training Report 65

DEPUTY PRIME MINISTER 66

Maximising Voter Registration 66

Notes:

Questions marked thus [R] indicate that a relevant interest has been declared. Questions with identification numbers of 900000 or greater indicate that the question was originally tabled as an oral question and has since been unstarred.

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ANSWERS

BUSINESS, INNOVATION AND SKILLS

Apprentices

Mr John Denham: [219937]

To ask the Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills, how many students started a higher level apprenticeship at levels 4, 5 and 6 in (a) 2013-14, (b) 2012-13 and (c) 2011-12 in each further education and higher education institution in England.

Mr John Denham: [219938]

To ask the Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills, how many students started a higher level apprenticeship at levels 4, 5 and 6 in (a) 2013-14, (b) 2012-13 and (c) 2011-12 by each type of provider.

Mr John Denham: [219939]

To ask the Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills, how many students started a higher level apprenticeship at levels 4, 5 and 6 in (a) 2013-14, (b) 2012-13 and (c) 2011-12 in each parliamentary constituency.

Nick Boles: As the requested table is large, information on the number of Higher Apprenticeship starts by each further education provider in England has been placed in the libraries of the house. The information is not available for Higher Education Institutions.

Table 1 shows the number of Higher Apprenticeship starts by provider type.

Information on the number of Higher Apprenticeship starts by geography is published in a supplementary table to a Statistical First Release:

https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/382956/apprenticeships-starts-by-geography-level-and-age.xls

Table 1: Higher Apprenticeship Starts by Provider Type, 2011/12 to 2013/14

PROVIDER TYPE 2011/12 2012/13 2013/14

General FE and Tertiary College

1,300 4,000 3,100

Other Public Funded 100 200 100

Private Sector Public Funded

2,300 5,500 5,800

Sixth Form College - 100 100

Specialist College - - 100

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PROVIDER TYPE 2011/12 2012/13 2013/14

Higher Apprenticeship Total

3,700 9,800 9,200

Notes:

1) The source is the Individualised Learner Record (ILR).

2) Volumes are rounded to the nearest 10 except for Totals, which are rounded to the nearest 100 ; “-“ represents a base value of less than 5.

Engineering: Females

Meg Munn: [219361]

To ask the Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills, which organisations have been awarded funding from the Employer Ownership Fund to train female engineers; and how much each such organisation has been allocated.

Nick Boles: The offer for support for women in engineering under the Employer Ownership Fund was closed for applications on 5 December 2014. The applications are being assessed and I hope to be able to announce any successful applications shortly.

Vocational Training

Meg Munn: [219396]

To ask the Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills, what forecast his Department has made of the spending on the 2014-15 Employee Ownership Fund.

Nick Boles: Our latest estimate of spending on the Employer Ownership Fund during 2014-15 is £0.72m.

CABINET OFFICE

Beer: Industry

Mr Nigel Evans: [219682]

To ask the Minister for the Cabinet Office, what estimate his Department has made of the number of jobs related to the brewing industry in (a) Ribble Valley constituency, (b) Lancashire and (c) the UK.

Mr Rob Wilson: [Holding answer 8 January 2015]: The information requested falls within the responsibility of the UK Statistics Authority. I have asked the Authority to reply.

Attachments:

1. ONS Letter to Member - Jobs in Brewing Industry [PQ 219682 ONS 1.pdf]

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Civil Servants: Pensions

Jonathan Ashworth: [219342]

To ask the Minister for the Cabinet Office, how many retired civil servants have not received any pension payments from MyCSP since October 2014.

Jonathan Ashworth: [219343]

To ask the Minister for the Cabinet Office, how many retired civil servants have received late pension payments from MyCSP since October 2014.

Jonathan Ashworth: [219344]

To ask the Minister for the Cabinet Office, how many retired civil servants have received late pension payments since the spin out of MyCSP in 2012.

Mr Francis Maude: MyCSP was spun-out as a mutual joint venture in May 2012. Mutualising MyCSP was good for staff, taxpayers and for the service they provide to pensioners. MyCSP will almost halve the cost of administering pensions within a decade, while improving services which were variable before. Employees of MyCSP have benefited through dividends, which they have received in both years since mutualisation. Staff survey figures show rising staff engagement and a decline in sickness absence.

MyCSP Ltd took over administration of the pensioner payroll in September 2011. Legacy problems were inherited from the previous supplier, including 5,579 cases where payments had already been delayed or missed by September. MyCSP have now cleared all but 422 of these cases and MyCSP has switched available resources to reduce the remaining backlog as quickly as possible.

Since October there have been 1197 cases of delayed payment, most of which were the result of ongoing delays of the historic cases inherited from the previous supplier in September.

Since October 36 overseas pensioners have been awaiting payments. 33 of these are still outstanding because new banking mandates need to be completed to allow processing by the new paying bank.

MyCSP are doing everything possible to clear all remaining cases where payments are still due but are in many cases dependent on employers or pensioners themselves for the necessary information to do so. Where delayed payment has caused hardship MyCSP have been making emergency interim payments to members. The majority of the scheme’s 658,000 pensioners have been paid accurately and on time since September.

Furniture

Jonathan Ashworth: [219520]

To ask the Minister for the Cabinet Office, how many (a) desks and (b) workstations there are in his Department; and what the average annual cost to his Department is of leasing each desk.

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Mr Francis Maude: Information on the Cabinet Office estate is available through the annual ‘State of the Estate’ report. A link to the report is below.

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/state-of-the-estate-2013

The Cabinet Office does not lease any desks.

Government Departments: Legal Opinion

Caroline Lucas: [219683]

To ask the Minister for the Cabinet Office, what guidance his Department issues on the circumstances under which Departments should seek legal advice from the Attorney General; if he will publish that guidance; and if he will make a statement.

Mr Francis Maude: Guidance on the circumstances under which departments can seek legal advice from the Law Officers including the Attorney General can be found in publicly available documents including the Ministerial Code and the Cabinet Manual.

Opinion Polls

Mr Mike Weir: [219533]

To ask the Minister for the Cabinet Office, what payments his Department has made to Ipsos-Mori for opinion polling since 1 June 2014; and what the purpose was of such polling.

Mr Mike Weir: [219534]

To ask the Minister for the Cabinet Office, how much his Department has spent on opinion polling on attitudes in Scotland towards Scottish independence since 1 January 2013; and under what cost headings such money has been spent.

Mr Francis Maude: As part of this Government's transparency programme, we publish spend data over £25,000 and contracts over £10,000 on Gov.uk and Contracts Finder.

Staff

Jonathan Ashworth: [219569]

To ask the Minister for the Cabinet Office, how many staff were employed in his Department on 1 January 2015.

Mr Francis Maude: Information about the size of the Cabinet Office workforce is published on the Cabinet Office website at https://www.gov.uk/government/collections/payroll-costs-and-non-consolidated-pay-data and on data.gov.uk at http://data.gov.uk/dataset/workforce-management-information-cabinet-office .

Information about the Cabinet Office workforce is also published in the Cabinet Office Annual Report and Accounts which are available at https://www.gov.uk/government/collections/cabinet-office-annual-reports-and-accounts

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Voluntary Work: Hertfordshire

Sir Oliver Heald: [219896]

To ask the Minister for the Cabinet Office, what future plans he has for the National Citizen Service in the North East Hertfordshire constituency.

Mr Rob Wilson: 817 young people took part in National Citizen Service (NCS) in North East Hertfordshire and surrounding area in 2014.

This year will again see NCS programmes taking place in every local authority across England, giving more young people the opportunity to take part in this life changing programme.

The government is committed to giving as many young people as possible the chance to take part in NCS and the significant growth of that the programme has seen so far is set to continue this year.

COMMUNITIES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT

Non-domestic Rates

Mr David Davis: [217876]

To ask the Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government, what estimate he has made of the number of small firms and shops in (a) England, (b) the East Riding of Yorkshire and (c) Haltemprice and Howden constituency which will be affected by the reduction in business rates.

Kris Hopkins: [Holding answer 15 December 2014]: My rt. hon. Friend, the Chancellor of the Exchequer announced at the 2014 Autumn Statement an extra £650 million of support for 2015-16 bills, bringing the total support of 2013 and 2014 Autumn Statement polices to £1.4 billion. This help includes:

• doubling small business rate relief for a further year. In England, this means an estimated 385,000 properties will pay no rates at all, while a further 190,000 properties will benefit from tapered relief;

• a 2% cap on the increase of the small business rates multiplier. This is a continuation of the 2% cap introduced in 2014-15 as part of Autumn Statement 2013 measures;

• increasing the temporary discount for shops, pubs and restaurants with rateable values below £50,000 from £1,000 to £1,500 for 2015-16, benefitting an estimated 300,000 properties in England;

• extending the existing transitional relief scheme for two years for properties with a rateable value up to and including £50,000.

These measures are in addition to previous Autumn Statement measures that continue into 2015-16, including:

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• a 50 per cent discount for 18 months to new occupants of vacant shops;

• allowing businesses to keep their small business rate relief for a year where they take on an additional property;

• business rates relief for empty new builds; and

• allowing businesses to pay their business rate bills over 12 months, in order to assist with their cash flow.

Central Government also now funds 50% of any local discount granted.

The Department does not collect data on a constituency basis, but Haltemprice and Howden constituency lies entirely within the East Riding of Yorkshire Council boundary. Table 1 attached shows the number of properties in 2014-15 within the East Riding of Yorkshire Council boundary that have benefitted from business rates measures extended in this year’s autumn statement.

Attachments:

1. Table - East Riding of Yorkshire Council [217876 Davis.docx]

CULTURE, MEDIA AND SPORT

Film: Finance

Luciana Berger: [219810]

To ask the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, whether his Department makes it a requirement of supporting the Film Fund that companies in receipt of Film Fund funding provide only paid (a) internships and (b) apprenticeships.

Mr Edward Vaizey: Companies in receipt of British Film Institute (BFI) Lottery Film Funding are subject to employment law.

Telephone Preference Service

Toby Perkins: [219749]

To ask the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, if he will take steps to ensure that telephone preference services are able to block international nuisance calls as well as domestic ones.

Mr Edward Vaizey: The Privacy and Electronic Communications Regulations (PECR) 2003 already prevent international nuisance marketing calls being made on behalf of UK companies. Callers are legally required to ensure they do not call a number that is registered with the Telephone Preference Service (TPS). UK consumers are also protected if they have previously notified the caller that they do not wish to receive such calls. Callers can be subject to fines of up to £500,000 for breaching the regulations. International marketing calls on behalf of non-UK companies are outside of the UK’s jurisdiction.

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UK City of Culture: Kingston upon Hull

Mr Gregory Campbell: [219826]

To ask the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, how his Department plans to ensure that Hull will learn lessons from Londonderry as the UK City of Culture in 2013.

Mr Edward Vaizey: DCMS officials recently visited Hull to discuss progress made with preparations for UK City of Culture 2017 and Hull will provide DCMS with a formal report on progress early this year. The CEO of Hull City of Culture has visited Derry~Londonderry to meet the CEOs of the City Council and Culture Company to ensure that lessons learned from UK City of Culture 2013 are incorporated into planning for 2017. Derry~Londonderry has also produced lessons learnt and evaluation reports which have been shared with Hull. DCMS will continue to support Hull in the run-up to 2017.

DEFENCE

Falkland Islands

Mr Nigel Evans: [219814]

To ask the Secretary of State for Defence, what plans his Department has to ensure a continued British military presence on the Falkland Islands.

Mr Mark Francois: The Government remains fully committed to the protection of the Falkland Islanders and is vigilant at all times. Our overall military posture in the South Atlantic is assessed as being appropriate and the Falkland Islands remain well-defended. However, we keep the situation under constant review, and as such contingency plans are in place to increase the military footprint in the South Atlantic, if required.

Gibraltar

Mr Philip Hollobone: [219945]

To ask the Secretary of State for Defence, what role his Department is playing in preventing illegal incursion into Gibraltarian waters by Spanish vessels.

Mr Mark Francois: The Government takes its responsibility for protecting the sovereignty of British Gibraltar Territorial Waters very seriously. The Royal Navy Gibraltar Squadron is at the forefront of our response to Spanish incursions, challenging unlawful actions by Spanish vessels. These challenges and subsequent diplomatic action by the Foreign Office are vital to demonstrating that the UK does not accept the practice, and to preserving our sovereignty over the waters. We shall continue to work with the Government of Gibralter on this issue.

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Helicopters: Crew

Alison Seabeck: [219944]

To ask the Secretary of State for Defence, how many helicopter crew sets there are in each of the armed services.

Mr Philip Dunne: The Royal Navy has 165 sets of operational helicopter crews, including 46 in the Commando Helicopter Force. The Army has 100, and the Royal Air Force has 120, including 28 in the Search and Rescue Force.

Military Aircraft

Angus Robertson: [219524]

To ask the Secretary of State for Defence, if he will place in the Library a copy of the Numerical Criteria for Airworthiness (Adelard 2002) produced for ALTG_ADRPI, under contract MAP 2b/1351.

Angus Robertson: [219525]

To ask the Secretary of State for Defence, if he will place in the Library a copy of the document, 201110314 Collision Warning System Analysis Impact V1 3, produced by Qinetiq in November 2011.

Mr Philip Dunne: A copy of the Numerical Criteria for Airworthiness (Adelard 2002) is attached.

Version 1.3 of the document '201110314 Collision Warning System Analysis' has been superseded and is no longer centrally held. A copy could be provided only at disproportionate cost.

Attachments:

1. Numerical Criteria for Airworthiness [Numerical criteria for Airworthiness.pdf]

Vernon Coaker: [219946]

To ask the Secretary of State for Defence, how many military aircraft there were in service in (a) May 2010 and (b) the latest date for which figures are available.

Mr Philip Dunne: I refer the hon. Member to the answer given on 18 December 2014 by my hon. Friend the Minister for Reserves (Julian Brazier) to Question 218827 giving a breakdown, by type, of the number of military aircraft in service.

Figures for May 2010 are not readily available. The figures shown below cover RAF fixed wing aircraft and are the average for January 2010. Figures for rotary aircraft cover all three Services.

"In service" has been taken to mean the effective fleet, which includes all aircraft barring those which are redundant, declared as surplus or awaiting disposal.

At January 2010

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AIRCRAFT TYPE – FIXED WING IN SERVICE FLEET

BAe 146 2

BAe 125 6

C-17 6

Dominie 9

Harrier 74

Hawk T1 129

Hawk T2 17

Hercules C130K 14

Hercules C130J 24

Nimrod MR2 6

Nimrod R1 2

Sentinel 5

Sentry 5

Tornado F3 22

Tornado GR4 137

Tristar 9

Tucano 93

Typhoon 64

VC10 15

Vigilant 65

Viking 82

Aircraft type – Rotary In service fleet

Apache 67

Bell 212 8

Chinook Mk2/3 48

Gazelle 27

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AIRCRAFT TYPE – FIXED WING IN SERVICE FLEET

Lynx Mk3 27

Lynx Mk7 77

Lynx Mk8 33

Lynx Mk9/9A 23

Merlin Mkl 42

Merlin Mk3/3A 28

N3 4

Puma 43

Sea King Mk3/3a 25

Sea King 4/6 42

Sea King Mk5 15

Sea King Mk7 (SKASac) 13

Attachments:

1. Hansard Extract 18 December 2014 [HOC 219946.doc]

Private Military and Security Companies

Mrs Madeleine Moon: [219735]

To ask the Secretary of State for Defence, if he will detail (a) the number and (b) the cost of contracts with private security companies in each year since 2008; and if he will make a statement.

Mr Philip Dunne: [Holding answer 8 January 2015]:

THIS INFORMATION IS NOT HELD CENTRALLY AND COULD BE PROVIDED ONLY AT

DISPROPORTIONATE COST. THE MINISTRY OF DEFENCE (MOD) PUBLISHES A RANGE OF TRADE, INDUSTRY AND

CONTRACT STATISTICS, INCLUDING A LIST OF SUPPLIERS TO WHOM THE MOD PAID

MORE THAN £5 MILLION IN EACH FINANCIAL YEAR. THE LATEST INFORMATION

COVERING 2013-14 IS AVAILABLE ON GOV.UK: HTTPS://WWW.GOV.UK/GOVERNMENT/STATISTICS/MOD-INDUSTRY-TRADE-AND-CONTRACTS-2014.

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DEPUTY PRIME MINISTER

General Election 2015

Mr Gregory Campbell: [219947]

To ask the Deputy Prime Minister, what plans there are to ensure a higher turnout at the General Election among people aged 18 to 25.

Mr Sam Gyimah: The Government is committed to maximising electoral registration to help support the highest possible turnout in elections. To ensure this, Government has introduced individual electoral registration (IER). Young people aged 18-25 have been one of the biggest users of online registration to vote since its introduction in June. Since 1 July 2014, 826,265 young people have applied to register online.

The Government has today announced that almost £10 million will be given to local authorities and to national activity to boost the number of people registering to vote around the country. This is in addition to the £4.2 million announced last year.

£6.8 million of the funding being announced today has been allocated to local authorities so that they can expand their programmes of canvassing and other activities aimed at encouraging people in their areas to register to vote. Up to £2.5 million will be used to fund wider activity, including working with national organisations to encourage groups who are not as well represented on the electoral register in general, such as young people including students and overseas voters.

EDUCATION

Children in Care

Dan Jarvis: [219899]

To ask the Secretary of State for Education, what estimate she has made of the average distance from home of young people accommodated in secure children's homes in each year since May 2010.

Mr Edward Timpson: The average distances from home of young people accommodated in secure children’s homes since March 2010 are given in the table below.

Distance from home of young people accommodated in secure homes

Years ending 31 March 2010 to 2014

Coverage: England

YEAR

NUMBER OF CHILDREN

ACCOMMODATED IN SECURE HOMES

AT 31 MARCH

AVERAGE DISTANCE OF THE SECURE

HOME FROM YOUNG PERSON’S

HOME (MILES) 1,2,3

2010 200 62

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YEAR

NUMBER OF CHILDREN

ACCOMMODATED IN SECURE HOMES

AT 31 MARCH

AVERAGE DISTANCE OF THE SECURE

HOME FROM YOUNG PERSON’S

HOME (MILES) 1,2,3

2011 160 47

2012 180 55

2013 200 56

2014 200 72

Source: SSDA903 collection

1. Distance is measured in a straight line from the young person’s home to the secure home.

2. As at 31 st March 2014 there were only 16 secure units operating in England therefore most placements will inevitably be at a distance from the young person’s home.

3. Based on children looked after who are placed in secure accommodation. A full list of secure accommodation can be found in table 2 of the Statistical First Release, “Children accommodated in secure children's homes: 31 March 2014” available at: https://www.gov.uk/government/collections/statistics-secure-children-s-homes

Numbers of children are rounded to the nearest 10.

Children: Walking

Tristram Hunt: [219892]

To ask the Secretary of State for Education, what steps her Department is taking to increase the number of children walking to school.

Mr David Laws: Local authorities are required to ensure that safe walking routes are available to those pupils who are expected to walk to school. They are also under a duty to promote sustainable travel and transport. The duty applies to children and young people of compulsory school age who travel to receive education or training in a local authority’s area. Local walking, cycling, and bus strategies should inform the local authority’s performance of its duty to promote sustainable school travel.

On 18 July 2014, the Department for Education issued revised home to school travel guidance which gives examples and provides further information on sustainable transport, including walking to and from school. The guidance is published online at:

www.gov.uk/government/publications/home-to-school-travel-and-transport-guidance

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GCSE: Disadvantaged

Mr Nigel Evans: [219815]

To ask the Secretary of State for Education, what proportion of pupils on free school meals gained five good GCSEs in (a) Ribble Valley constituency, (b) Lancashire and (c) the UK in 2014.

Mr David Laws: 2013/14 key stage 4 attainment figures for pupils eligible for free school meals in England, Lancashire and Ribble Valley, will become available on 29 January 2015 following the 2013/14 release of ‘GCSE and equivalent attainment by pupil characteristics’.

The Department for Education does not hold figures for other countries in the United Kingdom.

Pre-school Education: East of England

Mr David Ruffley: [219590]

To ask the Secretary of State for Education, how many free early years education places were provided in (a) Suffolk, (b) Norfolk, (c) Essex and (d) Cambridgeshire in each year since 1997.

Mr Sam Gyimah: The attached spreadsheet provides the number of part time equivalent funded early education places from 1997 to 2014 and the number of children in receipt of some funded early education provision from 2008 to 2014. The variation between areas will reflect local demand.

The latest statistics can be found online at: www.gov.uk/government/statistics/provision-for-children-under-5-years-of-age-january-2014

Attachments:

1. Part_time_funded_early_education_places [part_time_funded_early_education_places.xls]

Regional School Commissioners

Tristram Hunt: [219893]

To ask the Secretary of State for Education, how many staff are employed in each regional school commissioner's office; and what the annual budget is of each such office.

Mr Edward Timpson: Each Regional Schools Commissioner’s office employs between 6 and 8 members of staff and has a budget of approximately £460,000 for the 2014-15 financial year.

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ENERGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE

Boilers

Mr Angus Brendan MacNeil: [219876]

To ask the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, with reference to the Government's Fuel Poverty Consultation document of July 2014, if he will review his policy so that the off grid gas sector will be eligible for supporting measures such as the upgrading of old oil fired boilers.

Amber Rudd: Supporting off-grid households is an important principle in our approach to tackling fuel poverty. In England, the use of a new indicator – the fuel poverty gap – has highlighted the particular circumstances such households can face.

We are making a number of changes to policies to ensure increased levels of support to such households. For example, we have made changes to the operation of ECO to create incentives for energy suppliers to deliver more measures in these non-gas fuelled homes, including oil fired boilers replacements. While fuel poverty is a devolved issue, ECO operates across Great Britain, and these changes could have an impact in Scotland.

Furthermore, at Autumn Statement 2014, the Government announced new funding in England to support off-grid households (with Barnett consequentials).

Committee on Climate Change

David T. C. Davies: [219360]

To ask the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, what selection process is used to appoint members of the Climate Change Committee.

Amber Rudd: The Chair and members of the Committee on Climate Change are recruited according to the Office of the Commissioner for Public Appointments (OCPA) procedures. In line with this, the selection must be fair and open. For example, appointments must be advertised publicly and each candidate must be assessed against the same published criteria.

David T. C. Davies: [219364]

To ask the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, whether members of the Climate Change Committee are permitted to have financial interests in businesses which might be affected by energy and climate change policy.

Amber Rudd: The Government and the Committee on Climate Change takes very seriously the need to ensure that board members have no conflicts in fulfilling their public duties. When appointing to the board, the Government follows Cabinet Office guidance about making public appointments that sets out the rules and transparency requirements which must be satisfied before public appointments can be made.

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Heating: Carbon Emissions

Jonathan Reynolds: [219350]

To ask the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, what progress has been made towards the decarbonisation of heating in the UK to date; what steps he is taking to further progress such decarbonisation; and if he will make a statement.

Amber Rudd: The world first Renewable Heat Incentive has been supporting the installation of renewable heating systems in non-domestic buildings in Great Britain since November 2011 following this, the domestic RHI was introduced in April 2014 and already has just over 16,000 renewable heating systems in homes in Great Britain accredited to the scheme.

In addition, the Government established the Heat Networks Delivery Unit in Sept 2013 and the Government’s strategy for decarbonising heat in the UK was set out in the 2013 document The Future of Heating: Meeting the challenge :

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/the-future-of-heating-meeting-the-challenge.

The Unit has already supported 91 Local Authorities with grants and expertise to develop 122 heat network projects across towns and cities in England and Wales.

In order to tackle the decarbonisation challenge in industry, DECC and the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills are working with the eight most heat-intensive industrial sectors to produce individual roadmaps to 2050.

Members: Correspondence

Sir Gerald Kaufman: [219434]

To ask the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, when he intends to reply to the letter to him dated 21 October from the right hon. Member for Manchester, Gorton, with regard to M M Roberts.

Amber Rudd: My rt. hon. Friend the Secretary of State replied to the rt. hon. Member for Manchester, Gorton on 7 January 2015. A copy of the reply is attached.

Attachments:

1. SoS Ed Davey Letter to G Kaufman 07.01.15 [SoS Ed Davey Letter to G Kaufman 07.01.15.pdf]

Public Expenditure

Caroline Flint: [219864]

To ask the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, with reference to the table under section 2.10 of his Department's Annual Report and Accounts for 2013-14, what the reasons are for the change in spending between 2012-13 and 2013-14 on (a) consultancy and (b) contingent labour.

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Amber Rudd: Departmental expenditure on consultancies and contingent labour (temporary staff) for 2013-14 was £8.2m and £10.2m respectively (including Non- Departmental Public Bodies).

Spend on consultancy increased in 2013-14 due to increased activity on project areas including the new nuclear contract and the renewables obligations under contracts for difference.

Spend on contingent labour was up because of increased demands on the department, which couldn’t be met in the short term through recruitment.

Caroline Flint: [219866]

To ask the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, with reference to page 98 of his Department's Annual Report and Accounts for 2013-14, what the reasons are for the change in spending between 2012-13 and 2013-14 on leases for (a) the core department and (b) the departmental group.

Amber Rudd: The cost of building leases for the core Department increased from nil in 2012-13 to £560k in 2013-14 as a result of a new lease on additional office accommodation.

The cost of building leases for the Group increased from £1,259k in 2012-13 to £2,297k in 2013-14 due to the lease by the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority of an additional building from December 2012 and the termination of a rent free period on a second building.

Solar Power

Oliver Colvile: [219618]

To ask the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, what assessment he has made of the potential role of imported concentrated solar power in meeting the energy requirements of the UK.

Amber Rudd: I am aware of proposals to invest in concentrated solar power (CSP) projects in the desert regions of North Africa and the Middle East. The UK supports in principle such proposals as a means of providing local energy supply and economic development, reducing greenhouse emissions and potentially contributing to the EU’s security of electricity supply. We continue to monitor developments in this area. However, in present circumstances, geographical factors, costs, and the need to further reinforce electricity connections within the EU and linking the EU with third countries mean that the majority of Member States, including the UK, would not currently be in a position to benefit from imports of CSP generated electricity.

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Solar Power: North Africa

Oliver Colvile: [219753]

To ask the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, what steps he is taking in working with EU partners to encourage the development of concentrated solar power in the desert regions of North Africa as part of plans to meet the 15 per cent interconnections target for Europe.

Amber Rudd: The UK fully supports EU efforts to bring about further energy interconnection, both within the EU and linking the EU with third countries, in order to meet energy security and low carbon objectives. Developing concentrated solar power (CSP) in North Africa is potentially a part of these efforts among many others, although more research and development is required to demonstrate further improvements in CSP technology. The UK fully supports EU work in this area, such as in the Horizon 2020 Energy Programme.

Geographical and cost factors mean that CSP development in North Africa is not currently of direct interest to the UK.

ENVIRONMENT, FOOD AND RURAL AFFAIRS

Dogs: Animal Breeding

Tracey Crouch: [219934]

To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, if she will make an assessment of the potential benefits of amending England's dog breeding legislation in a manner similar to that contained in the Animal Welfare (Breeding of Dogs) (Wales) Regulation 2014; and if she will make a statement.

George Eustice: The Government considers that local authorities have the necessary powers to ensure the welfare of dogs at licensed dog breeding establishments under existing laws in England. In addition, my department wrote to all local authorities in England reminding them that the criteria for deciding if a dog breeder needs to be licensed is whether they are in the business of breeding and selling dogs, regardless of the number of litters bred or sold in a twelve month period.

Lead Ammunition Group

Sir Nicholas Soames: [219950]

To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, when she expects the Lead Ammunition Group to report.

George Eustice: The Lead Ammunition Group is independent of the Government and as such is not obliged to produce a report to the Government by a specified date. However, it is my understanding that the Group hopes to submit the report in 2015.

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Nature Conservation: Crime

Jim Fitzpatrick: [219580]

To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, with reference to page 11 of her Department's publication, Red Tape Challenge - Environment Theme Implementation Plan, what the reasons are for the review of Regulations on Control of Trade in Endangered Species being delayed from April 2014 until 2015.

George Eustice: The Review has not progressed as swiftly as originally intended due in part to the volume and complexity of the work needed fully to assess the anticipated impacts of the proposals for changes to the Regulations, and in part to the focus required on other urgent priorities, including the preparations for the London Conference on the Illegal Wildlife Trade and its follow up.

In addition to the Red Tape Challenge commitment to rationalise the number of CITES-related pieces of domestic legislation currently in place, the review has looked at, amongst others, proposals relating to new requirements brought about by amended EU regulations, the designation of ports of entry and exit to be used when importing and exporting CITES specimens and the updating of enforcement requirements to reflect the evolution of the illegal wildlife trade and enforcement trends.

The work on the Regulations is now nearing completion and it remains our intention to issue as soon as possible a public consultation on proposals to update and improve the Control of Trade in Endangered Species (Enforcement) Regulations, together with the Control of Trade in Endangered Species (Ports of Entry) Regulations.

Nature Conservation: Cybercrime

Jim Fitzpatrick: [219398]

To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, what additional provision she plans to make to ensure the level of monitoring of wildlife cybercrime does not fall following the expiration of funding for a cybercrime investigations post within the National Wildlife Crime Unit.

George Eustice:

We recognise the important work carried out by the National Wildlife Crime Unit (NWCU). Defra and the Home Office have committed £544,000 to help support the NWCU until March 2016.

In addition, Defra has provided funding to the NWCU this year to carry out a specific project on wildlife crime on the internet. We will continue to liaise with the NWCU on its work on this important topic, including considering the findings of its report.

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The National Crime Agency (NCA) and its law enforcement partners focus on disrupting those serious and organised criminals who present the highest risk to the UK and its communities, including in areas such as child sexual exploitation and modern slavery. Where high-risk organised criminals are engaged in the illegal wildlife trade, the NCA will lead, support or coordinate an appropriate level of response. That response could include the NCA’s niche capabilities such as the National Cyber Crime Unit or its global network of liaison officers.

Ragworms

Annette Brooke: [219951]

To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, what recent representations she has received on the commercial collection of ragworm in Sites of Special Scientific Interest; and if she will make a statement.

George Eustice: Defra has received no recent representations on the commercial collection of rag worm in Sites of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI).

As part of a SSSI notification Natural England provides a list of operations requiring Natural England's consent, which may include, for example, bait digging. None of the listed operations is permitted to be carried out without Natural England's prior written consent or the consent of another public body. Consent would only be given if the activity did not impact negatively on the designated feature of the SSSI.

Natural England has not recently received any notices for consent for bait digging (including specifically for rag worm collection).

FOREIGN AND COMMONWEALTH OFFICE

Afghanistan

Mr Douglas Alexander: [219443]

To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, when he last met Dr Husn Banu Ghazanfar, the Afghan Minister for Women's Affairs.

Mr Philip Hammond: The Minister of State, my noble Friend the right hon. Baroness Anelay of St Johns, the Minister responsible for human rights, met Dr Husn Banu Ghazanfar during the Women's Rights and Empowerment in Afghanistan Symposium in Oslo on the 23rd November 2014. Dr Ghazanfar also met the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, my noble Friend the right hon. Baroness Northover, on 3 December at the Ayenda Conference in London along with members of the Afghan Civil Society which was an associate event of the London Conference on Afghanistan. Unfortunately, Dr Ghazanfar’s programme was cut short and she was unable to have further meetings as planned. The UK Government is working closely with the government of Afghanistan,

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including Dr Ghazanfar, to improve the status of women and girls in Afghanistan, so that they can participate as fully as possible in a future, peaceful Afghan state.

Mr Douglas Alexander: [219444]

To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, what changes his Department is planning to the number of its staff based in Afghanistan.

Mr Philip Hammond: The total number of UK civilian staff in Afghanistan, excluding security and logistics personnel, will reduce from approximately 180 staff at present to approximately 110 staff by 2015.

Iraq

Mr Douglas Alexander: [219426]

To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, what requests the UK has received for additional support from the Kurdistan regional government.

Mr Philip Hammond: The UK remains committed to the stability and security of Iraq. To date we have provided substantial support to the Iraqi government and Kurdish authorities to combat the ISIL threat, including airstrikes, Intelligence, surveillance and targeting support, training and lethal and non-lethal military equipment.

The Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) submit formal requests for assistance to the international coordination cell in Erbil, the Organisation for Security Cooperation Iraq (OSC-I), on a weekly basis.

We continue to look at ways in which we can support Kurdish forces, in coordination with the federal government of Iraq, and consider additional requests for equipment or training as they are received.

Mr Douglas Alexander: [219427]

To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, what discussions he has held with the EU's new High Representative for Foreign Affairs on other EU member states' contribution towards the fight against ISIL in Iraq.

Mr Philip Hammond: I have regular discussions with the EU’s High Representative for Foreign Affairs on the EU’s strategy to tackle ISIL, both bilaterally and directly in EU meetings. Conclusions of EU meetings are available on EU websites.

Mr Douglas Alexander: [219429]

To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, what assessment he has made of the security situation around Mount Sinjar.

Mr Philip Hammond: I welcome the military operations conducted by Iraqi forces in northern Iraq, to remove Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) from the area of Mount Sinjar. Reports suggest

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that early in these operations Kurdish Peshmerga, supported by Iraqi Security Forces and Coalition airstrikes, were able quickly to remove ISIL from villages and towns north of Mount Sinjar. The situation remains fluid as fighting continues but on 6 January Iraqi forces were reported to have retaken much of Sinjar city.

Mr Douglas Alexander: [219430]

To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, what recent discussions he has had with his Iraqi counterpart on the refugees on Mount Sinjar.

Mr Philip Hammond: The UK has worked closely with coalition partners and Iraqi authorities, including the Kurdistan Regional Government, to alleviate the humanitarian situation around Mount Sinjar including delivering humanitarian aid by airdrops. In August, hundreds of Yazidi civilians became trapped around Mount Sinjar when fleeing ISIL. We are in close contact with partner agencies, including the UN, on the humanitarian situation in Iraq. We regularly discuss the situation in Iraq with the Iraqi government at both ministerial and official level, most recently when I met Iraqi Foreign Minister HE Dr Ibrahim Al-Jaafari, on 5 January 2015.

Mr Douglas Alexander: [219431]

To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, when he last discussed the conflict against ISIL with representatives of the Kurdistan regional government.

Mr Philip Hammond: My officials in Erbil, Baghdad and London discuss the conflict against ISIL with representatives of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) on a regular basis.

I last discussed this issue with KRG representatives during my visit to Erbil on 13 October in meetings with both KRG President Masoud Barzani and KRG Prime Minister Nechirvan Barzani.

The Minister for the Middle East, my hon. Friend the Member for Bournemouth East (Mr Ellwood), discussed this issue with the Head of the KRG’s Department for Foreign Relations, Mr Falah Mustafa, on Thursday 11 December.

Russia

Mr Douglas Alexander: [219428]

To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, what recent discussions he has had with his Russian counterpart on the interception of Russian aircraft by NATO forces over the Baltic.

Mr Philip Hammond: The UK has made no direct representations to the government of Russia on this issue. We strongly support recent comments made by North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) Secretary General Stoltenberg calling on Russia to obey the norms of international air traffic. On 2 December NATO Foreign Ministers also agreed on the need to maintain contact through NATO/Russia military channels to help ensure that Russian military flights, or naval activities, do not give rise to unintended accidents or escalation.

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Mr Douglas Alexander: [219445]

To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, what assessment he has made of the effect of EU-wide sanctions on Russia's policy towards Ukraine.

Mr Philip Hammond: Sanctions are an important element of the range of diplomatic measures we are undertaking to effect a change in Russia’s behaviour. EU sanctions are delivering a significant cost to Russia for its actions in Ukraine. The fall in the global oil price has driven an economic slump in Russia, including a shrinking economy and sharply declining currency. The wide-ranging restrictions of EU and US economic sanctions are exacerbating these negative trends. For Russia to remove the pressure of sanctions it will need to change its policy towards Ukraine.

Mr Douglas Alexander: [219446]

To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, if he will take steps at an EU-level to increase the size of the sanctions regime against Russia in response to the security situation in Ukraine.

Mr Philip Hammond: As the Prime Minister made clear to President Putin at the G20 meeting in Brisbane, unless Russia follows through on its obligations, and we see real progress towards peace in Ukraine, with full respect for Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, additional sanctions could be imposed. We are working with partners on contingency plans for that eventuality.

Sanctions are an important element in the range of diplomatic measures we are undertaking to effect a change in Russia’s behaviour. EU sanctions against Russia are regularly reviewed. Most recently, on 18 December, the Council of the European Union expanded the scope of sanctions in Crimea and Sevastopol, and on 4 December sectoral sanctions against Russian companies were revised.

Syria

Mr Douglas Alexander: [219422]

To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, what recent discussions he has had with Hadi al-Bahra on the humanitarian situation in Kobane.

Mr Philip Hammond: We had regular discussions with Hadi al-Bahra, while he was President of the Syrian National Coalition, most notably through the UK Special Representative for Syria. The UK Special Representative last met President al-Bahra on 18 December. I held detailed discussions with President al-Bahra on the situation in Syria when they met in London on 10 November 2014. All of these discussions covered the humanitarian situation throughout the whole of Syria as well as UK support to the Syrian opposition and the wider political process.

The Department for International Development have already responded to the urgent needs of Syrian refugees that have fled from Kobane to Turkey, by working with the

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relevant authorities and our partners to provide mattresses, non-food items and shelter for distribution to the most needy families. We stand ready to respond positively should further aid be needed.

Mr Douglas Alexander: [219424]

To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, what support his Department is giving to the Syrian opposition to assist delivery of essential services.

Mr Philip Hammond: In the current financial year, the UK has allocated £27 million of non-humanitarian aid to support the work of the National Coalition and Interim Government, local councils, non-government organisations, civil society, media and human rights activists in Syria. We are providing a range of support to Syrians to help save lives, bolster civil society, counter extremism, promote human rights and accountability, deliver basic governance and help lay the foundations for a more peaceful and inclusive future for Syria.

As part of this, in the past 12 months the Government has provided £2.3 million in support for local governance in opposition-controlled areas in Syria. This funding has enabled the training of local officials to help them ensure the provision of essential services to ordinary Syrians in their towns and villages, including vital infrastructure repair and rehabilitation projects which meet the needs of local people. We plan for this project to continue for at least one more year. The UK is committed to helping the Syrian people who continue to suffer after more than three years of conflict.

Mr Douglas Alexander: [219425]

To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, when he next expects the Friends of Syria Group to meet.

Mr Philip Hammond: The Core Group of the Friends of Syria countries (UK, USA, France, Germany, Italy, Turkey, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Jordan and United Arab Emirates – also known as the London 11) meets at regular intervals at both senior official and ministerial level. The UK is a leading member and the group most recently met at senior official level on 10 November 2014 in London. There are currently no fixed plans for a next meeting but the group will reconvene when it is appropriate to do so. The group remains committed to helping end the long-running Syrian crisis.

Thailand

Dan Jarvis: [219806]

To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, what consular support is being offered to Craig Lindley in Thailand.

Mr Tobias Ellwood: Our officials in Bangkok are aware of Mr Craig Lindley’s hospitalisation in Thailand and are providing advice and support to Mr Lindley’s friend and brother who are also in Thailand. This includes advice on visa extensions, information about medical repatriation companies, and obtaining updates from the hospital to pass on to Mr Lindley’s parents

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in the UK. Our officials have also been in touch with your office and have provided advice on options available to the family for payment of the hospital bills. Our Embassy in Bangkok will continue to monitor the case closely and maintain contact with the hospital and with Mr Lindley’s friends and family.

Ukraine

Mr Douglas Alexander: [219423]

To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, what assessment he has made of the implementation of the Minsk Protocol by all parties to the agreement.

Mr Philip Hammond: We are concerned by continued breaches of the ceasefire which was agreed in Minsk on 5 September and urge all parties to implement the Minsk Protocol in full so peace and stability can return to eastern Ukraine. Russia’s actions - troop movements, further convoys without the permission of the Ukrainian government, and Russia’s respect for the results of illegitimate separatist elections - are unacceptable. These actions have increased tensions in Ukraine and further call into question the sincerity of Russia’s commitment to de-escalate tensions and fulfill commitments they made in Minsk and elsewhere.

HEALTH

Breasts: Plastic Surgery

David T. C. Davies: [219363]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, how many patients have had breast enhancement surgery for cosmetic or non medical reasons in each of the last three years.

Jane Ellison: This information is not held. Cosmetic surgery is not usually available through the National Health Service.

Cancer

Mike Kane: [219595]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, what steps his Department is taking to ensure that the trust-level reports of the National Cancer Patient Experience Survey are more readily accessible to patients and the public.

Mike Kane: [219596]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, what assessment he has made of the quality and availability of practical and emotional support services for cancer patients receiving chemotherapy.

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Jane Ellison: The 2014 Cancer Patient Experience Survey reported that 93% of cancer patients surveyed who were being treated with radiotherapy and or chemotherapy received emotional support.

The survey also reported that the majority of cancer patients who took part in the survey said they received advice on practical matters such as availability of support groups (83%) and free prescriptions (78%). Just over half of patients surveyed reported receiving advice on financial help and benefits. NHS England recognises there may be opportunities for improvement in this area.

Living With and Beyond Cancer, a new joint initiative between NHS England and Macmillan Cancer Care, is currently in development. Areas the initiative is planning to focus on include ensuring all cancer patients have access to holistic needs assessment, treatment summary, cancer care review and a patient education and support event – the ‘Recovery Package’.

Cancer Patient Survey Trust level reports are published online at:

http://www.quality-health.co.uk/surveys/national-cancer-patient-experience-survey

Mr Virendra Sharma: [219611]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, what steps his Department is taking to tackle inequalities among BME communities' awareness of the signs and symptoms of cancer, early diagnosis and treatment of cancer and patient experience of cancer care.

Jane Ellison: Improving Outcomes: A Strategy for Cancer (2011) set out our ambition to save an additional 5,000 lives every year by 2014-15, and to narrow the inequalities gap at the same time. This strategy is backed by over £750 million, and although final figures will not be known for some time, projections show that we could be on course to save 10,000 lives over this time period.

Since 2010-11 the Department and Public Health England (PHE), since 2013, in partnership with NHS England (including NHS Improving Quality (NHS IQ)) and other stakeholders have run Be Clear on Cancer (BCOC) campaigns to raise the public’s awareness of cancer signs and symptoms; and encourage people with those signs and symptoms to go to the doctor promptly. As part of these campaigns, PHE works with a specialist multicultural marketing consultancy to develop activities with black and minority ethnic (BME) communities. Activities include targeted television, radio and press advertising in key national, regional and specialist media. As part of the BME public relations activity, healthcare professionals and cancer survivors from ethnic minorities (where possible), are recruited to participate in media interviews to address the barriers preventing early presentation to general practitioners (GPs).

A pilot BCOC campaign was run in six boroughs of London between October and November 2014 to raise awareness of the increased risk of prostate cancer amongst black men aged over 45. Early findings from the qualitative evaluation show that the

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majority of respondents demonstrated some awareness of seeing, hearing or taking some action about prostate cancer over the last few months and that GPs welcomed the campaign and were aware of the local activity.

To reduce inequalities in cancer treatment and to support the National Health Service to tackle regional variations we are providing data to providers and commissioners that allow them to benchmark their services and outcomes against one another and to identify where improvements need to be made. In June 2014, the National Cancer Intelligence Network published a second annual report on Cancer and equality groups: key metrics, which highlighted improvements in trusts reporting ethnic group.

To help cancer teams and professionals in trusts and support continual improvement in cancer patient experience, NHS IQ and Macmillan Cancer Support produced An Introductory Guide to Quality Improvement in November 2014. NHS IQ is launching a pioneering project that pairs highly-rated cancer trusts with trusts that have potential to improve their patient experience. This is a drive to reduce national variation in patients’ experience of care and raise overall standards. NHS IQ is also running events in partnership with Macmillan Cancer Support and NHS England to look at how cancer patient experience data is used by commissioners.

Through the National Cancer Equality Initiative we will continue to work with NHS England and relevant stakeholders to reduce inequalities in cancer care.

Clinical Commissioning Groups

Mr David Ruffley: [219592]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, how much clinical commissioning groups in (a) Suffolk, (b) Bedfordshire, (c) Cambridgeshire, (d) Essex, (e) Hertfordshire and (f) Norfolk spent on salaries and wages for (i) general and senior managers, (ii) nurses and midwives and (iii) administrative and clerical staff in each year since their inception.

Dr Daniel Poulter: Information is not available for every clinical commissioning group (CCG) requested.

Information on how much CCGs in (a) Suffolk, (b) Bedfordshire, (c) Cambridgeshire, (d) Essex, (e) Hertfordshire and (f) Norfolk spent on salaries and wages for (i) managers and senior managers, (ii) qualified midwifery and health nursing staff and (iii) administrative and clerical staff for 2013-14 is in the table below:

MANAGERS AND SENIOR

MANAGERS

QUALIFIED NURSING, MIDWIFERY AND HEALTH

VISITING STAFF ADMIN AND CLERICAL

STAFF

Suffolk 1

NHS West Suffolk CCG £5,405,305 £336,754 £1,599,079

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MANAGERS AND SENIOR

MANAGERS

QUALIFIED NURSING, MIDWIFERY AND HEALTH

VISITING STAFF ADMIN AND CLERICAL

STAFF

NHS Great Yarmouth and Waveney CCG 1

£1,670,798 £414,275 £661,367

Bedfordshire

NHS Bedfordshire CCG £3,741,697 £514,422 £1,118,727

NHS Luton CCG £1,320,940 £198,582 £505,207

Cambridgeshire

NHS Cambridgeshire and Peterborough CCG

£2,422,647 £561,384 £2,640,130

Essex

NHS Basildon and Brentwood CCG

£567,495 * £337,640

NHS Castle Point and Rochford CCG

£407,702 * £259,035

NHS Mid Essex CCG £780,923 £364,799 £1,136,240

NHS North East Essex CCG

£864,616 * £1,098,138

NHS Southend CCG £972,910 £356,912 £574,193

NHS Thurrock CCG £331,591 * £169,836

NHS West Essex CCG £1,032,463 £375,640 £1,371,972

Hertfordshire

NHS East and North Hertfordshire CCG

£1,789,417 £106,725 £692,885

NHS Herts Valleys CCG £1,561,066 - £573,772

Norfolk

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MANAGERS AND SENIOR

MANAGERS

QUALIFIED NURSING, MIDWIFERY AND HEALTH

VISITING STAFF ADMIN AND CLERICAL

STAFF

NHS North Norfolk CCG

£564,737 * £405,318

NHS Norwich CCG £726,744 - £288,031

NHS South Norfolk CCG

£954,474 * £528,648

NHS West Norfolk CCG £495,501 - £257,962

Source: Health and Social Care Information Centre, Provisional NHS Staff Earnings: Estimates.

Notes:

There is no data available for Ipswich and East Suffolk CCG; this may be due to its hosting arrangements. NHS West Suffolk CCG and NHS Ipswich and East Suffolk CCG share a Management Delivery Team (hosted by NHS West Suffolk CCG).Great Yarmouth and Waveney CCG cannot be split between Great Yarmouth and Waveney, and for the purposes of this table has been included in Suffolk.The majority of CCGs opened in April 2013, so only one year of complete total earnings data is available.Figures in the table are provisional NHS Staff Earnings estimates.The following key applies:

- Not applicable

* Data is obscured as the group had 5 or fewer staff, in line with The Data Protection Act

As expected with provisional data, some figures may be revised prior to the next publication as issues are uncovered and resolved.Figures rounded to the nearest pound.These figures represent payments made using the Electronic Staff Record (ESR) system to NHS Staff who are employed and directly paid by NHS organisations.Figures based on data from all English NHS organisations who are using ESR (two foundation trusts do not use ESR).Figures are based on staff with contracted hours more than zero. Bank and locum staff that typically have no contracted hours are not included in these figures.These statistics include "negative" payments - for example instances where a payment field has had money subtracted to correct an overpayment.The Health and Social Care Information Centre seeks to minimise inaccuracies and the effect of missing and invalid data but responsibility for data accuracy lies with the organisations providing the data. Methods are continually being updated to improve data quality where changes impact on figures already published. This is assessed but unless it is significant at national level figures are not changed. Impact at detailed or local level is footnoted in relevant analyses.As from 21 July 2010 the Health and Social Care Information Centre has published provisional monthly NHS workforce data. As expected with provisional

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32 Daily Report Friday, 9 January 2015 ANSWERS

statistics, some figures may be revised from month to month as issues are uncovered and resolved. The monthly workforce data is not directly comparable with the annual workforce census; it only includes those staff on the ESR (i.e. it does not include Primary care staff or Bank staff), it also includes locum doctors (not counted in the annual census). There are also new methods of presenting data (headcount methodology is different and there is now a role count). This information is available from September 2009 onwards at the following website: www.hscic.gov.uk

Diabetes

Keith Vaz: [219389]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, if he will increase the number of specialist diabetes teams in GP practices and health centres as a measure to prevent diabetes-related amputations.

Keith Vaz: [219390]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, how many diabetes-related amputations there were in each county in the last three years.

Keith Vaz: [219391]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, what steps he is taking to reduce diabetes-related amputations.

Jane Ellison: NHS England and clinical commissioning groups (CCGs) have responsibility for determining the overall approach to improving clinical outcomes from healthcare services for people with diabetes. There are various actions at a national level to help ensure that all patients with diabetes receive good quality care, including foot care.

The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) has published clinical guidance and quality standards on the treatment of diabetes and its complications. The NICE Diabetes Quality Standard is clear that people with diabetes who are at risk of foot ulceration should receive regular reviews by a foot protection team in accordance with its clinical guidance. The Health and Social Care Act (2012) places a duty on NHS England to have regard to the NICE Quality Standards. CCGs should also have regard to them in planning and delivering services, as part of a general duty to secure a continuous improvement in quality.

As part of the Quality and Outcomes Framework (QOF), general practitioners are remunerated for assessing nerve damage and poor blood supply to the feet in people with diabetes on an annual basis. Information is collected annually both through the QOF returns and through the National Diabetes Audit (NDA).

The new National Diabetes Foot Care Audit, a module of the NDA, aims to establish the extent to which national guidelines on the management of diabetic foot disease are being met. The audit will provide local teams with the evidence needed to tackle any identified differences in practice which will lead in turn to an overall improvement in

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management and outcomes for patients. Local and national level results will be available in March 2016.

People with active diabetic foot disease should be referred up to the hospital-based multidisciplinary diabetic foot teams and seen within 24 hours of referral. There has been an increase in the proportion of trusts with multidisciplinary diabetic footcare teams, from around 60% in 2011 to 72% in 2013.

Diabetic foot disease is also a focus of the cardiovascular Strategic Clinical Networks across England, with an emphasis on rolling out best practice.

The attached table gives a count of finished consultant episodes with a primary diagnosis of diabetes and a primary or secondary procedure of amputation between 2010-11 and 2012-13 as well as the number of diabetes patients from the 2009-10 and 2010-11 diabetes audits having an amputation the following year. The figures have been divided by primary care trust as we do not hold this data in the format requested.

Reference should be made to the notes provided with the table when interpreting these figures.

Attachments:

1. FCEs- Diabetes diagnosis- amputations 2010-13 [FCEs- diabetes primary diagnosis amputations 2010-13.xlsx]

Diabetes: South West

Keith Vaz: [219392]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, what estimate he has made of the number of diabetes-related amputations which took place in the last three years in Cornwall, Devon, Dorset and Somerset which could have been prevented.

Jane Ellison: It is the responsibility of NHS England and clinical commissioning groups (CCGs) to determine the overall approach to improving clinical outcomes from healthcare services for people with diabetes.

We are advised by NHS England that the Northern Eastern and Western Devon, Kernow, Dorset, South Devon and Torbay and Somerset CCGs are undertaking a range of measures to address the number of diabetes related amputations in their respective areas.

Digestive System: Older People

Greg Mulholland: [219614]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, what assessment he has made of the effectiveness of the guidance issued to doctors and nurses on diagnosing blocked bowels in the elderly.

Norman Lamb: Responsibility for continence services sits with NHS England and clinical commissioning groups (CCGs). NHS England has advised that no assessment has been made on the

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effectiveness on the guidance issued to doctors and nurses on diagnosing blocked bowels in the elderly.

NHS England is responsible for the commissioning of specialised colorectal services and has produced a number of service specifications on various types of incontinence, clearly defining what is expected to be in place for providers to offer evidence-based, safe and effective services. Service specifications published by NHS England on colorectal services include Colorectal Complex Inflammatory Bowel Disease (Adult) and Colorectal services: faecal incontinence (adults).

CCGs are responsible for commissioning a high quality continence service for their local populations and performance managing their providers in the delivery of high quality services.

We expect providers of colorectal services and continence care to take into account any relevant National Institute for Health and Care Excellence guidance on diagnosing blocked bowels.

Doctors: Working Hours

Steve McCabe: [219578]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, if he will commission research into the average numbers of hours worked by doctors in hospital medicine compared with their historical equivalents.

Dr Daniel Poulter: There are no plans to commission research into this area. It is for National Health Service employers to ensure that employees’ working hours fall within the employment contract agreed with staff and that the working hours are consistent with the relevant employment legislation.

Drugs: Scotland

Mr Barry Sheerman: [219610]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, with reference to the announcement made by the Scottish Cabinet Secretary for Health and Wellbeing on 7 October 2014, if he will introduce a scheme similar to the New Medicines Fund in England.

George Freeman: The Government has no plans to do so.

In August 2014, we announced an additional £160 million for the Cancer Drugs Fund. This increases the budget of the Cancer Drugs Fund from £200 million to £280 million in 2014-15 and 2015-16.

The Government is implementing all of the commitments in the 2014 Pharmaceutical Price Regulation Scheme (PPRS) on improving access to innovative medicines

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commensurate with the outcomes they offer patients. In addition, NHS England and the Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry are pressing ahead with plans to maximise the benefits of the PPRS by improving access to and optimising the use of medicines to improve patient outcomes.

Ebola

Iain McKenzie: [219940]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, what recent assessment he has made of the effectiveness of quarantine arrangements for people arriving in the UK from Sierra Leone; and if he will make a statement.

Jane Ellison: Medical advice, including from the Chief Medical Officer, is clear that quarantining returning healthcare workers, or others coming to the United Kingdom from Sierra Leone, is not a proportionate response to the level of risk Ebola represents to the public at this time. However, all protocols and procedures are kept under careful review, guided by the best scientific evidence, to ensure they remain appropriate in the light of changing circumstances

In addition, UK hospitals are well prepared to handle infectious disease and any patient displaying symptoms would be cared for by specialist staff in an isolation unit.

General Dental Council

John Woodcock: [219522]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, what assessment he has made of the effect of increases in the General Dental Council registration fee on availability of NHS dentists.

Dr Daniel Poulter: The increase in the General Dental Council (GDC) registration fee is not expected to impact on the availability of dentists for the National Health Service. All dentists must be registered with the GDC in order to practice whether this is for the NHS or privately.

Hepatitis: Drugs

Mr Andrew Smith: [219601]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, what response he has made to the request by NHS England to defer implementation of the guidance on sofosbuvir for hepatitis C.

Mr Andrew Smith: [219602]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, when NICE guidance on the use of sofosbuvir for treating hepatitis C will be published.

George Freeman: As an independent body, it is for the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE), in consultation with stakeholders, to consider NHS England’s request to defer implementation of its guidance on sofosbuvir (Sovaldi) for the treatment of chronic hepatitis C.

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NICE recently consulted on extending the funding period and we understand that NICE expects to publish the outcome of that consultation, along with its final draft guidance on sofosbuvir, later this month. The Department’s response to the consultation will be published alongside other stakeholders’ comments. We are confident that NICE will carefully consider all the comments it has received before taking a final decision.

NICE currently expects to publish its final guidance on sofosbuvir in February 2015, although this is subject to any appeals being received.

Homeopathy

Pamela Nash: [219623]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, when he has met which (a) representatives of and (b) organisations working on behalf of the homeopathy industry since 2012.

Jane Ellison: Ministers have had no meetings with representatives or organisations from the homeopathy industry since 2012.

In Vitro Fertilisation

Mr Nigel Evans: [219816]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, what plans his Department has to introduce three parent IVF treatment.

Jane Ellison: On 17 December 2014 the Government laid affirmative regulations in Parliament to allow the use of mitochondrial donation techniques in clinical practice to prevent the transmission of serious mitochondrial disease from mother to child. A Written Ministerial Statement was issued on 17 December 2014 and is available at the following link:

http://www.parliament.uk/business/publications/written-questions-answers-statements/written-statement/Commons/2014-12-17/HCWS132/

The mitochondrial DNA provided by the donor represents less than 0.1% of the total DNA and does not contribute to personal characteristics or traits. These come from nuclear DNA, which is provided solely by the child’s mother and father. The Government therefore would not describe mitochondrial donation as “three parent IVF”.

Liver Diseases

Mark Hunter: [219598]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, what steps his Department is taking to support the early identification of liver disease.

Jane Ellison: Public Health England (PHE) has a comprehensive range of action aimed at reducing the incidence and mortality from liver disease. It monitors the incidence, mortality and outcomes of treatment for liver disease and the risk factors: alcohol obesity and hepatitis B and C. PHE has a wide range of action to tackle unhealthy alcohol consumption,

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obesity and viral hepatitis through strengthening local action, promoting healthy choices, and giving appropriate information to support healthier lives.

In response to the All Party Parliamentary Hepatology Group report PHE has committed to producing a PHE Liver Disease Framework. This will focus on public health action to tackle risk factors for liver disease and inequalities in relation to liver disease. Work has already begun to bring together expertise within PHE on the major risk factors for liver disease (alcohol, hepatitis B and C and obesity), data on liver disease and its risk factors and on death and dying from liver disease. PHE has also issued liver profiles to each local authority area, which include information about hepatitis C, as well as modelling tools to assist local commissioners in establishing need at local level. Many of the actions to tackle the major risk factors require a coordinated approach between PHE and NHS England.

NHS England is responsible for delivering improvements in outcomes against the NHS Mandate and in line with the NHS Outcomes Framework. NHS England is adopting a broad strategy for delivering improvements in relation to premature mortality, working with commissioners and PHE to support clinical commissioning groups in understanding where local challenges lie and in identifying the evidence in relation to the priorities for reducing mortality at a national level.

Locums

Steve McCabe: [219576]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, pursuant to the Answer of 25 November 2014 to Question 214838, if he will make it his policy to identify locum doctors separately within the information collected by his Department on spend on agency and contract staff.

Dr Daniel Poulter: There are no plans to expand data collections to include information on locum doctors employed by agencies. It is important to ensure that the burden of data collection on National Health Service organisations is kept to a minimum, helping them to keep their administrative costs low so they can concentrate on delivering good patient care. It is the responsibility of NHS organisations to have a firm grip on their workforce planning and management including their use of locum doctors.

Lyme Disease

Daniel Kawczynski: [219600]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, how many people each year are diagnosed with Lyme disease.

Jane Ellison: The total number of people diagnosed with Lyme disease in England and Wales for the last nine years is listed in the table below:

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TOTAL

REPORTED

CASES 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012

Lyme disease in England and Wales

500 595 768 797 813 863 905 959 1,040

Since 2010 hospital laboratories are required to report positive diagnoses of Lyme disease to public health authorities. These laboratory data are collated by Public Health England and published regularly.

Medical Treatments

Mr Barry Sheerman: [219612]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, with reference to the Minister for Life Sciences' announcement on 20 November 2014 on considering how to speed-up patient access to medicines, devices and diagnostics, what discussions his Department has had with (a) NICE and (b) NHS England on that matter.

George Freeman: The review of the pathways for the development, assessment, and adoption of innovative medicines and medical technology will consider how to speed up access for National Health Service patients to cost-effective new diagnostics, medicines and devices. Officials have already had preliminary discussions with both the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence and NHS England, and these will continue as the review progresses.

Mental Health Services

Luciana Berger: [219813]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, pursuant to the Answer to Question 219055, which areas are piloting enhanced access to mental health practitioners.

Dr Daniel Poulter: All NHS 111 areas receive mental health calls and use algorithms within NHS Pathways to enable assessment; receiving additional support from nurses as required.

There are four areas that are piloting enhanced access to mental health practitioners, either within the NHS 111 call centre or by transferring to teams outside. NHS England is in the process of finalising which locations will take forward the NHS 111 pilot areas and NHS England will make an announcement when this process has been completed.

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Mental Illness: Children

Dr Sarah Wollaston: [219591]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, whether funding will be made available to ensure that the Prevalence Study on Mental Health of Children and Young People in Great Britain covers the same data sets to enable it to be comparable to the 2004 survey.

Norman Lamb: The Department is in the process of commissioning a new prevalence survey of children and young people’s mental health that is comparable to the 2004 survey.

Ministers are currently considering options for the new survey informed by advice from a range of academics and researchers, health and care professionals and their representative bodies, commissioners and survey suppliers. The Department hopes to announce the procurement phase of the survey in the near future.

Final decisions on the scope, sample size, methodology and questionnaire have not yet been made and it is not possible to pre-empt them at this stage or to say exactly what the new survey will cover, although it is likely to provide some data on characteristics such as ethnicity.

Dr Sarah Wollaston: [219619]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, what provisions are in place within the Prevalence Study on Mental Health of Children and Young People in Great Britian to sub-sample the population by ethnicity.

Dr Sarah Wollaston: [219620]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, whether the Prevalence Study on Mental Health of Children and Young People in Great Britian contains data on (a) children under five, (b) young poeple over 15, (c) BME populations, (d) LGBT young people, (e) migrant children, (f) asylum seekers and (g) children in detention centres.

Norman Lamb: The Department is in the process of commissioning a new prevalence survey of children and young people’s mental health that is comparable to the 2004 survey.

Ministers are currently considering options for the new survey informed by advice from a range of academics and researchers, health and care professionals and their representative bodies, commissioners and survey suppliers. The Department hopes to announce the procurement phase of the survey in the near future.

Final decisions on the scope, sample size, methodology and questionnaire have not yet been made and it is not possible to pre-empt them at this stage or to say exactly what the new survey will cover, although it is likely to provide some data on characteristics such as ethnicity.

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Neuromuscular Disorders

Mr David Anderson: [219448]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, what plans he has to develop more regional managed clinical neuromuscular networks.

Mr David Anderson: [219449]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, what steps he is taking to ensure that sufficient funding is available for wheelchair services for neuromuscular patients with complex needs.

Mr David Anderson: [219488]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, what steps his Department and NHS England are taking to increase the number and availability of hydrotherapy pools for people living with (a) neuromuscular and (b) other long-term debilitating conditions.

Norman Lamb: Since 1 April 2013, NHS England has been responsible for commissioning specialised neurological services, which includes services for patients with neuromuscular disorders. NHS England has published a service specification for neurological care, which sets out what providers must have in place to offer evidence-based, safe and effective services. The specification can be found at the following link:

www.england.nhs.uk/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/d04-neurosci-spec-neuro.pdf

Specialised neuromuscular care may include referral to local or specialised physiotherapy, hydrotherapy or rehabilitation if appropriate. Provision of hydrotherapy services is a matter for the local National Health Service and may be accessed by patients with neuromuscular and other long-term debilitating conditions, subject to assessment and referral.

Neuromuscular patients may also be referred for enabling equipment such as wheelchairs adaptations and environmental controls in line with their clinical commissioning group or specialist rehabilitation referral criteria, subject to the complexity of need.

NHS England is currently undertaking a review of wheelchair services, led by Rosamond Roughton, National Director of Commissioning Development, which will consider provision across both specialised and non-specialised wheelchairs.

NHS England has set up strategic clinical networks (SCNs) for neurological conditions to provide clinical expertise and guidance. Alongside SCNs, Operational Delivery Networks (ODNs) are working with commissioners, providers and patients to ensure the delivery of safe and effective services across the patient pathway and help secure the best outcomes for all people with neurological conditions. Providers are at liberty to set up an ODN for neuromuscular services if they consider it would benefit service provision locally.

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NHS: Costs

Greg Mulholland: [219613]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, what estimate he has made of the annual cost to the NHS of undiagnosed conditions and conditions picked up while in hospital.

Dr Daniel Poulter: No estimate has been made of the annual cost to the NHS of undiagnosed conditions.

Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) record details of all admissions, outpatient appointments and Accident and Emergency attendances at NHS hospitals in England. However, the HES diagnosis code(s) used to describe the reason(s) a person is in hospital does not differentiate between a pre-existing condition and a condition being diagnosed for the first time. Therefore, no estimate can be made of the cost of conditions being picked up in hospital.

NHS: Equality

Mr Virendra Sharma: [219593]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, what steps are being taken to ensure NHS-wide implementation of the refreshed Equality Delivery System; and how the implementation of that system will be evaluated.

Norman Lamb: The refreshed Equality Delivery System (EDS2) is a tool designed to help local NHS organisations, in discussion with local partners, including local communities, to review and improve their equality performance for characteristics given protection under the Equality Act 2010.

During 2012, implementation of this tool featured as part of the criteria for the authorisation of clinical commissioning groups in England; EDS2 now features in NHS England’s Assurance Framework for Clinical Commissioning Groups. EDS2 has been embedded within the Care Quality Commission’s new inspection regime for hospitals, and is scheduled to be included in the NHS Standard Contract from April 2015.

A survey exercise carried out by NHS England during 2014 indicated that over 93% of all NHS clinical commissioning groups and NHS provider organisations were implementing the Equality Delivery System.

The programme of work on EDS2 includes continuous evaluation, overseen by NHS England. A national ‘EDS2 Dashboard’ is being finalised that will monitor uptake of the tool by organisations, and highlight good practice and outcomes.

These actions will ensure that the refreshed EDS2 receives system-wide implementation across the NHS in England, and that its effectiveness is monitored and evaluated on a continuous basis.

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NHS: Per Capita Costs

Mr David Ruffley: [219622]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, what the total public expenditure per head of population was on (a) capital and (b) running costs of the NHS in (i) Suffolk, (ii) Bedfordshire, (iii) Cambridgeshire, (iv) Essex, (v) Hertfordshire, (vi) Norfolk and (vii) England in each year since 1997.

Dr Daniel Poulter: The Department does not collect any information for the National Health Service by county or English region. Individual trusts have therefore been grouped together by region based on their geographical location.

Capital spend per head of population for 2007-08 to 2013-14 for primary care trusts, NHS trusts and foundation trusts collectively, and the Department of Health Group as a whole (England only) are shown in the table below.

REGION 2007-08 £ 2008-09 £ 2009-10 £ 2010-11 £ 2011-12 £ 2012-13 £ 2013-14 £

Bedfordshire 24.12 31.90 31.00 42.15 32.30 34.46 40.60

Suffolk 23.66 25.98 27.87 29.51 33.09 42.48 22.10

Cambridgeshire 72.58 85.45 66.35 62.53 45.00 49.02 52.83

Essex 44.79 43.77 59.60 46.75 31.06 23.30 58.11

Hertfordshire 34.25 41.52 40.66 33.28 36.74 30.77 49.61

Norfolk 27.69 43.80 51.34 43.16 28.90 36.31 26.87

England 78.23 85.30 99.73 79.42 71.65 71.39 80.74

Source: Audited summarisation schedules of NHS bodies, 2007-08 to 2013-14; Departmental Group Resource Account 2007-08 to 2013-14; Monitor

Running costs per head of population for 2007-08 to 2013-14 by primary care trust and the Department of Health Group (England only) are shown in the table below.

REGION 2007-08 £ 2008-09 £ 2009-10 £ 2010-11 £ 2011-12 £ 2012-13 £ 2013-14 £

Bedfordshire n/a n/a n/a n/a 44.15 54.03 n/a

Suffolk n/a n/a n/a n/a 30.60 32.84 n/a

Cambridgeshire n/a n/a n/a n/a 43.35 41.44 n/a

Essex n/a n/a n/a n/a 48.63 46.20 n/a

Hertfordshire n/a n/a n/a n/a 41.00 42.02 n/a

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REGION 2007-08 £ 2008-09 £ 2009-10 £ 2010-11 £ 2011-12 £ 2012-13 £ 2013-14 £

Norfolk n/a n/a n/a n/a 29.06 33.39 n/a

England n/a n/a n/a n/a 62.83 66.09 56.36

Source: Audited summarisation schedules of Primary Care Trusts, 2011-12 to 2012-13; Departmental Group Resource Account 2011-12 to 2013-14

Running costs per head of population for the clinical commissioning groups have been summarised within the following NHS England Area Team areas for 2013-14 in the table below.

AREA TEAM 2013-14 £

East Anglia 20.82

Essex 21.43

Hertfordshire and the South Midlands 21.04

Source: NHS England

Information on running costs was not separately identified in the accounts prior to 2011-12.

Information on NHS trust and foundation trust running costs is not available centrally.

NHS: Private Sector

Debbie Abrahams: [219495]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, pursuant to the Answer of 16 December 2014 to Question 218445, how much the NHS spent on commissioning private providers in each of the last five years.

Dr Daniel Poulter: The information requested is provided in the table below:

YEAR SPEND ON INDEPENDENT PROVIDERS £ MILLION

2009-10 4,144

2010-11 4,757

2011-12 5,320

2012-13 5,669

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YEAR SPEND ON INDEPENDENT PROVIDERS £ MILLION

2013-14 6,554

Independent providers, both for-profit and not-for-profit, have long through successive governments been providing care to National Health Service patients. Under this Government competition between providers of NHS services has been pursued on the basis of competition for quality through a system of fixed national tariffs. Our position on who should provide services is taken to ensure patients receive the best possible services and outcomes. These decisions are taken by the local clinicians, who are best placed to act for the benefit of their patients.

Obesity

Keith Vaz: [219527]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, what assessment he has made of the implications for his Department's policies of obesity care of the recent ruling by the European Court of Justice ruling that obesity can constitute a disability under certain circumstances.

Jane Ellison: The ruling by the European Court of Justice does not change the Department’s policies on obesity. We will continue to work to help people to improve their diet and reduce physical inactivity, alongside working with partners to shape an environment where the healthier choice is the easier choice.

Social Services: Third Sector

Julian Sturdy: [219521]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, what steps he is taking to ensure that the charitable sector can play an increased role in adult social care.

Norman Lamb: The Government appreciates that voluntary sector organisations make a substantial contribution to the delivery of high quality local health and social care services. Their unique understanding of local communities often means that they are better placed than others to reach those vulnerable and sometimes hard to reach groups. They have a strong track-record of designing, providing and supporting services based on insight into clients’ needs, and are often well placed to respond flexibly to those needs.

The Department provides over £125 million of grant funding per year to the Voluntary, Community and Social Enterprise (VCSE) sector to help deliver better health and social care outcomes. This includes the Third Sector Investment Fund which offers grants to the voluntary and community sector to support the development of the sector, build capacity and promote innovation across health and care.

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The Department also has a long history of working with the sector to develop policy. For example, the development of legislation and the regulations and guidance for the Care Act 2014 were produced in collaboration with expert reference groups including a broad range of VCSE organisations.

The Care Act also gives local authorities flexibility to delegate most of their care and support functions under the Act to another body, although the local authority will retain overall responsibility for the fulfilment of the function. Such delegation can include the voluntary sector where appropriate. In recognition of the important role of the VCSE sector in adult social care, the Act also gives local authorities a new duty to promote a diverse provider market.

Supermarkets

Keith Vaz: [219393]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, what recent discussions his Department has had with supermarkets as part of the Responsibility Deal.

Jane Ellison: There are regular and ongoing discussions between Departmental officials and the major high street retailers about the voluntary partnership with industry and others to encourage them to continue to commit to play their part to improve public health. Details of the supermarkets that are members of the voluntary partnership can be found at:

https://responsibilitydeal.dh.gov.uk/partners/

Information about formal high level Steering Group meetings is also available on the Responsibility Deal website.

Tattooing

David T. C. Davies: [219362]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, how many patients have had tattoos removed on the NHS in each of the last three financial years.

Jane Ellison: The information is not held. Cosmetic procedures are not usually available through the National Health Service.

University Hospital of Hartlepool

Mr Iain Wright: [219894]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, if he will meet (a) the hon. Member for Hartlepool and (b) representatives from Hartlepool Borough Council to discuss the issue of transferring hospital services back to the University Hospital of Hartlepool; and if he will make a statement.

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Jane Ellison: In line with the Government’s commitment to devolve power to communities, decisions about NHS services are essentially a matter for the NHS locally in consultation with the communities they serve.

Vulnerable Adults

Julian Sturdy: [219537]

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, what steps he is taking to ensure that appropriate support systems are in place for older vulnerable people and people with dementia.

Norman Lamb: We are committed to ensuring that older vulnerable adults and their carers receive the best possible support in all settings through the Proactive Care Programme, and by ensuring all people aged 75 and over have a named general practitioner (GP) with overall responsibility for their care, providing continuity and oversight of their care. People living with dementia will benefit from this patient focused care.

From April 2015, councils and the National Health Service will pool £5.3 billion of their local budgets under the Better Care Fund. This will require local authorities and the NHS to work together, and engage local partners, including voluntary sector organisations. It is expected that local areas will use some of this to improve care for people with dementia, such as providing access to dementia advisors, reminiscence services and counselling.

Dementia is a key priority for this Government which is why in 2012 we launched the first ever Prime Minister’s Challenge on dementia to increase diagnosis rates, raise awareness and understanding and double funding for research in dementia by 2015.

Since the launch of the Challenge, we have made significant progress across all three strands of the challenge including:

- on 28 February 2014, the Secretary of State for Health announced his ambition for improving dementia care and support for people with dementia, their family and carers. This signalled the importance of a tailored plan of care as part of a package of high quality, personalised dementia care and support;

- in the hospital setting, through the Dementia Commissioning for Quality and Innovation (CQUIN) reward (introduced from April 2012), with around 4,000 referrals a month, it is clear that more people with dementia in hospitals are being identified and assessed;

- the Dementia Care and Support Compact, the care sector’s own response to the Prime Minister’s Challenge on Dementia, sets out a commitment to support the delivery of the challenge and improve care and support for people with dementia, their carers and families;

- on 1 April, we put in place a new Dementia Directed Enhanced Service which has had over 80% take up by GPs to reward practices for facilitating timely diagnosis and support for people with dementia;

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- on 22 May, we launched the Dementia Roadmap web based navigation aid with the Royal College of General Practitioners to assist primary care staff effectively support patients, families and carers at the time of diagnosis and throughout the dementia journey; and

- on 10 September 2014, NHS England published a new Dementia Toolkit aimed at helping GPs make a more timely diagnosis and what they can do in terms of vital post-diagnostic support.

JUSTICE

Indonesia

Mike Kane: [219615]

To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, what progress has been made on establishing a bilateral prisoner transfer agreement with Indonesia.

Andrew Selous: The Foreign and Commonwealth Office have shared a model prisoner transfer agreement with the Indonesian authorities. Unfortunately at present Indonesia does not have the necessary legislation in place to facilitate prisoner transfers, without which it cannot enter into prisoner transfer arrangements.

We are aware that other countries are also seeking prisoner transfer arrangements with Indonesia, and remain open to collaborating with them and with Indonesian authorities to develop their legislation.

Interpreters

Sheila Gilmore: [219783]

To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, what the success rate in supplying interpreters was under the Capita TI interpreting contract in each month from January 2012 to March 2014.

Andrew Selous: The percentage success rates for the Capita Translation and Interpreting contract are published and can be found using the below link:

https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/statistics-on-the-use-of-language-services-in-courts-and-tribunals-january-2012-december-2013

The interpreting contract was introduced to tackle the inefficiencies and inconsistencies in the previous system. The contract has delivered significant improvements so far and we now have a system that is robust, sustainable and able to deliver a quality service at an affordable level. As a result of the contract, we have spent £27m less in the first two years it has been running, and it continues to reduce the burden on taxpayers.

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Secure Training Centres

Dan Jarvis: [219897]

To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, pursuant to the Answer of 5 January 2015 to Question 218894, what the specific distance from home was for each of the (a) seven young people placed closer to home and (b) nine young people placed further from home.

Andrew Selous: Overall crime and proven offending by young people has fallen in recent years. Fewer young people have entered the criminal justice system and as a result fewer people have ended up in custody. To deliver the best value for money for taxpayers we have reduced the number of youth justice places.

Young people are placed in establishments that can most effectively manage their individual needs. Factors such as age, suitability of regime, risk of self-harm or to others, all have to be taken into account.

Disclosure of specific information about individual offenders may lead to the identification of those offenders and a potential breach of the Data Protection Act. . The table below therefore sets out, in banded categories, the distances from home for young people placed in secure establishments following their transferral from Hassockfield Secure Training Centre;

Table A: Table showing the banded distance from home (in miles) of the young people after the decommissioning of Hassockfield Secure Training Centre.

MILES (BANDED) NUMBER OF YOUNG PEOPLE WHO

WERE PLACED CLOSER TO HOME NUMBER OF YOUNG PEOPLE WHO

WERE PLACED FURTHER FROM HOME

0-50 3 2

51-100 2 4

101-150 2 0

151+ 0 3

“Home” is defined as a young person's address at the time of placement.

This data is operational and uses a calculation of distance travelled by road rather than distance as the crow flies.

This information comes from the eAsset database, the booking system used by the YJB to place young people into custody.

These figures have been drawn from administrative IT systems, which, as with any large scale recording system, are subject to possible errors with data entry and processing and can be subject to change over time.

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Dan Jarvis: [219898]

To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, what estimate he has made of the average distance from home of young people accommodated in secure training centres in each year since May 2010.

Dan Jarvis: [219900]

To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, what estimate he has made of the average distance from home of young people accommodated in secure young offender institutions in each year since May 2010.

Andrew Selous: Overall crime and proven offending by young people has fallen in recent years. Fewer young people have entered the criminal justice system and as a result fewer young people have ended up in custody. To deliver the best value for taxpayers we have reduced the number of youth custody places.

The Youth Justice Board (YJB) is responsible for the placement of young people in custody. Young people are placed in establishments that can most effectively manage their individual needs. While every effort is made to place young people as close to home as possible, other factors are taken into account in placement decisions, such as age, suitability of regime, risk of self-harm and the risk of harm to other.

The YJB holds data on the distance from home of young people accommodated in Secure Training Centres and Young Offender Institutions. “Home” is defined as a young person's address at the time of placement. If no address is recorded, the address of the Youth Offending Team overseeing the young person is used as a proxy.

Table A: Average distance from home (in miles) for young people in Secure Training Centres and in Under 18 Young Offender Institutions from May 2010

YEAR

AVERAGE

DISTANCE

FROM

HOME

(MILES) FOR

YOUNG

OFFENDERS

Secure Training Centres Young Offender Institutions

May 2010 - April 2011 49 45

May 2011 - April 2012 52 50

May 2012 - April 2013 51 51

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YEAR

AVERAGE

DISTANCE

FROM

HOME

(MILES) FOR

YOUNG

OFFENDERS

May 2013 - April 2014 54 50

Data from April 2012 has been taken from eAsset, the booking system used by the Youth Justice Board for England & Wales to place young people in to custody. Data prior to April 2012 comes from the Youth Justice Board’s Secure Accommodation Clearing House System, the booking system used prior to eAsset.

This data is based on 12 monthly snapshots of the custodial population, taken on the last Friday of the month or first Friday of the following month, depending on which is nearer to the actual month end.

These figures have been drawn from administrative IT systems, which, as with any large scale recording system, are subject to possible errors with data entry and processing and can be subject to change over time.

Data from April 2013 is provisional. The figures for the 2013/14 financial year will be finalised in the 2013/14 Youth Justice Statistics on 29th January 2015 and the figures for the 2014/15 financial year will be finalised in the 2014/15 Youth Justice Statistics which are anticipated for publication in January 2016.

PRIME MINISTER

Radicalism

Stephen Barclay: [219818]

To ask the Prime Minister, when he last received an update on how effectively steps recommended by the Extremism Taskforce have been implemented.

Stephen Barclay: [219819]

To ask the Prime Minister, what recent assessment he has made of progress in implementing each of the steps recommended by the Extremism Taskforce.

Stephen Barclay: [219820]

To ask the Prime Minister, who is responsible (a) in each department and (b) across government for overseeing implementation of the steps recommended by the Extremism Taskforce.

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Stephen Barclay: [219821]

To ask the Prime Minister, what processes and organisational structures are in place to ensure that a cross-government approach is taken to tackling extremism.

Mr David Cameron: I refer my hon. Friend to the evidence I gave to the Liaison Committee on 16 December 2014, in particular the responses I gave to Q54 and Q68. A transcript can be found on the parliament.uk website.

TRANSPORT

Buses: Safety Belts

Richard Burden: [219901]

To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, pursuant to his Department's publication Department for Transport Ninth Statement of New Regulation, updated on 30 December 2014, whether he plans to bring forward secondary legislation to ensure that children aged three to 14 wear seat belts while travelling on coaches.

Mr Robert Goodwill: It is the Department’s intention to bring forward secondary legislation to ensure that children are required to wear seat belts while travelling on coaches. Adults over the age of 14 already have this requirement imposed on them, and the intention is to extend this to children as expressed in the Government’s Ninth Statement of New Regulation.

Christmas

Mr John Spellar: [219795]

To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, who the duty Minister in his Department was on each day of the parliamentary Christmas recess 2014-15.

Claire Perry: The Ministers on duty for this parliamentary recess were as follows:

19 - 23 December (inc) – Rt Hon John Hayes MP

24 - 27 December (inc) – Robert Goodwill MP

28 - 31 December (inc) - Baroness Kramer

1 - 4 January (inc) – Claire Perry MP

All Ministers were fully briefed and involved on any issues in their portfolios throughout the recess period.

Kevin Brennan: [219808]

To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, if he will publish the name of the duty Minister in his Department for each day during the most recent parliamentary recess.

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Claire Perry: The Ministers on duty for this parliamentary recess were as follows:

19 - 23 December (inc) – Rt Hon John Hayes MP

24 - 27 December (inc) – Robert Goodwill MP

28 - 31 December (inc) - Baroness Kramer

1 - 4 January (inc) – Claire Perry MP

All Ministers were fully briefed and involved on any issues in their portfolios throughout the recess period.

Driving: Licensing

Hywel Williams: [219887]

To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what public consultation has been undertaken in Wales, Northern Ireland, Scotland and England on the decision to display the Union flag on driving licences in Wales, Scotland and England.

Claire Perry: No public consultation has been carried out on the decision to display the Union flag on driving licences.

Hywel Williams: [219888]

To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what estimate he has made of the cost of implementation of the decision to display the Union flag on driving licences in Wales, Scotland and England.

Claire Perry: The cost of putting the Union flag on all licences issued to drivers in England, Scotland and Wales is expected to be £188,000.

Hywel Williams: [219889]

To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what consideration his Department gave to using the Welsh and Scottish flags for licences issued to drivers in Wales and Scotland respectively.

Claire Perry: The Department has considered giving motorists a choice of national symbol. The excessive cost involved in making the systems and other changes required to offer this choice means this is impractical. To ensure that the cost is kept as low as possible national symbols other than the Union flag will not be included.

High Speed 2 Railway Line

Mrs Cheryl Gillan: [219805]

To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what rate of interest is charged on late payments of rent on properties let out by HS2 Ltd under the sale and rent back scheme.

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Mr Robert Goodwill: The rate of interest charged on late payments of rent is 4% above Bank of England base rate. This applies to late payments of rent on all properties let out by HS2 Ltd. The company does not differentiate between properties with a sale and rent back arrangement or other rental properties.

Motorways: Air Pollution

Joan Walley: [219716]

To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, if he will place in the Library a copy of all scoping reports on air quality in respect of motorway improvement schemes produced in the last three years.

Mr John Hayes: A copy of each Environmental Assessment Report produced for motorway improvement schemes in the last three years will be placed in the House Library by 30 January 2015.

It should be noted that Air Quality scoping reports are not produced as individual documents for motorway improvement schemes, but air quality is considered as part of the overall environmental scoping exercise which is undertaken for each project in line with the Design Manual for Roads and Bridges Volume 11 Section 2 parts 4 and 6.

The results of the scoping exercise provide the basis for the subsequent Environment Assessment Report which provides decision makers and the public with an accessible document which:

• Describes and reports the environmental assessment activities;

• Provides a clearly auditable trail of assessment decisions; and

• Provides clear information on environmental mitigation to be implemented by a project.

Shrewsbury Station

Daniel Kawczynski: [219824]

To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, if he will direct Arriva Trains and Network Rail to work on important maintenance issues at Shrewsbury Station.

Claire Perry: Network Rail is operationally independent. The maintenance of Shrewsbury station and its station facilities is the joint responsibility of Network Rail, as the landlord and owner of the freehold of this station and the Station Facility Owner, Arriva Trains Wales. This is in accordance with their respective obligations under both the Station Access Conditions and the relevant station lease. However, I look forward to the debate on this issue which the Hon. Member has secured on 14 January.

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TREASURY

Banks: Loans

Mr Philip Hollobone: [219733]

To ask Mr Chancellor of the Exchequer, what steps he is taking to improve access to bank lending (a) in general and (b) for large-scale new housing developments.

Mr David Gauke: The Government has taken significant action to improve access to bank lending, notably through the Funding for Lending Scheme, as well as supporting non-bank lending channels via the British Business Bank

The Government is also implementing further major reforms to boost competition in the provision of smaller business finance through the Small Business, Enterprise and Employment Bill; these include the measures to improve availability of credit information on small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) and to match SMEs rejected for finance with challenger banks and alternative finance providers.

The Government has also put in place a series of measures to unlock housing development by providing loans to fund major infrastructure and build costs of housing schemes through its Large Sites Infrastructure Programme, Get Britain Building Programme and Builders Finance Fund.

Children: Day Care

Stephen Timms: [219642]

To ask Mr Chancellor of the Exchequer, what progress HM Revenue and Customs has made in developing an online childcare support calculator to replace its current calculator; and whether the proposed new calculator will be ready by September 2015.

Stephen Timms: [219643]

To ask Mr Chancellor of the Exchequer, if HM Revenue and Customs will include the childcare element of universal credit in the online calculator it is developing alongside the tax-free childcare scheme; and if he will make a statement.

Andrea Leadsom: HMRC are currently developing an online childcare calculator. This will be introduced in good time before the launch of Tax-Free Childcare and will replace existing online calculators that perform similar functions.

Electronic Commerce: VAT

Toby Perkins: [218877]

To ask Mr Chancellor of the Exchequer, what steps he is taking to ensure that overseas retailers trading online stock which is located in the UK pay the appropriate level of VAT.

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Andrea Leadsom: Supplies of goods are within the scope of UK VAT if the goods are actually in the UK at the time they are sold to the customer.

HMRC are cracking down hard on all forms of tax evasion, regardless of where it occurs or who commits it. HMRC are determined to tackle deliberate non-compliance to ensure that the tax system operates fairly and efficiently to create a level playing field for all.

Electronic Publishing: VAT

Austin Mitchell: [219219]

To ask Mr Chancellor of the Exchequer, what rate of VAT is payable on eBooks (a) supplied by Amazon from Luxembourg and (b) supplied in the UK.

Austin Mitchell: [219224]

To ask Mr Chancellor of the Exchequer, what information his Department holds for comparative purposes on VAT taxes and rates on (a) books and (b) eBooks in other EU countries.

Mr David Gauke: E-books supplied from a business in Luxembourg to a consumer in the UK are currently subject to a 3% rate of VAT in Luxembourg. E- books supplied by a UK VAT registered business are subject to UK VAT at 20%. From 1 January 2015 UK VAT of 20% will apply to both.

The European Commission publishes a summary of the VAT rates that apply in all Member States including those applicable to books and e-books. This is available on the Commission’s website at: http://ec.europa.eu/taxation_customs/resources/documents/taxation/vat/how_vat_works/rates/vat_rates_en.pdf

Fossil Fuels: Tax Yields

Margaret Curran: [219662]

To ask Mr Chancellor of the Exchequer, what estimate he has made of the effect on oil and gas receipts of the fall in the price of Brent crude to $56 a barrel.

Mr David Gauke: The independent Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) published forecasts for oil and gas revenues in the December 2014 Economic and Financial Outlook. The report shows that these tax receipts are expected to be £15.8bn over the forecast period. The March 2015 forecast will incorporate the impact of recent changes in the oil price.

The global fall in oil prices should provide a boost to the economy and support UK and global growth. Falling oil prices contributed to annual CPI inflation of 1.0 per cent in November, the lowest level of inflation in 12 years, and reductions in petrol and diesel prices, which are now at their lowest levels since September 2010. On 5th January 2015, diesel was down 18.28p/l on its July 2014 peak, at 117.93p/l, and petrol down 20.05p/l at 111.06p/l.

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Insurance: EU Law

Charles Hendry: [219825]

To ask Mr Chancellor of the Exchequer, what the cost has been to the UK of the EU's Solvency II Initiative to date; and what recent estimate he has made of the cost of full implementation of that initiative.

Mr David Gauke: HM Treasury published an impact assessment on UK implementation of Solvency II in November 2011. The impact assessment can be found at:

https://www.gov.uk/government/consultations/solvency-ii-framework-directive-2009138ec

Interest Rate Swap Transactions

Guto Bebb: [218632]

To ask Mr Chancellor of the Exchequer, what assurances he has received that agreements between the individual banks and the Financial Conduct Authority in relation to the interest rate swap redress scheme were identical.

Guto Bebb: [218660]

To ask Mr Chancellor of the Exchequer, what recent discussions he has had with the Financial Conduct Authority on the potential fining of banks following the completion of the interest rate swap redress scheme.

Andrea Leadsom: No conversations have taken place between the Financial Conduct Authority and HM Treasury on the potential fining of the banks following the FCA redress scheme. Furthermore, HM Treasury had not had sight of the agreements held between the FCA and the individual banks. The nature of the agreements is a matter for the FCA as an independent regulator.

However, I took part in a debate on the FCA’s review scheme last month, along with my Hon. Friend, where the issue of the individual agreements was discussed. Following the debate, I wrote to the FCA to put forward my view that more transparency in this matter will help to provide greater assurance that the review has been conducted in a fully independent and impartial manner. I also encouraged the FCA to come to an agreement with the banks as soon as possible on what might be shared with the Treasury Select Committee.

Public Sector Debt

Mr Gregory Campbell: [219948]

To ask Mr Chancellor of the Exchequer, what the National Debt has been between May 2010 and January 2015.

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Mr David Gauke: Latest Public Sector Finances data is available up to November 2014. In May 2010 public sector net debt excluding public sector banks was £974.2 billion (62.7% of GDP). In November 2014 public sector net debt was £1457.2 billion (79.5% of GDP).

The latest OBR forecast shows that public sector net debt will peak at 81.1 percent of GDP in 2015-16, before starting to fall as a share of GDP in 2016-17. The government’s long-term economic plan is working, restoring the public finances to a sustainable path and delivering economic security for hardworking people.

Solar Power: North Africa

Oliver Colvile: [219617]

To ask Mr Chancellor of the Exchequer, if he will provide funding for the import of concentrated solar power from North Africa.

Danny Alexander: Under Electricity Market Reform, the Government’s Contract for Difference (CfD) scheme is the primary mechanism to support large scale electricity generation in the UK. Concentrated Solar Power is not currently an eligible technology for support from UK CfDs.

Under this scheme projects outside the UK are not currently eligible. The Government has been considering the benefits of supporting projects outside of the UK and published a paper in August 2014 setting out indicative areas of work that would need to be addressed to open the UK CfD scheme to eligible non-UK projects. This paper can be found here:

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/cfds-for-non-uk-renewable-electricity-projects

Welfare Tax Credits

Mr Frank Field: [219406]

To ask Mr Chancellor of the Exchequer, how much and what proportion of annual expenditure on tax credits is allocated to the administration of the programme.

Mr David Gauke: I refer the Rt Hon Member for Birkenhead to HMRC’s Annual Report and Accounts for 2013-14.

WALES

Driving: Licensing

Hywel Williams: [219890]

To ask the Secretary of State for Wales, what discussions he had with the Secretary of State for Transport prior to the decision to display the Union flag on driving licences in Wales, Scotland and England.

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Alun Cairns: Prior to the decision to display the Union flag on driving licences, I had been in contact with the Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Transport about the case for including an optional Welsh flag on driving licences.

Hywel Williams: [219891]

To ask the Secretary of State for Wales, if he will take steps to ensure that the Welsh flag can be displayed on driving licences in Wales.

Alun Cairns: Displaying the Union flag on driving licences strengthens the UK’s sense of national identity, and Wales continues to be an important and integral part of this Union. As part of the decision making process, the Wales Office ensured that the Department for Transport gave due consideration to whether people should be allowed to choose which UK national flag to have on their licence. This work showed that the cost of offering a choice of national flags was excessive. We were keen to ensure that costs were kept to a minimum.

The inclusion of the Union flag has no effect on the availability of bilingual driving licenses.

WORK AND PENSIONS

Atos Healthcare

Austin Mitchell: [219585]

To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, what the average delay has been in medical examinations of disability cases conducted by Atos in (a) Grimsby and (b) the rest of England in the last 12 months; what the main causes were of such delays; and if he will make a statement.

Mr Mark Harper: Official statistics for Employment and Support Allowance (ESA) processing times are not readily available and to provide this information would incur disproportionate cost.

Austin Mitchell: [219586]

To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, how many medical examinations in disability cases dealt with by Atos required a doctor in (a) Grimsby and (b) the rest of England in the last 12 months.

Mr Mark Harper: In 2014, there were 29,821 assessments completed nationally that required a doctor to undertake a Work Capability Assessment. 121 of these were completed for the Grimsby postcodes DN15 to DN20, DN31 to DN41 and DN55.

Austin Mitchell: [219587]

To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, what sanctions his Department has imposed on Atos in response to delays in medical examinations in the last 12 months.

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Mr Mark Harper: We have taken a robust approach to managing the contract with Atos Healthcare and have applied financial remedies such as service credits and awarded fees where and when appropriate.

From 1 March 2015, MAXIMUS Health and Human Services will take over the contract to deliver Work Capability Assessments.

Disability Living Allowance

Daniel Kawczynski: [219599]

To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, what estimate he has made of the cost to the public purse of extending the higher rate of disability living allowance, including the Motability rate, to children under the age of three.

Mr Mark Harper: No such estimate has been made.

Employment Schemes

Greg Mulholland: [219624]

To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, if he will take steps to ensure the quicker payment of benefits to those on temporary work placements.

Esther McVey: Where someone takes-up work of 16 hours or more each week, either on a temporary or permanent basis, they are treated as being in remunerative work and their JSA claim is terminated and any outstanding payment issued to the claimant.

If a person’s temporary work ends and they wish to re-claim JSA within 26 weeks of the last day of a previous award and providing there has been no change to their circumstances, Jobcentre Plus has a streamlined process known as Rapid Reclaim/Reclaim Gather to ensure claims are dealt with quickly. Additionally, all claimants can be considered for a Short Term Benefit Advance at the start of any new claim.

Jobseekers engaged on work experience arranged through their Jobcentre still continue to receive their benefit uninterrupted, provided they continue to satisfy the conditions of entitlement.

Universal Credit helps to ensure people are better off in work than on benefits and abolishes the limit to the number of hours someone can work each week. A claimant’s UC payment adjusts automatically according to the number of ours worked. As claimants increase their hours their UC payment will gradually reduce, ensuring they are always better of in work.

We want to ensure that we minimise the administrative burden on claimants so that those who move off Universal Credit on a temporary basis can return to it quickly and easily as possible. The Universal Credit re-claims and re-award processes allow this to happen for certain claimants when they become re-entitled to Universal Credit within 6

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months of a previous Universal Credit claim ending by re-using information already held on the claimant as part of their previous Universal Credit claim.

The re-claim and re-award processes also ensure that these claimants have a shorter wait until they are paid Universal Credit by re-instating the previous assessment period from the claimant’s previous Universal Credit award.

Housing Benefit: Social Rented Housing

Helen Goodman: [219829]

To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, how many people have (a) begun and (b) stopped paying the under-occupancy penalty in 2014-15 to date.

Mr Mark Harper: We published an analysis of the changes to the number of people subject to a reduction in their Housing Benefit award from May to December 2013. This was published here:

https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/removal-of-the-spare-room-subsidy-analysis-july-2014

It is not possible at this time to update this information within the disproportionate cost limit. I will however consider if an update can be published in the future.

Social Security Benefits

Stephen Timms: [219812]

To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, what representations he has received in the last two years about the adequacy of his Department's hardship payments scheme.

Esther McVey: The information as requested is not readily available and could only be provided at disproportionate cost.

Trussell Trust

Stephen Timms: [219782]

To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, when he last met representatives of the Trussell Trust.

Esther McVey: The Secretary of State last met with representatives from the Trussell Trust in September 2014. The Department and its Ministers engages regularly with a wide range of organisations.

Work Programme

Stephen Timms: [219811]

To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, how many Work Programme sub-contractors have received no referrals since the inception of that programme.

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Esther McVey: The Department does not hold this information.

The level of referrals is a commercial matter between the prime provider and their sub-contractors.

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62 Daily Report Friday, 9 January 2015 MINISTERIAL CORRECTIONS

MINISTERIAL CORRECTIONS

CABINET OFFICE

Civil Servants: Pensions

Jonathan Ashworth: [219342]

To ask the Minister for the Cabinet Office, how many retired civil servants have not received any pension payments from MyCSP since October 2014.

An error has been identified in the written answer given on 8 January 2015. The correct answer should have been:

Mr Francis Maude: MyCSP was spun-out as a mutual joint venture in May 2012. Mutualising MyCSP was good for staff, taxpayers and for the service they provide to pensioners. MyCSP will almost halve the cost of administering pensions within a decade, while improving services which were variable before. Employees of MyCSP have benefited through dividends, which they have received in both years since mutualisation. Staff survey figures show rising staff engagement and a decline in sickness absence.

MyCSP Ltd took over administration of the pensioner payroll in September 2014. Legacy problems were inherited from the previous supplier, including 5,579 cases where payments had already been delayed or missed by September 2014. MyCSP have now cleared all but 422 of these cases and MyCSP has switched available resources to reduce the remaining backlog as quickly as possible.

Since October 2014 there have been 1197 cases of delayed payment, most of which were the result of ongoing delays of the historic cases inherited from the previous supplier in September 2014.

Since October 2014 36 overseas pensioners have been awaiting payments. 33 of these are still outstanding because new banking mandates need to be completed to allow processing by the new paying bank.

MyCSP are doing everything possible to clear all remaining cases where payments are still due but are in many cases dependent on employers or pensioners themselves for the necessary information to do so. Where delayed payment has caused hardship MyCSP have been making emergency interim payments to members. The majority of the scheme’s 658,000 pensioners have been paid accurately and on time since September 2014.

Jonathan Ashworth: [219343]

To ask the Minister for the Cabinet Office, how many retired civil servants have received late pension payments from MyCSP since October 2014.

An error has been identified in the written answer given on 8 January 2015. The correct answer should have been:

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Daily Report Friday, 9 January 2015 MINISTERIAL CORRECTIONS 63

Mr Francis Maude: MyCSP was spun-out as a mutual joint venture in May 2012. Mutualising MyCSP was good for staff, taxpayers and for the service they provide to pensioners. MyCSP will almost halve the cost of administering pensions within a decade, while improving services which were variable before. Employees of MyCSP have benefited through dividends, which they have received in both years since mutualisation. Staff survey figures show rising staff engagement and a decline in sickness absence.

MyCSP Ltd took over administration of the pensioner payroll in September 201 1 4. Legacy problems were inherited from the previous supplier, including 5,579 cases where payments had already been delayed or missed by September 2014. MyCSP have now cleared all but 422 of these cases and MyCSP has switched available resources to reduce the remaining backlog as quickly as possible.

Since October 2014 there have been 1197 cases of delayed payment, most of which were the result of ongoing delays of the historic cases inherited from the previous supplier in September 2014.

Since October 2014 36 overseas pensioners have been awaiting payments. 33 of these are still outstanding because new banking mandates need to be completed to allow processing by the new paying bank.

MyCSP are doing everything possible to clear all remaining cases where payments are still due but are in many cases dependent on employers or pensioners themselves for the necessary information to do so. Where delayed payment has caused hardship MyCSP have been making emergency interim payments to members. The majority of the scheme’s 658,000 pensioners have been paid accurately and on time since September 2014.

Jonathan Ashworth: [219344]

To ask the Minister for the Cabinet Office, how many retired civil servants have received late pension payments since the spin out of MyCSP in 2012.

An error has been identified in the written answer given on 8 January 2015. The correct answer should have been:

Mr Francis Maude: MyCSP was spun-out as a mutual joint venture in May 2012. Mutualising MyCSP was good for staff, taxpayers and for the service they provide to pensioners. MyCSP will almost halve the cost of administering pensions within a decade, while improving services which were variable before. Employees of MyCSP have benefited through dividends, which they have received in both years since mutualisation. Staff survey figures show rising staff engagement and a decline in sickness absence.

MyCSP Ltd took over administration of the pensioner payroll in September 2011 2014. Legacy problems were inherited from the previous supplier, including 5,579 cases where payments had already been delayed or missed by September 2014. MyCSP have now cleared all but 422 of these cases and MyCSP has switched available resources to reduce the remaining backlog as quickly as possible.

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64 Daily Report Friday, 9 January 2015 MINISTERIAL CORRECTIONS

Since October 2014 there have been 1197 cases of delayed payment, most of which were the result of ongoing delays of the historic cases inherited from the previous supplier in September 2014.

Since October 2014 36 overseas pensioners have been awaiting payments. 33 of these are still outstanding because new banking mandates need to be completed to allow processing by the new paying bank.

MyCSP are doing everything possible to clear all remaining cases where payments are still due but are in many cases dependent on employers or pensioners themselves for the necessary information to do so. Where delayed payment has caused hardship MyCSP have been making emergency interim payments to members. The majority of the scheme’s 658,000 pensioners have been paid accurately and on time since September 2014.

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Daily Report Friday, 9 January 2015 WRITTEN STATEMENTS 65

WRITTEN STATEMENTS

BUSINESS, INNOVATION AND SKILLS

Final Government Evidence for the Low Pay Commission's 2015 Report-National Minimum Wage

Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Employment Relations and Consumer Affairs; Department For Business, Innovation and Skills (Jo Swinson): [HCWS179]

I am pleased to announce that I have published the final evidence that the Government has provided to the Low Pay Commission on the National Minimum Wage.

This report updates the evidence that the Government provided in October 2014. The report reflects the latest information on earnings, the labour market and economic forecasts.

A copy of the final evidence will be placed in the libraries of the House and will be available at www.gov.uk.

Attachments:

1. Final Government Evidence [201420140108_Final Goverment Evidence for LPC.pdf]

DEFENCE

Libya Training Report

Secretary of State for Defence (Michael Fallon): [HCWS181]

On 11 June 2014, my predecessor informed the House ( Official Report , column 49WS) that the UK had started training personnel from the Libyan General Purpose Force at Bassingbourn Camp as part of an international commitment with other G8 nations. I updated the House on 4 November 2014, Official Report column 44WS, and confirmed that, in agreement with the Libyan Government, the training completion date was being brought forward and the recruits would return to Libya.

On 5 November 2014, the Prime Minister announced that, in response to allegations linking some of the Libyans undergoing training at Bassingbourn, he had asked for a report into the training programme by Christmas. I have today placed a copy of the report’s conclusions and recommendations in the Library of the House.

We accept all of the report’s conclusions and recommendations. The report highlights some of the significant challenges we faced delivering this training programme, and also highlights a number of areas in which my Department could have done better: we are looking at these very carefully.

The report raises the issue of communication with the local community. I regret the fact that my Department did not communicate effectively with the local MP and local authorities and community over the change to the walk out policy for the recruits. I have asked officials to

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66 Daily Report Friday, 9 January 2015 WRITTEN STATEMENTS

implement the lessons we have learned from this so that we can apply them in future, while noting that no future GPF training will take place at Bassingbourn Camp.

The report also highlights the issue of maintaining discipline amongst the recruits. While it is clear that the breakdown in the political situation in Libya played a large role in the problems we encountered, there are things we could have done better. In particular, the report recommends that in future we consider ‘pre-training’ the command element of any future cohort and carrying out basic training for the rest of the recruits in their own country, and I have instructed officials to take this forward, in the event we were to run further such training in the UK again.

Finally on discipline, the report asks whether, in the future, we could apply UK Service Discipline to training foreign troops in the UK: I have tasked officials to investigate this.

I also would like to commend the performance of the trainers from 3 SCOTS themselves who, despite the severe challenges they encountered, were able to deliver the training objectives for the majority of the trainees who remained in the programme until the end.

Finally, I would like to repeat that it is regrettable that there were disciplinary issues and how grateful we were for the support the Ministry of Defence received from the local community, the Cambridgeshire Constabulary and other Government Departments throughout the training programme.

DEPUTY PRIME MINISTER

Maximising Voter Registration

Deputy Prime Minister (Mr Nick Clegg): [HCWS180]

I am pleased to announce that the Government is making available up to £9.8 million pounds this year to support the costs of activities aimed at increasing the completeness and accuracy of the electoral register. This funding will help build on the work delivered through the £4.2 million maximising registration funding which the Government made available in 2013/14.

The Government has modernised the system of electoral registration to make it fit for the 21 st century. Individual Electoral Registration was introduced on 10 June in England and Wales and 19 September in Scotland. Almost nine in ten existing electors in Great Britain were automatically transferred to the new electoral registers under IER without needing to take any action. Another key feature of the transition has been the introduction of on-line registration which makes registering to vote more convenient and accessible than ever before. Registering on-line takes as little as three minutes and can be done on a smartphone or tablet. It is proving to be a success. Over 4 million people have submitted applications to register to vote since the launch of IER with the majority of these made on-line. The on-line service has consistently achieved a high user satisfaction rate of over 90%.

Whilst the Government welcomes this progress, there is more to do. We are determined to ensure everyone in the country is signed up to the electoral register and has their chance to vote. Alongside the transition to IER, it is therefore essential that further steps be taken to

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ensure everyone who is eligible is on the register. This further funding will help meet this aim.

The funding will be allocated at both a national and local level. At a local level, every Electoral Registration Officer (ERO) in Great Britain will receive a share of £6.8 million with allocations based on levels of under registration. Activity delivered by EROs as a result could include further letters to households - to help identify those who have moved home and invite those that need to register to do so - and more door-to-door canvassing, targeted either at under-registered groups such as students, or specific wards where registration rates are lower. Up to £2.5 million funding will be available to fund wider activity, including working with national organisations. This funding will support activity to encourage specific under registered groups such as students, overseas electors and armed service personnel to register to vote. Finally, up to £500k will be used to support efforts to boost confidence in the integrity of the electoral process in areas where a number of allegations of impropriety have been made in the past.