Blogs

Review of the Papers, Wednesday 11 April

Government  

  • Proposals to create an "NHS headquarters" or a separate "management executive" within the Department of Health are being developed by David Nicholson, the chief executive of the health service. The move would be the first step towards the creation of a more independent board to run the £90bn business the health service is about to become, reducing the day-to-day involvement of politicians. Gordon Brown, the chancellor, is reported to be considering the idea as one of his early acts in office, assuming he becomes prime minister. The proposals reflect the changing nature of the NHS as it becomes more of a commissioning organisation and less of a direct provider of care.

Policy Announcements, Tuesday 10 April

Government  

  • Scottish Labour has used its Holyrood election manifesto launch to put education at the heart of its plans for the next parliament. Party leader Jack McConnell told a press conference that education would have "first call" on all extra spending by the Scottish Executive. He insisted other departments would have to "cut their cloth" accordingly. Mr McConnell also included a pledge to expand the availability of modern language lessons for children.  
  • Shorter NHS waiting times, cheaper rail travel for pensioners and 6,500 affordable new homes are promised by Labour for the Welsh assembly election.

Pay up, or I'll send the boys round

And so to the latest attack on motorists and the Government's obsession with giving more power to the least appropriate people. A Department for Transport's feasibility study into "pay as you drive" includes proposals to use debt collectors to chase unpaid fees. And these glorified thugs will have a right to force their way in to your home, no questions asked, and take what they think is worth a few quid. The system barely works at present with crooked or bullying bailiffs only allowed in to premises by consent.

Blood on their hands

A report by the London School of Economics for the Prince's Trust charity, entitled The Cost of Exclusion gives us a very dim view of our future. It appears that the benefits handout culture of Great Britain is producing a population of "Neets" - people not in education, employment or training. Astonishingly, roughly one in five young people faces a lifetime on government handouts, under-achieving in education and runs the risk of falling into crime!

Review of the Papers, Tuesday 10 April

Government

  • A "lost generation" of unemployed young people is costing the economy billions of pounds a year in benefits, youth crime and educational under-achievement, a major report discloses today. The first large-scale study of its kind also shows that the population of "Neets" - people not in education, employment or training - is more than double that of Germany and France and is still growing. Roughly one in five young people faces a lifetime on government handouts, under-achieving in education and runs the risk of falling into crime, says a report by the London School of Economics for the Prince's Trust charity. The study, entitled The Cost of Exclusion, warns that the problem of "youth exclusion" is draining £3.65 billion a year from the exchequer, enough to fund a 1p cut in income tax. It says the strength of the economy is masking the true cost of having 1.2 million young Neets. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/04/10/nyouth10.xml
  • Gordon Brown is "seriously considering" creating a super-ministry covering energy and the environment, which would pave the way for the potential break-up of the Department of Trade and Industry, according to Whitehall insiders. A blueprint for the radical shake-up of Whitehall is being drawn up as part of the chancellor's planning for his first 100 days as prime minister. Mr Brown, keen to demonstrate he will adopt a more collegiate style as leader, is involving senior officials outside the Treasury - including Gus O'Donnell, the cabinet secretary - in the work on the restructuring. Moving energy from the DTI to the Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs would have political, as well as operational, advantages. It would give David Miliband, the environment secretary, an enhanced role in a Brown cabinet, as well as providing a power base from which to attack the Tories' new emphasis on green issues. http://www.ft.com/cms/s/db97be14-e6d2-11db-9034-000b5df10621.html
  • Services for people with HIV in Britain are crumbling through neglect and complacency in spite of the government's good record on helping developing countries deal with the condition, according to a report released yesterday. Ten years after drugs were made available that will keep people alive, HIV does not have a high priority and funding disappears into the general NHS pot, says the report. Its survey of HIV service providers and commissioners concludes there is no national strategic vision. The report, from a group of charities called the Aids Funders Forum, which includes the Elton John Aids Foundation and Crusaid, says the NHS is not putting in place the right services to deal with the changing face of the condition in the UK, and is failing to focus on keeping people well. There are no government targets on HIV prevention, social care or provision of information, it says, and it has disappeared from the political agenda and public consciousness. http://www.guardian.co.uk/aids/story/0,,2053387,00.html  
  • The loss of lottery funding for arts groups and other good causes in order to pay for the London Olympics is small compared with the overall government funding they receive, Tessa Jowell claims. The culture secretary has come under fire from groups such as the Arts Council, the Heritage Lottery Fund and Sport England for the government's decision to increase the amount of lottery funding for London 2012 to meet the rising cost of the Olympics. The government last month announced an extra £675m would be diverted from lottery funding for the games, taking the total lottery "take" for London 2012 to £2.2bn. In an interview with the Financial Times, Ms Jowell said: "I don't underestimate the anxiety this has caused people." http://www.ft.com/cms/s/6731acce-e6ff-11db-9034-000b5df10621.html
  • More than a million motorists a year face having bailiffs force their way into their homes to collect unpaid parking fines under legislation before MPs. Action could be taken even when the motorist is unaware that a ticket has been issued or that the debt has been pursued through the civil courts. In such cases car owners have faced spiralling costs - including bailiffs' fees - of hundreds of pounds. The Department for Transport's feasibility study into "pay as you drive" includes proposals to use debt collectors to chase unpaid fees. Motoring groups are alarmed at the proposals contained in the Tribunal Courts and Enforcement Bill, which is designed to strengthen the power of bailiffs to collect civil debts. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/04/10/npark10.xml
  • A marked increase in the number of supersize secondary schools has led to an erosion of discipline, as teachers try to keep control of children they cannot identify even by year group, let alone by name, research suggests. Expulsions from the largest secondaries, with 1,500 or more pupils, have risen by 28 per cent since Labour came to power in 1997, leaving 730 pupils a year permanently excluded from school. Temporary exclusions are now running at nearly 10 per cent of pupils in schools with more than 1,000 children, compared with 3 per cent in schools with 1,000 or fewer pupils. http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/education/article1632773.ece
  • Military personnel were banned from selling their stories to the media last night amid increasing pressure over the decision to allow the marines and sailors freed from Iran to be paid for their accounts of captivity. Des Browne, the Secretary of State for Defence, imposed the ban on further media deals pending a full-scale review of rules governing payment - although it did not affect Leading Seaman Faye Turney's ITV1 interview with Sir Trevor McDonald, aired last night. He said the Royal Navy had faced a "tough call" but admitted that the decision to allow the captives to sell their stories had "not reached a satisfactory outcome". http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/politics/article2437297.ece
  • A solicitor whose firm specialises in compensation claims for sick miners made a personal profit of £16.8 million in one year. Jim Beresford is the senior partner in Beresfords, a firm in Doncaster which registered more than 90,000 claims under the Government-run scheme. He is named today as Britain's highest-earning solicitor. Tens of thousands of former miners whose health was damaged by their years of work underground have received awards of less than £1,000. More than 15,000 claimants died before they received any money, yet in 2005, when the scheme was running at its peak, 56-year-old Mr Beresford grew richer at a rate of £45,892 every day. The bulk of his firm's profits were paid by the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) for its work on claims by miners suffering from chronic respiratory disease or a disabling hand condition called vibration white finger (VWF). http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/law/article1633063.ece

Conservatives

Review of the Papers, Thursday 05 April

Government  

  • The National Health Service's £12bn information technology programme yesterday passed one key milestone - but confirmed it had missed another. Connecting for Health is celebrating the installation of digital imaging systems to replace expensive, flammable and easily lost wet X-ray films across all NHS trusts in the south of England and London on time and on budget. But the NHS has missed by a long way a much-revised target to get first out-patient appointments made online through the so-called "choose and book" system. Originally, all 9m or so first out-patient appointments a year were meant to be made through "choose and book" by December 2005. That target has been revised repeatedly: at the end of last week it was for 90 per cent of referrals to be made that way. In practice just 38 per cent went through the system in the last week of March, according to Connecting for Health, with referrals running at an annual rate of about 3.3m. http://www.ft.com/cms/s/4efcea1a-e312-11db-a1c9-000b5df10621.html  
  • Gordon Brown has been accused of making false claims that his flagship scheme to secure private finance for public sector projects provides good value for money. A study by the University of Edinburgh of the Treasury's statements about the success of the private finance initiative (PFI) found that the evidence for the claims to be "either non-existent or false". The attack follows criticism by the Confederation of British Industry that the Treasury minister Ed Balls, a close Brown ally, misrepresented its stance on the Chancellor's 1997 decision to abolish the pension funds' right to reclaim the tax deducted from share dividends. http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/politics/article2422666.ece  
  • A former market trader who went on to become chief executive of Birmingham City Council is expected to be unveiled today as the new chairman of the BBC. News of the likely appointment of Sir Michael Lyons as the replacement for Michael Grade, who is now with ITV, prompted accusations of cronyism from the Conservatives. Sir Michael, who is appointed by the Queen on a recommendation by the Culture Secretary Tessa Jowell, has headed a succession of government finance reviews at the behest of the Chancellor, Gordon Brown. http://news.independent.co.uk/media/article2422641.ece  
  • Reforms to NHS dentistry are failing, the British Dental Association said yesterday as thousands of would-be patients besieged a practice near Portsmouth offering NHS care. In scenes more typical of the January sales, patients arrived at first light at a new practice in Titchfield Common, Hampshire. Before the doors had opened, 2,000 people had registered online and over the phone. Hundreds more arrived in an attempt to grab the 1,000 remaining places. By the time the surgery opened at 10am, the queue stretched around the block. Manori Ambrose, who set up the surgery, said: "There are a lot of people who need a dentist who are not even on the waiting list." The British Dental Association (BDA) wrote to Barry Cockroft, the Chief Dental Officer of England, yesterday and called for changes to the dental contract, which has been in force for a year. http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/health/article1615073.ece  
  • The move to dramatically increase the cost of making telephone calls from hospital beds by 160 per cent will hit the elderly and vulnerable hardest, campaigners said. The announcement that Patientline, the UK's main provider of hospital bedside entertainment and communications, plans to increase its charges from 10p to 26p, comes shortly after guidance from the Department of Health recommended that patients should be widely permitted to use mobile phones on hospital premises. http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article1613242.ece  
  • Hobby clubs have become victims of "heavy-handed" child protection rules, according to a report that has found that many are now closing their doors to young people. Some of the most popular clubs in Britain, which teach adults and children to fly model aeroplanes or climb mountains, routinely tell all under18s that they must be accompanied by a parent if they want to attend. They are also running out of volunteers prepared to coach younger people because of the mountain of checks and paper-work that are now required. The research was conducted by the Manifesto Club, a group that campaigns against red tape, which examined how Britain's 780 model-aircraft clubs were coping with new child protection laws. http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/law/public/article1615081.ece  

Conservatives  

Policy Announcements, Wednesday 04 March

Government  

  • "Talking" CCTV cameras that tell off people dropping litter or committing anti-social behaviour are to be extended to 20 areas across England. They are already used in Middlesbrough where people seen misbehaving can be told to stop via a loudspeaker, controlled by control centre staff. About £500,000 will be spent adding speaker facilities to existing cameras.  
  • MPs should be able to take part in shorter, more topical debates to help make the Commons the "cockpit of the nation", according to Jack Straw. The leader of the Commons also raised the idea of allowing members to use equipment such as personal digital assistants in the chamber to let them keep up with their constituency correspondence.

Review of the Papers, Wednesday 04 April

Government  

  • Gordon Brown was last night under renewed pressure from the Conservatives after Brussels revealed that the chancellor had been forced to back down in a row over Britain's highly politically-charged EU rebate. Brussels said the Treasury had yesterday finally abandoned a 15-month rearguard action against a new deal for financing an expanded EU as the price for securing a Europe-wide agreement to tackle VAT fraud. The new deal will see Britain's rebate - a totemic issue for the Conservatives since it was negotiated by Margaret Thatcher in 1984 - reduced by around £1bn a year over the next six years. Tony Blair signed up to the budget in December 2005 but the Treasury has blocked the implementation of the agreement ever since, in an attempt to boost the size of Britain's rebate. http://business.guardian.co.uk/story/0,,2049567,00.html  
  • Fresh difficulties hit the government's gambling policy yesterday after a High Court judge allowed existing casinos to bring a legal challenge to the creation of Britain's first Las Vegas-style super-casino as well as 16 other new premises. Mr Justice Collins ordered that the judicial review challenge, spearheaded on behalf of existing casinos by the British Casino Association, should be heard as a matter of urgency. That hearing, to last three days, is expected to take place before May 25. The existing casinos claim they are being treated "significantly less favourably" than the 17 proposed new establishments that could be licensed as a result of the 2005 Gambling Act. http://www.ft.com/cms/s/47014a6e-e249-11db-af9e-000b5df10621.html  
  • A £2.4 billion expansion of the railways over the next two years was announced yesterday by Network Rail. The programme will include lengthening hundreds of platforms, increasing speeds on some lines, and new tracks and resignalling schemes. John Armitt, chief executive of Network Rail, said that the programme was a response by the company to the rising demand for rail travel. The £2.44 billion "enhancements" will be carried out from this month to March 2009. Network Rail will fund £1.73 billion of the schemes, with the rest of the money coming from other stakeholders in the railways, including the Department for Transport and local authorities. At £1.2 billion a year, the total is more than double the average annual spending on enhancements. Schemes being worked on over the next two years include projects connected with the 2012 Olympics, on which £109 million will be spent by March 2009. http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article1610077.ece
  • At least 120,000 bright children are effectively going backwards in secondary schools, prompting fresh fears over the way top pupils are taught. One child in five who was doing well in some core subjects at the end of primary school failed to make any further progress in the first three years of secondary education, according to figures obtained by the Conservatives. Many of the top performing pupils at 11 actually did worse by the age of 14. The findings come as the Government issued fresh threats to hundreds of "coasting" schools that they face closure unless standards improve. Local authorities are being told to issue notices to schools that fail to boost pupils' grades warning that they will be turned into privately-sponsored city academies if improvement is too slow. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/04/04/npupils04.xml
  • Gordon Brown stood by his controversial move to scrap tax credits for pension funds yesterday, insisting it had been the best decision for the long-term health of the economy. Speaking for the first time since the row broke, the chancellor attempted to quash growing criticism of the 1997 measure by rejecting opposition claims that it had damaged the pensions of millions of Britons by reintroducing a £5bn tax bill to pensions funds. http://business.guardian.co.uk/story/0,,2049538,00.html  
  • Green-minded householders will be allowed to put up solar panels and wind turbines without applying for planning permission under plans to be announced today by Ruth Kelly. The communities secretary hopes the changes will encourage people to generate their own energy supplies and cut carbon emissions, as well as reducing the number of non-controversial applications that clog up the planning system. At present applications can take months to be processed and cost hundreds of pounds. http://environment.guardian.co.uk/energy/story/0,,2049574,00.html  

Conservatives  

Policy Announcements, Tuesday 03 April

Government  

  • All pregnant women in England will be given the option of a home birth under plans launched by health secretary Patricia Hewitt. Hewitt unveiled Labour's vision for the future of maternity services in England and said that expectant mothers will be guaranteed a "full range of birthing choices" by 2009. She acknowledged a current shortfall in midwives but said 1,000 were in training and would qualify in the next couple of years. And she insisted that the ambitious "gold standard" plans would not be financed by cuts elsewhere in the NHS. Women will also be able to choose how to access maternity care when they first discover they are pregnant, such as going directly to a midwife or a GP.  
  • The FiReControl project has just taken a step forward with the signature of the contract to supply the technology infrastructure.

Review of the Papers, Tuesday 03 April

Government  

  • Labour's campaign launch for May's crucial elections was in danger of being eclipsed last night by the growing controversy over Gordon Brown's pension taxation changes. The Treasury was forced into an embarrassing climbdown yesterday over claims that business leaders at the CBI had supported the 1997 reforms to impose a £5bn a year pensions tax. Ed Balls, one of the chancellor's closest allies, backtracked on his claim as the former head of the CBI said it was "completely untrue" to say the organisation had pushed for the change. http://business.guardian.co.uk/story/0,,2048762,00.html  
  • Hundreds of schools regarded as drifting towards failure or merely "coasting" face intervention from local authorities, which have been told by ministers to be tougher on standards. Earlier action to prevent schools needing special measures or risking closure was ordered by the government last night. Councils must use new powers to crack down on schools that are not getting the best out of all their pupils, failing certain groups such as ethnic minorities, or allowing a wide gender gap to develop in results, ministers said. Formal warning notices are to be issued to schools, which must draw up action plans within 15 days. Councils can also force a school to take an outside partner, be it a better school, local college, business or consultancy, to turn things around. Schools that do not improve may lose their delegated powers over their budgets. http://education.guardian.co.uk/ofsted/story/0,,2048754,00.html  
  • More than half of all cancer patients needing lifesaving radiotherapy are waiting longer than the Government's "maximum acceptable delay" for treatment, according to a damning report. The Times has been told that the paper shows huge variations in the delivery of treatments around the country, with many "black holes" where services are extremely poor. The study, by the National Radiotherapy Advisory Group, has not been published and ministers have not indicated that it will be. But Professor Karol Sikora, a cancer specialist, said that it should provoke "an outcry for better provision". http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/health/article1605142.ece  

Conservatives  

Policy Announcements, Monday 02 April

Government  

  • Tough new powers giving teachers' clear and unequivocal authority to discipline badly behaved pupils become law this week. Designed to combat disruptive, bullying or offensive behaviour, they give teachers a clear statutory right to restrain, detain and remove unruly pupils, confiscate mobile phones that are being used in a malicious or disruptive way and punish pupils for poor behaviour not just in school, but also on the way to and from school.  
  •  Ken Livingstone has called for a 15 pence increase in the London "living wage". London's mayor said workers in the capital should be paid £7.20 an hour, rather than the current rate of £7.05. He noted that almost half of part-time and one in seven full-time workers failed to receive the current living wage, arguing this was "unacceptable". The London living wage is worked out by the Living Wage Unit and provides a weighting for people working in the capital because of expensive housing costs.  
  • A network of experienced regional reps is to be set up to move forward Government plans for an inspiring Cultural Olympiad in the run-up to the 2012 Olympic Games and Paralympic Games, Culture Minister David Lammy announced today. Each of England's eight regions outside London is to have its own 'Creative Programmer' who will: encourage and enable arts and cultural bodies to get involved, and create opportunities for ordinary people to take part; become a dynamic link between the regions and London's 2012 organising committee (LOCOG); assess whether local projects meet the criteria to become part of the Cultural Olympiad; and ensure that each region's heritage is as well represented as its 21st century technology.  
  • Cabinet Office Minister Pat McFadden today announced a new Impact Assessment (IA) process to ensure that all new regulation is necessary and carried out with minimum burdens. This improves on the previous Regulatory Impact Assessment (RIA) with a simpler, more transparent process that will be embedded in the earliest stage of policy making. The new arrangements will begin from mid-May and all IAs will be available from an online database making them easily available for public scrutiny.  
  • Fifteen areas across Britain will be given £32 million in a scheme to give local areas more control over plans to tackle worklessness, Work and Pensions Secretary John Hutton announced today. The 15 areas, which have been chosen as pathfinders in the Cities Strategy, will get direct control of £32 million from the Government's Deprived Areas Fund after devising their own plans and targets to help people get the support they need to find work. They will also have a key role in shaping the delivery of the Government's flagship Pathways to Work programme to help people off incapacity benefit, have access to improved data-sharing, and a greater ability to influence the provision of training opportunities and employment programmes at a local level.  

Conservatives  

Agricultural subsidies

While I was away, I received a copy of this letter from Bob Durward (chairman of the classical liberal New Party) to David Milliband. Bob has allowed me to reproduce it here. I hope it tickles you as much as it tickles me.

To: Rt Hon David Milliband MP
Secretary of State, DEFRA
17 Smith Square
London SW1P 3JR

Dear Secretary of State,

My friend, who is in farming at the moment, received a cheque for £3,000 from the Rural Payments Agency for not rearing pigs. I now want to join the "not rearing pigs" business.

In your opinion, what is the best kind of farm not to rear pigs on, and which is the best breed of pigs not to rear? I want to be sure I approach this endeavour in keeping with all government policies, as dictated by the EU under the Common Agriculture Policy.

I would prefer not to rear bacon pigs, but if this is not the type you want not rearing, I will just as gladly not rear porkers. Are there any advantages in not rearing rare breeds such as Saddlebacks or Gloucester Old Spots, or are there too many people already not rearing these?

As I see it, the hardest part of this programme will be keeping an accurate record of how many pigs I haven't reared. Are there any Government or Local Authority courses on this?

My friend is very satisfied with this business. He has been rearing pigs for forty years or so, and the best he ever made on them was £1,422 in 1968. That is - until this year, when he received a cheque for not rearing any.

If I get £3,000 for not rearing 50 pigs, will I get £6,000 for not rearing 100?

I plan to operate on a small scale at first, holding myself down to about 4,000 pigs not raised, which will mean about £240,000 for the first year. Then I can afford to buy an aeroplane.

Another point: These pigs that I plan not to rear will not eat 2,000 tonnes of cereals. I understand that you also pay farmers for not growing crops. Will I qualify for payments for not growing cereals to not feed the pigs I didn't rear?

I am also considering the "not milking cows" business, so please send any information you have on that too. Please could you also include the Government information on set aside fields? Can this be done on an e-commerce basis with virtual fields?

In view of the above you will realise that I will be totally unemployed, and will qualify for unemployment benefits.

I shall of course vote for you at the next general election.

Yours faithfully,

Comment spam

Back from a fantastic week's skiing, and I find that we are being bombarded with comment spam, mostly from domains in Russia and Turkey. Having only enabled it a couple of weeks ago, I'm going to have turn off anonymous commenting, to get rid of these bastards. It's a piece of cake to register anyway, which is all you have to do to leave a comment. We don't need to know anything about you, we just need to know that you exist, so we can filter out the spammers.

Review of the Papers, Monday 02 April

Government  

  • The row over the government's pensions policy deepened yesterday as business leaders dismissed ministers' claims that they had lobbied for Gordon Brown's controversial tax changes in 1997. Documents released under the Freedom of Information Act late on Friday showed that the chancellor was warned about his plans to remove a key tax benefit enjoyed by pension funds in his first budget. Civil servants warned that the cuts could lead to the closure of many occupational pension schemes. http://business.guardian.co.uk/story/0,,2047974,00.html  
  • Developers siting new buildings close to hazardous industrial installations could be forced to finance some of the extra costs involved in making the plants safer, under government proposals being unveiled today. If implemented, the ideas would for the first time establish the principle of spreading out the costs of reducing the dangers of such sites between their operators and nearby businesses. The proposals could leave developers of projects such as housing estates or warehouses facing bills of several million pounds. Up to now, all the costs of necessary plant improvements have fallen on the operators themselves. Developers could find themselves paying for extra safety measures, such as improved maintenance or more sophisticated instrumentation. About 60 large industrial sites in England, Wales and Scotland, mainly chemical plants and refineries, that are considered especially hazardous would be covered by the new rules. http://www.ft.com/cms/s/21886216-e0b6-11db-8b48-000b5df10621.html  
  • A £16bn merger of two big-spending Ministry of Defence agencies will be finalised today under a plan to improve the UK's poor record in weapons buying. The MoD's procurement arm is being combined with its logistics division, creating a 29,000-strong Bristol-based department that controls 40 per cent of the defence budget. The merger is part of an overhaul of military buying policy as Britain looks to create long-term partnerships with industry to maintain and upgrade warships, helicopters, armoured vehicles and fighter jets - all of which often remain in service for decades. http://www.ft.com/cms/s/927fea8e-e0b6-11db-8b48-000b5df10621.html  
  • The UK has spent £165m on hiring private security companies in Iraq in the past four years - the equivalent to around a quarter of the entire Iraq aid budget, it has emerged. A further £43m has been spent on private guards in Afghanistan since 2004. The security costs, mainly for guards for British staff and facilities, were revealed in a parliamentary answer from the Foreign Office minister Kim Howells. They reflect the huge quantities of money that Britain and the US have had to divert from humanitarian and reconstruction resources to deal with the deteriorating security environment in both countries. In Iraq, a total of £145m has been spent on security guards to protect British assets, with a further £20m going on police training and security advisers to the Iraqi government. Britain's Iraqi aid budget over the same period was £644m. http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,,2048009,00.html  
  • The industrialist responsible for the London 2012 Olympics construction project has rejected claims that the budget will continue to soar over the next five years, and predicted that the final cost will probably be less than the £9.3bn announced by the government. Sir Roy McNulty, acting chairman of the Olympic Delivery Authority (ODA), said the budget, which has trebled since London was awarded the games, was now "realistic". In an interview with the Guardian to mark the project's first year yesterday, he insisted it had been "fast out of the blocks" and hit all the main milestones. Sceptics have warned of possible £15bn costs but Sir Roy said there would be "pressure to deliver value for money throughout the whole exercise" and the Olympics were "in relatively good shape". http://www.guardian.co.uk/olympics2012/story/0,,2048050,00.html  
  • Council tax inspectors have held high-level talks with their overseas counterparts who use an annual system for revaluing properties, according to documents published by the Conservatives yesterday. Annual revaluations would mean that any household would be taxed for any material improvement to their home, said Caroline Spelman, the Tory local government spokesman. The Government has already announced that a revaluation, which would likely result in large council tax rises for homes that have benefited from the boom in property prices, will be delayed until after the election. But detailed information obtained by the Tories indicates that the Valuation Office in England is preparing for a new system of regular revaluations, including using computer programmes and so-called "spy in the sky" technology to value homes, to boost local council revenues in England. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/04/02/nhomes102.xml  
  • An outgoing chief constable launched an attack on the level of police bureaucracy yesterday, as a survey revealed that public confidence in the service is plummeting. Alastair McWhirter, on his last day as chief constable of Suffolk police, said officers were spending half their time in the station, sometimes filling in forms for Government statistics. Mr McWhirter said a "phenomenal" amount of paperwork was required to take someone into custody. Even the file for a simple assault case contained 128 bits of paper and had been handled by about 56 different people before it got to court. Mr McWhirter said bureaucracy in the force was a "necessary evil" but needed a root and branch overhaul. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/04/02/ntape02.xml  

Conservatives  

Policy Announcements, Friday 30 March

Government  

  • The economy and employees needs to be "flexible", Tony Blair is to say in a speech about work. His ideas about "flexi-Britain" include urging employees to adapt quickly to the needs of their bosses to keep the "knowledge economy" moving. In return, employees should benefit from family-friendly hours and workplace rights. Mr Blair will say the government's role should be to encourage skills training while protecting workers' rights. In a speech in Manchester on Friday, he is to say: "The modern world of work is defined by flexibility.

Review of the Papers, Friday 30 March

Government  

  • David Miliband, the Environment Secretary, has secured agreement from the Treasury to double the spending on green farming schemes to improve the landscape and increase the number of rare wild birds. English farmers will be able to apply for a share of £3.9 billion until 2013. The funding will help farmers to switch to organic production and will be used to conserve habitats such as hay meadows. The money has been raised in part by a clawback from farmers of handouts from the Common Agricultural Policy. This means that arable farmers in England will have to pay out 12 per cent of their CAP handouts this year to fund the green schemes, rising to 14 per cent from 2009 until 2013.

Policy Announcements, Thursday 29 March

Government  

  • The Home Office will be split into two separate departments for security and for justice in the next six weeks. The Department for Constitutional Affairs will take control of probation, prisons and prevention of re-offending and be renamed the Ministry of Justice. The slimmed-down Home Office will then be left to concentrate on dealing with terrorism, security and immigration.  
  • The provisional figures published today for carbon dioxide emissions underline the need for swift and decisive action on climate change, Environment Secretary David Miliband said today. The figures do not include the effect of the EU Emissions Trading Scheme (which covers nearly half of UK carbon dioxide emissions) but Mr Miliband said that should not disguise the need for action. Mr Miliband said that, while the 11/4% increase in 2006 was due mainly to unusually high international gas prices leading to a switch to coal in electricity generation, the statistics demonstrated the clear need for continued action by all levels of government, business, and individuals.
  • Public buildings like museums, galleries, government buildings and town halls must get energy ratings - like consumer friendly fridge ratings - and display them to the public from April 2008, the Government said today. Visitors will be able to see the annual carbon emissions of each building. This measure is intended to encourage energy improvements to public buildings, help cut costs to the public purse and lead the way in cutting carbon emissions.
  • New guidance on street design aims to breathe new life into communities by creating safe and sustainable environments for residents, Transport Minister Gillian Merron announced today. Manual for Streets, a joint publication between the Department for Transport and Communities and Local Government, emphasises the importance of residential streets in the creation of places in which people want to live. In particular it aims to reduce the impact of vehicles on residential streets by asking practitioners to plan street design intelligently and proactively, and gives a high priority to the needs of pedestrians, cyclists and users of public transport.
  • The Government today launched a major modernisation of the Building Control system with the publication of a paper detailing its vision for how the system can be improved. 'The Future for Building Control' sets out a package of options that the Government is minded to develop further and invites interested parties to provide suggestions on how reform should proceed. The publication follows detailed discussions with key members of industry on the strengths and weaknesses of the current system, which have highlighted the strong case for reform. The paper recognises a number of important shortcomings with the current system including the lack of a clear future vision for the purpose of Building Control, the current piecemeal approach to regulatory change and the complexity of guidance. Problems with achieving compliance and with effective enforcement are also highlighted as key areas for action.
  • A £3.9 billion budget for the new Rural Development Programme for England 2007 to 2013 has been agreed. This is more than double the budget available for the previous programme which ran from 2000-2006. This programme will implement the European Rural Development Regulation - also known as the Second Pillar of the Common Agricultural Policy. £3.3 billion of the total budget will be allocated to agri-environment and other land management schemes. This funding will help farmers manage the land more sustainably and deliver important environmental outcomes on biodiversity, landscape and access, water quality and climate change. Some £600 million will also be made available to make agriculture and forestry more competitive and sustainable and to enhance opportunity in rural areas.
  • The Office of Government Commerce (OGC) will today announce four new government deals, worth over £1 billion. The deals will allow public sector organisations to make savings on the cost of buying goods and services. The deals include a £1 billion four-year electricity framework led by OGCbuying.solutions, which will provide a portion of electricity from renewable sources; a four-year print services framework led by the Department for Transport to be awarded next week, giving access to suppliers across the UK with the quality, capacity and technical capability to serve public sector customers; and two three-year framework agreements on the supply of tyres and vehicle glass worth £79 million. Led by the NHS Purchasing and Supply Agency (NHS PASA) and the Police Information Technology Organisation (PITO) respectively, these deals are set to save the public sector over £6 million.
  • The government must put "extra effort" into increasing skills in the car industry if it is to avoid further job losses, MPs have warned. A review by the Commons trade and industry select committee, launched after the collapse of MG Rover in 2005, found "mixed prospects" for the future of the automotive industry.

Conservatives  

review of the Papers, Thursday 29 March

Government  

  • Home secretary John Reid has finalised plans to break up the Home Office. It was confirmed last night that Mr Reid had passed his proposals to No 10 amid reports that Tony Blair will give the go ahead for the scheme in a statement today to parliament. Mr Reid has made clear he wants to turn the Home Office into a new ministry of security, while hiving off prisons and probation to a ministry of justice based on the Department for Constitutional Affairs. http://politics.guardian.co.uk/homeaffairs/story/0,,2045266,00.html  
  • Gordon Brown has engineered the biggest cash squeeze on families for a quarter of a century, it has emerged. Soaring taxes have eaten dramatically into households' pockets, causing a deterioration in their disposable incomes. Government figures show that disposable incomes grew last year at the slowest rate since 1982, when unemployment hit three million. Experts said that when the ballooning cost of mortgage payments and utility bills were taken into account, households were likely to have suffered a painful fall in their wealth. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/03/29/nincome29.xml
  • The House of Lords last night threw out controversial plans to site a supercasino in Manchester, despite Tessa Jowell's last-ditch attempt to win back support with a package of concessions. A fatal amendment - passed by three votes - forced the culture secretary's gambling reforms back to the drawing board, rejecting 16 smaller venues as well as the Las Vegas-style casino. The government needed majorities in both houses, rendering its 24-vote victory in a simultaneous Commons division worthless. http://politics.guardian.co.uk/homeaffairs/story/0,,2045198,00.html  
  • The NHS is to get a minimum of 3 per cent real-terms growth a year between 2008 and 2011, Patricia Hewitt, the health secretary has said. Following last week's Budget, and the chancellor's settlement for education in the comprehensive spending review, Ms Hewitt told the Financial Times that the NHS "will continue to grow, and grow faster than the rate of economic growth -generally". Asked if that meant a minimum of 3 per cent, given Treasury forecasts that the economy will grow at 2.75 per, she said in an interview: "That is your deduction, but I am not dissenting from it." http://www.ft.com/cms/s/17353d88-dd92-11db-8d42-000b5df10621.html  
  • NHS bosses charged with delivering the much-delayed £6.2bn IT upgrade to health trusts throughout England have launched a £100m-plus drive for "additional" IT suppliers to meet "immediate business needs". Separately, the Guardian has learned that the Australian group IBA Health is close to abandoning talks over a potential all-share takeover of cash-strapped software supplier iSoft, which is contracted to provide systems for 60% of the NHS's troubled National Programme for IT (NPfIT). http://business.guardian.co.uk/story/0,,2044984,00.html  
  • Margaret Beckett should have been demoted from her job as environment secretary - not promoted to the Foreign Office - because of her role in the fiasco of reforming farming subsidies, an all-party committee of MPs says today. A damning report from the environment, food and rural affairs committee says the introduction of the single payments scheme was a catastrophe which wasted up to half a billion pounds and left many farmers struggling to cope. http://www.guardian.co.uk/country/article/0,,2045189,00.html

Conservatives

Policy Announcements, Wednesday 28 March

Government  

  • The minimum age for a marriage visa is to be raised from 18 to 21, in a bid to combat forced marriages. Spouses or fiances who want to come to the UK from outside the EU may also have to pass an English test first. People who act as guarantors for people on family visit visas could also face fines of £1,000 if they overstay. The proposals are part of efforts to strengthen UK border controls, which will see more people being screened before they enter the UK.   
  • Members of Parliament have voted to give themselves £10,000 each a year to spend on things like websites to boost "public understanding" of Parliament.