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4 Nov 2002 : Column 88Wcontinued
Post Offices
Mr. Webb: To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions (1) what plans he has to inform benefit and tax credit claimants that they will be able to receive their entitlement in cash over the counter at the Post Office after April 2003; [76105]
- (2) what plans he has to publicise the availability of the new Post Office card account. [76106]
Malcolm Wicks: Customers are being supplied with information (including letters and leaflets), which clearly sets out their 'account options'. They can choose the bank or building society account (including the Post Office card account) which best meets their needs and circumstances. All of the Department for Work and Pensions material sets out the key features of the various accounts and mentions the availability of collecting cash from the Post Office, and the Post Office card account.
4 Nov 2002 : Column 89W
The material the Inland Revenue have sent out with new Tax Credit application forms also clearly sets out the various account options, and the fact that people will still be able to collect their money from the Post Office if they wish.
Winter Fuel Payments
Mr. Willetts: To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, pursuant to his answer of 15 October 2002, Official Report, column 643W, on winter fuel payments, on what basis he has estimated the one-off cost of paying backdated winter fuel payments for 199798 to 200102 to British citizens living within the European Economic Area to be less than the future annual cost. [78482]
Mr. McCartney: The one-off costs quoted in my written answer on 15 October 2002, Official Report, column 643W were the administrative costs associated with the implementation of the changes.
The annual cost is the estimated on-going cost of the actual winter fuel payments. Our estimate of the first year cost of such winter fuel payments is around #21 million, which takes account of entitlement for past periods.
Fraud
Mr. Webb: To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions what the average time taken by his Department's Operational Intelligence Unit to respond to requests from local benefit fraud inspectors to requests for data in suspected fraud cases under the terms of the Social Security Fraud Act has been. [74843]
Malcolm Wicks: The information is not held centrally and could be obtained only at disproportionate cost.
Advertising
David Davis: To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions if he will list external (a) public relations/communications companies, (b) advertising and marketing companies, (c) management consultancies, (d) accountancy companies, (e) banking firms, (f) individual consultants and (g) other specialist consultancies used by his Department since June 2001; what actions those consultancies/companies have performed within his Department; and what costs have been incurred through use of these consultancies/companies. [74682]
Mr. Nicholas Brown: The information is not held centrally and could be obtained only at disproportionate cost.
Jobcentre Plus
Mr. Swayne: To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions what steps he is taking to ensure that Jobcentre Plus services are available throughout rural areas. [73983]
4 Nov 2002 : Column 90W
Mr. Nicholas Brown: We understand the difficulties that people living in rural areas can face, both in securing employment and gaining access to our services. We are therefore developing new ways of making Jobcentre Plus services more accessible to such people, for example by:
- providing a single point of access to jobs and benefits
providing access to jobs through call centres, touch screen 'Jobpoints' in a wider range of locations, and the internet
enabling people to make claims for benefit by telephone, and eventually through other channels such as the internet
extending outreach services such as local community surgeries
making services available through mobile units
delivering services from premises shared with our partners in the local community, for example local authorities
The integrated Jobcentre Plus offices which we will be extending throughout Great Britain over the next four years will offer a significantly enhanced telephone service that will improve access to services for those who do not live near a Jobcentre Plus office. Each Jobcentre Plus office will have a dedicated telephone contact centre open from 8.30 am to 6.00 pm. Customers will be able to make their initial claim to benefit through this service and book appointments with Personal Advisers.
Employment Initiatives
Mr. Wray: To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions what plans he has to increase the (a) amount and (b) quality of support for the educational, training and employment scheme employees. [74405]
Mr. Nicholas Brown: The amount and quality of support available to participants on our educational, training and employment programmes is under constant review as part of our continuous improvement agenda. This is led by Jobcentre Plus in partnership with the organisations delivering the programmes. Organisations wishing to compete for our education, training or employment related contracts are asked to set out how they intend delivering the programme, including the amount and quality of support they will offer participants. The providers who win the contracts are then subject to contractual and quality audits by Jobcentre Plus regional contracts managers, district quality management teams and, in some cases, the Adult Learning Inspectorate. These seek to ensure that providers deliver to the standards proposed in their bids and to support continuous improvement in the quality of their provision.
4 Nov 2002 : Column 91W
ENVIRONMENT, FOOD AND RURAL AFFAIRS
Food Import Inspections
Mr Gummer: To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs when she expects harmonised European Union legislation will be in force covering food of non-animal origin. [75921]
Ms Blears: I have been asked to reply.
I am advised by the Food Standards Agency that the European Commission is still preparing its proposal for a regulation on official feed and food controls which will cover, inter alia, harmonised controls for imports of food of non-animal origin. The Commission expects to submit its final proposal to the European Council in late November 2002. It is unlikely, therefore, that the Regulation will be agreed and come into force before 2004.
Recycling
Jeremy Corbyn: To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs if she will list local authorities that are (a) failing to meet Government recycling targets, (b) expected to meet them and (c) exceeding them; and what the estimates are for recycling in England for (i) the current year and (ii) 200304. [71110]
Mr. Meacher [holding Answer 19 July 2002]: Local authority Statutory Performance Standard (Xtargets") for recycling and composting of household waste have been set for the years 200304 and 200506. Local authorities will submit performance data against which these targets will be measured to the Audit Commission in Summer 2004 and audited performance figures will be available towards the end of 2004.
Targets for individual authorities are listed in the publication XGuidance on Municipal Waste Management Strategies" March 2001. Copies of this document were placed within both libraries of the House on 5 March 2001. They are also published on DEFRA's website at http://www.defra.gov.uk/environment/waste/management/guidance/mwms/10.htm.
We will have audited recycling performance figures for 200102 in December 2002 and this should give us an indication of progress to targets. A document setting out individual local authorities' targets and the most recent available data for their household waste recycling rates (200001), set out in ascending order according to their recycling and composting rate for 200001, has been placed in both libraries of the House (Table A).
A further document (Table B) setting out the same information, but also including a column showing the difference between the 200001 rate and the 200304 target, in order to show Xprogress to target", has also been placed in both libraries of the House. Those furthest from their target in percentage points are shown at the top of the table. Note that, since all authorities had to achieve different levels of improvement to reach their target, that table does not allow for exact comparison.
4 Nov 2002 : Column 92W
We set targets in a way which means all authorities would have to improve their performance over their rate in 199899, no matter what their starting point. For that reason, when tracking local authorities' recycling performance, we consider how much the recycling rate has increased, rather than looking simply at the rate.
I have written to the leaders of the local authorities that are listed below about recycling. In these authorities, preliminary performance data for 200102, taken from 200203 Best Value Performance Plans, shows that the authority's recycling rate has decreased, stayed the same, or only increased by 1 per cent. between 199899 and 200102. I have invited the relevant leaders to identify work that is already in hand to meet their 200304 Statutory Performance Standard for recycling and composting of household waste and to consider the need for further action where this is relevant.
Adur District Council
Arun District Council
Aylesbury Vale District Council
Barrow-in-Furness Borough Council
Bassetlaw District Council
Berwick-upon-Tweed Borough Council
Bolton Metropolitan Borough Council
Bournemouth Borough Council
Bradford City Council
Breckland District Council
Brentwood Borough Council
Brighton & Hove Council
Broadland District Council
Broxtowe Borough Council
Cambridge County Council
Cannock Chase District Council
Carlisle City Council
Charnwood Borough Council
Christchurch Borough Council
Copeland Borough Council
Corby Borough Council
Cotswold District Council
Craven District Council
Cumbria County Council
Dartford Borough Council
Derby City Council
Doncaster Metropolitan Borough Council
Dorset County Council
Dover District Council
Easington District Council
East Dorset District Council
East Northamptonshire District Council
East Staffordshire Borough Council
Eastbourne Borough Council
Ellesmere Port & Neston Borough Council
Elmbridge Borough Council
Exeter City Council
Fareham Borough Council
Forest of Dean District Council
Fylde Borough Council
Gateshead Metropolitan Borough Council
Gloucester City Council
Gosport Borough Council
Gravesham Borough Council
Hampshire County Council
Harrogate Borough Council
4 Nov 2002 : Column 93W
Hertsmere Borough Council
Horsham District Council
Hyndburn Borough Council
Kettering Borough Council
Kingston upon Hull City Council
Lancaster City Council
Lincoln City Council
Liverpool City Council
London Borough of Barking & Dagenham
London Borough of Barnet
London Borough of Bexley
Longon Borough of Croydon
London Borough of Ealing
London Borough of Enfield
London Borough of Hammersmith & Fulham
London Borough of Haringey
London Borough of Newham
London Borough of Redbridge
London Borough of Richmond upon Thames
London Borough of Southwark
London Borough of Tower Hamlets
Macclesfield Borough Council
Manchester City Council
Mansfield District Council
Medway Council
Mendip District Council
Mid Suffolk District Council
Mid Sussex District Council
Milton Keynes Council
Newark & Sherwood District Council
Newcastle upon Tyne City Council
Newcastle-under-Lyme Borough Council
North Cornwall District Council
North Dorset District Council
North Kesteven District Council
North Norfolk District Council
North Shropshire District Council
North Tyneside Council
North Warwickshire Borough Council
North West Leicestershire District Council
Northampton Borough Council
Northumberland County Council
Nottingham City Council
Nuneaton & Bedworth Borough Council
Oadby & Wigston Borough Council
Oswestry Borough Council
Poole Borough Council
Purbeck District Council
Reigate & Banstead Borough Council
Rochdale Metropolitan Borough Council
Rossendale Borough Council
Rotherham Metropolitan Borough Council
Royal Borough of Kensington & Chelsea
Runnymede Borough Council
Rushmoor Borough Council
Rydale District Council
Sedgemoor District Council
Sefton Metropolitan Borough Council
Sheffield City Council
Shepway District Council
Shrewsbury & Atcham Borough Council
Shropshire County Council
Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council
4 Nov 2002 : Column 94W
South Bedfordshire District Council
South Kesteven District Council
South Lakeland District Council
South Oxfordshire District Council
South Somerset District Council
South Staffordshire Council
St Albans City and District Council
Stevenage Borough Council
Stockport Metropolitan Borough Council
Stockton-on-Tees Council
Stoke-on-Trent City Council
Sunderland City Council
Swindon Borough Council
Tandridge District Council
Taunton Deane Borough Council
Teesdale District Council
Thanet District Council
Three Rivers District Council
Tewkesbury Borough Council
Tynedale District Council
Warwick District Council
Warwickshire County Council
Watford Council
Waveney District Council
Waverley Borough Council
West Berkshire Council
West Devon Borough Council
West Lancashire District Council
Western Riverside Waste Authority
Wirral Metropolitan Borough Council
Worcester City Council
Worthing Borough Council. bjclynne/mickm
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