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13 Mar 2008 : Column 595W—continued

Analysis of budget breakdown 11 MILLION 2007 to 2009
£
2007-08 budget 2008-09 draft budget

Projects

2,432,345

2,183,402

Office and administration costs

238,696

252,396

Premises including rent

270,283

271,438

Depreciation and cost of capital

377,052

360,848

Total budget

3,318,378

3,068,084



13 Mar 2008 : Column 596W

Departmental Official Cars

Mr. Kemp: To ask the Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families what make and model of car (a) he and (b) each Minister in his Department selected as their official ministerial car; and what criteria were applied when making the decision in each case. [192439]

Kevin Brennan: I refer the hon. Member to the answer given on 10 March 2008, Official Report, column 8W, by my hon. Friend, the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for the Department for Transport.

Departmental Plants

Mr. Hoban: To ask the Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families how much his Department and its predecessor spent on pot plants in each of the last five years. [192051]

Kevin Brennan: The Department for Children, Schools and Families and its predecessor spending on pot plants for its headquarters buildings including maintenance and rental over the last five years is broken down as follows:

£000

2003-04

40.5

2004-05

36.6

2005-06

53.7

2006-07

42.6

2007-08

78.3


Disadvantaged: Crime

Ms Buck: To ask the Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families what analysis his Department has made of the Institute of Education research indicating a correlation between educational inequality and crime; and if he will make a statement. [193056]

Kevin Brennan: This research was conducted by the DCSF-funded Centre for Research on the Wider Benefits of Learning (WBL), based at the Institute of Education. It is part of a body of research we have supported over the last eight years focusing on the impact of education, and its distribution, on societal well-being and social cohesion.

Addressing the distribution of social outcomes created by lack of opportunity has been, and remains, a key objective for Government. The Children’s Plan, recently published by the Department, restates the need to close the gap in educational achievement for children from disadvantaged families, alongside achieving world class standards. As an outcome of last year’s comprehensive spending review, Government have announced a Public Sector Agreement to

(PSA 11). This PSA has stretching performance indicators associated with closing the gaps at each age stage of learning. By closing the gap in educational attainment we expect not only to deliver more fairness in opportunity to individuals, but to benefit the quality of society too, measured by indicators such as the incidence of crime.


13 Mar 2008 : Column 597W

Information Officers

Mr. Laws: To ask the Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families how many people worked in his Department’s press office and those of its predecessor departments in each year since 2004-05. [176819]

Kevin Brennan: The Department for Children, Schools and Families was established in June 2007 and employs the full time equivalent of 20 press officers.

Pupil Exclusions

Michael Gove: To ask the Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families (1) how many pupils with behavioural, emotional and social difficulties have received a fixed period exclusion in the last 12 months; [192623]

(2) how many and what proportion of those secondary school pupils who received a fixed period exclusion in the last 12 months were eligible for free school meals. [192628]

Kevin Brennan: The requested information could be provided only at disproportionate costs.

Pupils: Hearing Impaired

Michael Gove: To ask the Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families how many hearing impaired pupils are taught in (a) mainstream and (b) special maintained schools. [193378]

Kevin Brennan: Information from the School Census shows that, in January 2007 in England, there were 6,570 hearing impaired pupils in maintained primary schools, 5,670 such pupils in maintained secondary schools and 1,610 such pupils in all special schools. These figures refer to those who have hearing impairment as primary need and cover those at School Action Plus and with SEN statements. They exclude general hospital schools and dually registered pupils.

Sexual Harassment

Mr. Hoban: To ask the Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families how many complaints of (a) sexual harassment and (b) sexual discrimination have been made by staff in (i) his Department and (ii) its agencies in the most recent year for which figures are available. [184691]

Kevin Brennan: No complaints of sexual harassment or sexual discrimination were made by staff in my Department during 2007.

The Department does not have any Executive agencies.

Sure Start Programme: Lancashire

Rosie Cooper: To ask the Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families how many children received services from Sure Start in West Lancashire constituency in each year since the programme’s inception. [193951]

Beverley Hughes: There are five Sure Start Children’s Centres up and running in West Lancashire offering services to 2,818 children under five and their families. We do not collect data centrally on the number of children accessing Sure Start services each year.


13 Mar 2008 : Column 598W

Vocational Education

Mr. Laws: To ask the Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families what estimate he has made of the comparative returns to the economy of (a) uncertified employer purchased training and (b) low level vocational qualification bearing education and training; and if he will make a statement. [174261]

Bill Rammell: I have been asked to reply.

There is insufficient data on uncertified employer purchased training, and its link to wages, employment and productivity, to allow such a comparison to be carried out. From our research on NVQ level 2 qualifications however, we do know that vocational qualifications can provide higher returns when they are delivered through the workplace, particularly for men(1).

The Department will continue to monitor the returns to education and training, both through commissioned research and through internal analysis of data. It is vital that we gain as full an understanding as possible of the returns to training and qualifications. This will enable us to make sure that the qualifications we deliver in future provide economically valuable skills for individuals, employers and the economy as a whole, and help us to achieve the ambitions for a high-skilled work force set out in the Leitch report on skills.

Youth Services: Enfield

Joan Ryan: To ask the Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families how much funding his Department provided to Enfield Council for youth services in each of the last 10 years; and what the real terms change was from each year to the next. [190258]

Beverley Hughes: The Government do not set a budget for spending on youth services. Local authorities decide what should be spent, taking into account Government policy and local needs. The following table shows how much Enfield has decided to allocate in the last nine years, in both cash and real terms. Data is not available from before 1999-2000.

Budgeted net expenditure by Enfield on youth service s
£
Cash terms Real terms

1999-2000

999,000

1,188,394

2000-01

986,108

1,156,589

2001-02

1,052,333

1,205,408

2002-03

1,121,647

1,245,818

2003-04

1,355,382

1,463,032

2004-05

1,440,161

1,512,774

2005-06

1,518,136

1,561,692

2006-07

1,648,564

1,648,564

2007-08

2,023,600

1,959,903

Notes:
1. Cash terms figures are converted to real terms (2006-07 prices) using the December 2007 gross domestic product (GDP) deflators.
2. 2007-08 data remains provisional and subject to change by the local authority.

13 Mar 2008 : Column 599W

Youth Services: Tamworth

Mr. Jenkins: To ask the Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families how much funding his Department provided to Tamworth Borough Council for youth services in each of the last 10 years; and what the real terms change was each year. [193618]

Kevin Brennan: Children’s Services funding is distributed to local (education) authorities and as such we are unable to provide any figures specifically for Tamworth borough council. The figures provided in this answer are for the whole of Staffordshire local authority (of which Tamworth is a subsection).

The Department do not provide any funding to local authorities which is specifically ring fenced to be spent on Youth Services. It is left up to the individual local authorities to decide locally how much of their overall funding they want to allocate for youth services based on their own individual local needs and circumstances, and as such, included in the following table is how much Staffordshire local authority has spent on its youth services in the last eight years (1999-2000 to 2006-07). We do not have comparable figures prior to the introduction of section 52 for the 1999-2000 financial year.

Net current expenditure by Staffordshire local authority on youth services for 1999-2000 to 2006-07
Cash terms Real terms (2006-07 prices)
£ Percentage change from previous year £ Percentage change from previous year

1999-2000

5,198,224

n/a

6,183,724

n/a

2000-01

5,426,754

4.4

6,364,947

2.9

2001-02

5,619,168

3.5

6,436,545

1.1

2002-03

5,330,832

(5.1)

5,920,975

(8.0)

2003-04

5,731,777

7.5

6,187,018

4.5

2004-05

6,147,428

7.3

6,457,382

4.4

2005-06

6,587,558

7.2

6,776,556

4.9

2006-07

7,802,989

18.5

7,802,989

15.1

n/a = Figures not available.
Notes:
1. Financial data are drawn from local authorities Section 52 Outturn Statements submitted to the DCSF (formally DFES). 2002-03 saw a break in the time series following the introduction of Consistent Financial Reporting (CFR) to schools and the associated restructuring of the outturn tables. The change in sources is shown by the blank row. Comparable figures are not available prior to the introduction of section 52 for the 1999-2000 financial year.
2. 2006-07 data are subject to change by the local authority.
3. Cash terms figures are converted to real terms (2006-07 prices) using the December 2007 Gross Domestic Product (GDP) deflators.
4. Figures as reported by Staffordshire local authority as at 10 March 2008.

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