HSE: Shutting the stable Door - The Health & Safety Executive has issued precautionary advice to operators of fuel storage sites following the publication of a progress report by the Buncefield Major Incident Investigation Board on the joint investigation by HSE and the Environment Agency.
HSE has requested that operators with consent to store quantities of oil or other fuels that make them subject to the Control of Major Accident Hazards (COMAH) Regulations 1999, review their operations in the light of information obtained from the investigation to date and report the outcomes of those reviews to HSE by Easter 2006. HSE inspectors will also be carrying out targeted inspections at those sites over the next three months.
HSE's precautionary advice takes the form of a safety alert issued to all COMAH operators and industry groups:
Press release ~ HSE – Chemical industries website ~ HSE – COMAH website ~ Buncefield Investigation website ~ Interim Report ~ UKPIA ~ CIA ~ BCDTA trade association ~ Chemical and Downstream Oil Industry Forum (CDOIF) ~ Environment Agency
ODPM: Is it my imagination or is it getting warmer? - Housing and Planning Minister Yvette Cooper has announced that the Government has tightened the time for the building industry to comply with new climate change regulations. Transitional arrangements have been cut from the usual maximum of three years to just 12 months to speed up take up of the regulations to maximise their impact on climate change.
All new buildings without full building plans approved by 6 April must comply with the new Part L building regulations from
The revisions to Part L to be implemented in April 2006 will set maximum carbon dioxide emissions for whole buildings. This performance-based approach will offer designers the flexibility to choose solutions that best meet their needs, and that are cost-effective and practical. However, the revisions to Part L will raise performance standards to a level that will provide a strong incentive to designers to consider Low and Zero Carbon systems.
Press release ~ Part L building regulations ~ Energy Performance of Buildings Directive ~ Achieving the 40% House scenario ~ Environmental Change Institute ~ Carbon Trust
English Nature: I thought I saw something moving - A free guide to the mammals that you can find in your garden has been published by English Nature. Produced with The Mammal Society and Mammals Trust UK, the guide, illustrated with stunning photographs, has tips on attracting more mammals to your garden and deterring less welcome visitors.
The guide shows how to live alongside the mammals and the benefits they can bring. For example, moles can be good for your garden by eating harmful insect larvae like leatherjackets and helping to drain & aerate heavy soils. Hedgehogs are also very useful to have around as they consume large quantities of snails and slugs.
Mammals in your garden and 10 other leaflets about gardening with wildlife in mind are available free.
Press release ~ Mammals in your garden ~ Other leaflets in ‘Nature in your Garden’ series ~ The Mammal Society ~ Mammals Trust UK ~ Environment Agency - Mammals ~ UK Mammals - winners and losers? ~ A report to Peoples’s Trust for Endangered Species Mammals Trust UK ~ The Mammal Monitoring Project
Home Office: Back on the Beat - As part of the roll out of neighbourhood policing to all areas of the country, the Home Office has worked with an Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO) Neighbourhood Policing Team to establish 43 Basic Command Units (BCUs) one for each force in England and Wales.
Each of these BCUs is supposed to implement & champion neighbourhood policing and provide advice on the best way of adapting neighbourhood policing for their force. The Government expects half the country to have neighbourhood policing by 2007, with full implementation by 2008.
The Home Office has also:
· announced the findings of a research report into National Reassurance Policing Pilots (NRPP) and
· published a literature review of community engagement in policing.
Press release ~ Evaluation report on National Reassurance Policing Pilots ~ Literature review of community engagement in policing - Community Engagement in Policing ~ Reassurance Policing ~ Neighbourhood Policing - your Police; your community; our commitment ~ Home office police reform website ~ Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO) ~ National Reassurance Policing Pilots (NRPP)
Industry News: Clear signals ahead for a sustainable Railway system - Sustainable development, the idea of linking economic growth, social inclusion and protection of the environment to benefit both present and future generations is increasingly one of the biggest ideas around.
However we have a major problem as, over the past 50 years the capacity of our overall transport system has not increased at anything like the pace needed to keep up with the increased mileage (the average person in 1950 travelled less than 3,000 miles per year, while today it is, excluding international air, nearly 7,000).
Despite the sustainable advantages of rail it only has some 6%-7% of the passenger (but this is four times larger in
But there is a deeper reality in that the car is seen to have liberated us. However, the reality is that this is a liberation that has increasingly proved to be illusory. The only way our major cities can be made to work sustainably is by having adequate rail systems, both heavy & light and, of course, underground where appropriate.
There is a strong environmental case for rail - Short-haul aircraft can emit up to ten times more carbon dioxide emission than high-speed trains per passenger carried.
There is a challenge to reduce infrastructure costs but all the signs are pointing downwards. To a significant extent the high cost levels are a consequence of the roller-coaster ride of the industry since privatisation. If we can settle down to a long-term plan with the aim of getting more out of our railways the industry will be in an even better position to play an increasingly important role in
Full article ~ Railway Forum ~ The Association of Train Operating Companies ~ The Railway Industry Association ~ Network Rail ~ Passenger Transport Executives ~ Transport for London ~ DfT – Road Transport and congestion data ~ Rail transport: The sustainable alternative for air travel in Europe ~ Energy Efficiency Technologies for Railways
Forthcoming Event: Leading the drive for success - The National School of Government is hosting the Efficiency and Performance Improvement Conference 2006 on Tuesday 28th and
Keynote Speeches include:
· Mobilising Public Leadership in the Drive for Success
· What do we mean by Success?
· The Sunningdale Institute – how can we help?
· Developing Professional Skills
· Turning Policy into Delivery
· Efficiencies through Modernisation – Driving Cultural Change through Organisations
· Emerging Directions in Healthcare Improvement
· Leading the drive for success
· From Strategy to Delivery
Parallel Sessions/Workshops will support the keynote speeches. These sessions will be conducted by either practitioners or those with a special knowledge of the tools, techniques and tactics that really work.
Full details ~ National School of Government ~ Sunningdale Institute ~ Government Skills (the SSC for Central Government) ~ NHS Institute for Innovation and Improvement ~ Prime Minister’s Delivery Unit ~ Home Office Police Standards Unit ~ European Centre for Business Excellence ~ Gershon’s review of Public Sector Efficiencey ~ Delivery & Reform Group ~ Four ‘Ps’ ~ The relationship between central delivery toolkits ~ Other events
DH: Chief Medical Officer Sir Liam
Donaldson, John Broughton, Assistant Chief Constable, Essex Police and Sandra
Caldwell, Director of Field Operations at the HSE, have launched a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to
help ensure that investigations into serious patient safety incidents are
conducted in a consistent & well-coordinated manner that leads to effective
learning.
The protocol forms part of the guidance promised to
the NHS by the Chief Medical Officer in his report Building a Safer NHS for Patients
(2001) and will take effect in circumstances of unexpected death or serious untoward
harm, involving NHS patients being treated in either NHS or independent
sector hospitals, requiring investigation by the police, HSE or the police and
the HSE jointly.
Press release ~ Memorandum of understanding: Investigating
patient safety incidents involving unexpected death or serious untoward
harm ~ Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO) ~ HSE
Health Services website ~ Building a Safer NHS for Patients
~ Seven steps to patient safety ~ Patient Safety Research Portfolio ~ Wristbands -
simple technolgy for safer practice
Big Lottery Fund: Children’s happiness and healthy
development is at the centre of a £15 million partnership between the Big Lottery Fund and the Children’s Play Council (CPC). The grant is the first to be
awarded through the Lottery good cause fund’s £155 million Children’s Play
initiative, which is focused on improving and developing play opportunities for
children in all areas of
The CPC,
part of the National Children’s
Bureau, has been awarded the grant to deliver the Play England Project, a major five-year development, to
help local agencies in planning for play across their area by setting up a
national support and development infrastructure across the
regions.
The Big Lottery Fund has already announced
allocations totalling £124 million for local authorities in
Press release ~ BLF – Children’s Play ~ Children’s Play Council ~ Q&As ~ National Children’s
Bureau
Scottish
Executive: All Scottish schoolchildren are to have
an individual identity number as part of a new child protection strategy. The unique pupil ID numbers, known as
Scottish Candidate Number (SCN), are
intended to allow pupil records containing key information to be quickly shared
between schools and councils.
Numbers will
be available to issue to all new pupils
starting primary one or entering into the Scottish education system from the summer of
this year.
One ‘beneficiary’ will be the Children Missing Education project,
launched last year to help find children who have disappeared from the
education system, which has already traced 114 children referred to them by
councils.
Press release ~ Scottish Candidate
Number (SCN) (current use) ~ Safe and well: Good practice in schools and education authorities
for keeping children safe and well ~ DfES Information sharing Index
Countryside
Agency: The Natural England partnership of the Countryside Agency, English
Nature and Rural Development Service, were asked by Defra to undertake
fact-finding work on the current coastal situation and the types of access that
would be most useful for the public and beneficial to wildlife & the
coastal landscape. Initial
studies took place in 2005 near
The Natural England partners have now selected four
further study areas to cover coastline areas with good or poor access
provision, different levels of tourism and proximity to large population
areas
Work
will take place along the Suffolk Coast, Southern Cumbrian Coast and
Morecambe Bay, County Durham and Hartlepool Coast and North
Devon, Exmoor and West Somerset Coast during March and April this
year and the Countryside
Agency will report to Defra on the outcome of this work in May, in preparation for the launch of a public
consultation in October
2006.
Press release ~ Countryside Access – Coasts section ~ Countryside
Agency ~ Natural England ~ ‘Access to
the English Coast’ project ~ ICZMap
project
DH:
Health
Minister Rosie Winterton has announced that eight 'pioneer' health
communities have been chosen to help the NHS deliver a maximum wait
of 18 weeks from GP referral to treatment. The eight will become test-beds for innovative new ways to
speed up access to care and show the rest of the NHS how to make long waiting
times history.
According to the government, it will require a
transformation of the way that waiting times are measured and for the first
time will include the 'hidden waits' for
diagnostics.
Press
release ~ Picture Archiving and Communications System
(PACS) ~ National
Programme for IT in the NHS ~ DH – Waiting times ~ Diagnostic waits
ODPM: Ten schemes
from 15 local authorities have been awarded £126 million over three years in a
new Government programme intended to boost the economies of some of the most
deprived areas in
·
increase
entrepreneurial activity in the local population
·
support
the growth & reduce the failure rate of locally-owned
businesses
·
attract
appropriate inward investment & franchising
·
making
use of local labour resources
Press
release ~
LEGI
website ~ Local Authority Business
Growth Incentives (LABGI) scheme ~ Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) UK
report
Defra: New
proposals to reduce red tape while continuing to protect human health & the
environment have been published by Defra, the Welsh Assembly Government and the
Env. Agency. The consultation
(closes
Defra estimates that a single streamlined permitting
system will yield administrative savings of approximately £70m over 10 years
for industry & regulators, with potential for additional economic
benefits. Defra also claims that
this new approach will also create the potential to simplify other permitting
systems in the future.
Press release ~ Environmental Permitting
Programme ~ Consultation documents ~ Defra's Five Year Strategy - Delivering the Essentials of Life ~ Simplification Plan - Lifting the Burden ~
WAG: The
Welsh Assembly Government has published for consultation (closes
In May 2002 the European Union adopted
a Recommendation on Integrated Coastal Zone Management and this requires Member
States to develop ICZM strategies by 2006.
Press
release ~ Consultation
documents ~ Carmarthen Bay and
Estuaries ~
Wales – Integrated coastal zone
management ~ Wales - Coastal and Maritime Partnership ~
Defra - Integrated coastal zone management ~ EU - Integrated coastal zone management ~ A review of worldwide
practice
DCMS: An Independent Review of European
Football that will examine the way the game is run and make recommendations to
improve its governance has been launched in
The review has a dedicated
website where fans and football organisations will be able to
contribute to the review (by
Press release ~ Nice Declaration on the Specific Characteristics of
Sport
Ofwat: Ofwat is consulting (closes
In the consultation Ofwat sets out its thinking on
sustainable development including:
·
An initial
interpretation of what sustainable development means to
Ofwat
·
How Ofwat believes it
can contribute to sustainable development
·
What Ofwat thinks will
be the key issues for the 2009 price review and beyond
The response to the consultation will be considered
by the Water Services Regulation
Authority, which succeeds the Director General as the industry's
economic regulator on
Press release ~ Contributing to sustainable development - a consultation on
Ofwat's approach
HM
Treasury: The Gowers Review of Intellectual Property issued a ‘call for evidence’ (by
The ‘call for evidence’ consists of a letter from
Andrew Gowers, with an accompanying paper that provides details of the scope of
the Review and sets out a number of general & specific issues on which the
Review would particularly like to gather evidence. It also invites respondents
to highlight other issues for consideration.
Press release ~ Gowers Review of
Intellectual Property ~ Intellectual Property website ~ IP Crime Strategy document ~ International
Intellectual Property Institute (IIPI) ~ British library Business
and IP Centre ~ Creative Industries website
DH: NHS and social care organisations are
being given guidance in helping millions of people with long term conditions
manage their health better and stay out of hospital in a new guide - Supporting people with long term conditions
to self-care.
Defra: UK expertise & backing is making it
possible is protect wildlife & habitats and support communities from Latvia
to Las Perlas, according to the annual report of the Darwin Initiative, which aims to help
countries that are rich in biodiversity, but have limited financial resources
to conserve their wildlife and use it sustainably.
Projects investigating mass flamingo death in
Press release ~ The Darwin Initiative ~ Eighth
Annual Report ~ Convention on
Biological Diversity ~ Eighth Conference of the Parties to the Convention on Biological
Diversity
ONS: ‘Ethnicity’ is highlighted in the new
edition of Social Trends published
by the Office for National Statistics. It shows that the experiences of
This
year's feature report is on the ethnic
& religious diversity of the
Press
release ~
National Statistics – Social
& Welfare website ~ Ethnicity
website ~ Social Trends
36
ODPM: The
Government is claiming that its reforming measures, included in the Housing Act
2004, has entered the next phase with the laying of seven Statutory Instruments
in Parliament. Measures that will
come into force in April 2006 include those that are intended to: bring
long-term empty homes back into use, improve landlord management of their
properties through licensing and increase the health & safety of dwellings
Further measures under the Housing Act to safeguard
tenants' deposits are scheduled to come into force in October.
Press
release ~ Housing Act 2004 ~ Commencement dates for provisions of
Act
HMRC: Responding
to recent European Court of Justice decisions in the linked cases of
"The Government welcomes these decisions, in which the
Press release ~
HMRC ~ Background article ~ European Court of
Justice Judgement
Defra / CA: The
The Natural
England partnership welcomes the Government’s decision to sign the Convention
as it provides a basis for recognising the importance of landscapes and sharing
experience across
The
Defra press release ~ Countryside Agency press release ~
European
Landscape Convention (ELC) ~
CC: In the past it's been difficult to get a quick
& easy picture of what difference charities are actually making. That's
all set to change with the launch of an on-line database from the Charity
Commission. The SIR (Summary Information Return)
database will hold details of all the biggest charities' achievements
and lets them tell their story to everyone, whether potential
volunteers, donors or committed givers.
There are
currently over 700 SIRs in the database, but this will grown to over three and
a half thousand as the deadline for charities sending their returns into the
Charity Commission arrives. All
charities with an income of over £1 million must now send in an annual
SIR.
HMRC: The Government says that it will
introduce legislation in the Finance Bill 2006 to amend the
As part of this, measures will be introduced to
deny loss relief where there are arrangements which
either:
·
result in losses
becoming unrelievable outside the
·
give rise to
unrelievable losses which would not have arisen but for the availability of
relief in the
The proposed legislation will be effective
from
Press release ~ Changes to Company Tax Loss Relief Following European Court of
Justice (ECJ) Judgment ~ Press article ~ Advocate General’s Opinion in Case 446/03
HMRC Employers, payroll
agents and accountants in
EmployerTalk offers everyone involved in payroll the chance to talk in confidence
face-to-face with HMRC experts and to hear about the latest news and
developments on a range of technical and legislative topics. Small employers can hear about the £250
incentive on offer if they file this year's Employer PAYE returns
online.
WGPlus would like to make it
clear that the commentary & links provided, in
respect of any particular item, are published in its capacity as an
independent non-government funded organisation and reflect the editorial
team’s need to both précis & re‑format the content of news
releases.
Any views
expressed are therefore entirely those of the WGPlus
editorial team and independent of any sponsor, government organisation or
political party.
For the
official view of a source organisation, readers should click
on the ‘press release’ that is the first link attached to each
item.
While every care is
taken to ensure that all links ’work’ in the newsletter (including checking
just before publication), WGPlus cannot guarantee that websites will not make changes that
will nullify individual links, especially over a period of
time.