Category: Press Releases

  • PRESS RELEASE : Mike Nesbitt backs Police concerns on cost of living crisis [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Mike Nesbitt backs Police concerns on cost of living crisis [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Ulster Unionist Party on 16 January 2023.

    Mike Nesbitt MLA, the Ulster Unionist representative on the Policing Board of Northern Ireland, has endorsed the special edition of the Police Federation magazine, Police Beat. The magazine highlights the impact on serving officers of the cost of living crisis.

    Mike Nesbitt said:

    “This is a stark illustration of the human cost of the current financial crisis on the people we rely on to keep society safe. Probationary officers are leaving at one end. Senior, experienced officers are moving on at the other end, and in between, officers at all grades are feeling under-valued. The overall impact is fast approaching a crisis similar to that happening in the NHS, except police officers cannot take the same industrial action as nurses to bring a focus to their plight.

    “I noted some months ago the head of the Prison Service said he was recruiting prison officers without the budget to fund their salaries, because he could not keep prisons safe without the additional headcount. I further note he said he was doing so with the approval of the then Minister for Justice. Unfortunately, there has been no such support for the PSNI.

    “Millions are being lost in training probationary officers who do not stay the distance because they discover they cannot support their families as they thought they could as a police officer. Meanwhile, expertise is being lost as officers move on too early. We know it takes years, maybe decades, to replace what has been lost. You may recreate the numbers quite quickly, but rebuilding that level of experience takes a very long time.

    “It does no one justice to see a police officer take a second job to make ends meet. In fact, I find that appalling, as would my late father or grandfather. We are supposed to be a first world country. There is a real issue with regard to the disrespect we show our public servants whose calling is to professions such as policing and nursing, which results in a clear and deeply negative impact on the public they desire to serve. That is why I believe we need the Assembly back now.”

  • PRESS RELEASE : Health crisis will continue to deepen without political leadership – Alan Chambers [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Health crisis will continue to deepen without political leadership – Alan Chambers [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Ulster Unionist Party on 6 January 2023.

    Ulster Unionist Health Spokesperson Alan Chambers MLA has warned that the longer it takes for a Northern Ireland Executive to be re-established the more serious and dangerous the crisis in the health service will become.

    Alan Chambers said:

    “It is absolute madness that we are in the midst of the most difficult winter pressures ever to face the local health service and instead of a having an Executive in place overseeing the response and taking the actions necessary to see us through it, the system and the staff that work within it are being betrayed in the worst possible manner.

    “The crisis facing our health service, both in scheduled and unscheduled care, is now costing lives. Thanks to the efforts of Robin Swann we have record numbers of staff in training and the short-term and longer-term plans in place, but now the health system is being denied the leadership it so desperately needs to effectively implement those plans.

    “Of course the current problems are not unique to Northern Ireland, but the sheer breadth and scale of the pressures are. At least in Westminster, even with the current Government’s many failings, there are a team of Ministers in place trying to take charge of the situation. The Prime Minister only this week laid out his commitment to try and turn things around in the health service in England. Yet in Northern Ireland the only thing we can be sure of is that the longer the re-establishment of the Executive is blocked the worse things are going to get.

    “I challenge those MLAs and the Party responsible to imagine spending one night in an Emergency Department, to watch staff and listen to the real distress from patients, and then try to state that what they are doing is still the best way forward for the people of Northern Ireland. It’s not and they know it.

    “Instead with each week that passes sadly more and more patients are coming to real harm and yet we have one political party that doesn’t seem to care. It is abhorrent!”

  • PRESS RELEASE : Science curriculum in schools improving despite pandemic pressures [February 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Science curriculum in schools improving despite pandemic pressures [February 2023]

    The press release issued by Ofsted on 2 February 2023.

    Ofsted has today published the first in a new series of reports looking at how subjects are taught in England’s schools.

    Today’s report looks at science education and draws on evidence from a sample of primary and secondary schools, gathered as part of routine inspections.

    Inspectors found that science curriculums are improving and developing despite the lingering challenges of the pandemic. The science curriculum taught to pupils, including those with special educational needs and/or disabilities (SEND), is generally at least as ambitious as the national curriculum aims. This is a significant strength in science education in England’s schools.

    However, the report notes areas where improvements still need to be made. In secondary schools, inspectors found that pupils sometimes lacked opportunities to take part in high-quality practical work. In contrast, there was a greater emphasis on practical work in primary schools, but not necessarily work that had a clear purpose in relation to the curriculum. In a small number of schools visited, pupils were not retaining the science knowledge they had learned.

    Ofsted Chief Inspector, Amanda Spielman, said:

    A good science education can open the door to some of the most interesting and socially valuable pathways in life. So I’m encouraged to see the progress that has been made in science teaching, despite the pressures brought by the pandemic.

    I hope that this review helps subject leaders and teachers to construct a challenging science curriculum with relevant and useful practical work.

    The report makes a series of recommendations for how schools and other organisations can make sure that all pupils leave school with an authentic understanding of science, including:

    • developing a curriculum which identifies and sequences the knowledge pupils need, especially to work scientifically
    • providing all pupils with opportunities to take part in high-quality practical work that has a clear purpose in relation to the curriculum
    • building enough time into the curriculum for pupils to learn and remember key knowledge
    • initial teacher education providers supporting trainee teachers to develop their knowledge of what science is and the methods it uses, and how to teach this

    All inspections were carried out between September 2021 and July 2022.

  • PRESS RELEASE : 100,000 British small businesses benefit from government-backed Start Up Loans [February 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : 100,000 British small businesses benefit from government-backed Start Up Loans [February 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy on 2 February 2023.

    The government’s Start Up Loans scheme has achieved another landmark milestone as the 100,000th business loan is granted.

    • Start Up Loans programme reaches landmark 100,000 milestone, with more than £941 million in support given out to small businesses
    • Business Minister Kevin Hollinrake visits 100,000th recipient, St Albans based noodle shop Ramen Electra
    • Women, young people, and Black, Asian, and other ethnic minority business people among key groups supported by the scheme

    The government’s Start Up Loans scheme has achieved another landmark milestone as the 100,000th business loan is granted, bringing the total support given to firms to more than £941 million, it has been announced today (Thursday 2 February).

    The scheme, administered by the British Business Bank, offers financial support, guidance, and advice to entrepreneurs looking to start their own business.

    Business Minister Kevin Hollinrake visited the 100,000th recipient, a thriving St Albans based noodle shop Ramen Electra, run by James Fraser, to hear about how crucial the firm’s Start Up Loan was in getting the successful business off the ground and to mark the important milestone.

    Business Minister Kevin Hollinrake said:

    We know how important small businesses are to our communities, creating jobs, growth, and opportunities, and that is why we are backing them all the way to not only start up, but to scale up.

    As a former business owner, I know how difficult it can be to get your business off the ground, which is why I’m incredibly proud that Government-backed Start Up Loans have helped 100,000 aspiring entrepreneurs, from Shetland to Shoreditch, to make their dreams a reality.

    Of the total of more than 100,000 loans, 40 percent have gone to women and one-in-five to people from Black, Asian, and other ethnic minority backgrounds.

    Meanwhile, young people (aged between 18-24 years old) have received 14 percent of loans since the scheme was established in 2012.

    The success of the Start Up Loans scheme has been felt nationwide, with new and exciting businesses across the country using them to establish and grow.

    The top five local authorities by loan volume and value are Birmingham, Leeds, Cornwall, Hackney in East London and Manchester, demonstrating the impact of Start Up Loans across the UK.

    With 12,382 loans in the North-West, 7,117 in the East of England, 5,616 in the East Midlands and 15,39 in Northern Ireland, as well as many more across all parts of the United Kingdom, the Start Up Loans scheme has seen the entire UK benefit, with total economic activity estimated to be around £5.3 billion.

    Richard Bearman, Managing Director, Start Up Loans said:

    Start Up Loans supports people across the UK who are looking to start their own businesses and passing our one hundred thousand loan milestone is an amazing achievement that has been ten years in the making. We could not have achieved this without the dedicated support of our network of UK delivery partners and in-house team, and I’d like to take this chance to thank them for everything they do to make our work possible.

    The government is not only supporting businesses to start up, but to scale up too. The Start Up Loans scheme was recently expanded to provide finance to eligible businesses operating for up to 5 years to support their expansion. The Business Secretary Grant Shapps also recently announced a ‘Scale-up Summit’ to bring together key technology, development and finance figures who have accelerated businesses from start-ups to scale-ups.

    The Start Up Loans programme provides personal loans of up to £25,000 to aspiring businesses while also providing dedicated mentoring and support to each recipient. The goal of the scheme is to make sure that viable start-ups and early-stage businesses have the finance and support they need to thrive.

    Funding for the programme comes from the Department of Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy and is administered by the British Business Bank.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Long-term strategy launched to fix children’s social care [February 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Long-term strategy launched to fix children’s social care [February 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Education on 2 February 2023.

    Government to transform children’s social care, with ambitious plans that put families at the heart of reform .

    Vulnerable children will be better supported to stay with their families in safe and loving homes, as part of an overhaul of children’s social care.

    Backed by £200 million over the next two years, a new, ambitious and wide-ranging Children’s Social Care Implementation Strategy will transform the current care system to focus on more early support for families, reducing the need for crisis response at a later stage.

    The plan responds to recommendations made by three independent reviews by Josh MacAlister, the Child Safeguarding Practice Review Panel into the tragic murders of Arthur Labinjo-Hughes and Star Hobson, and the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA). The findings revealed the current care system is often fragmented, siloed, and struggling to meet the needs of children and families across England.

    Families will receive local early help and intervention with challenges such as addiction, domestic abuse or mental health, to help families to stay together where possible and overcome adversity. This will start in 12 local authorities and is backed by £45m to embed a best practice model that will then be shared more widely.

    Children who grow up in loving, stable homes tend to have better outcomes, which is why the proposals put relationships at the heart of the care system and prioritise family-like placements where a child can no longer live with their parents. Kinship care, where a child is placed with a relative or close family friend, will be prioritised by simplifying the process and providing more support to extended families, such as grandparents, aunties, uncles and others. Recognising the transition within a family can be challenging for all involved, the government will also provide training and support to kinship carers.

    Foster carers will also see an above-inflation increase in their allowance to help cover the increasing costs of caring for a child in their home, in recognition of the brilliant care they provide to children. This is alongside £25 million over the next two years on a recruitment and retention programme, which is the largest investment in recent history, helping to attract more people to offer a loving home for children in need. Depending on local need, foster care recruitment will focus on areas where there is a particular shortage of placements for children such as sibling groups, teenagers, unaccompanied asylum seeking children (UASC), those that have suffered complex trauma or parent and child foster homes.

    Today’s announcement echoes the Prime Minister’s intention to better support all families, as evidence shows that strong, supportive families make for more stable communities and happier individuals.

    Minister for Children, Families and Wellbeing, Claire Coutinho said:

    Children in care deserve the same love and stability as everyone else. Yet we’ve seen from the two tragic murders of Arthur Labinjo-Hughes and Star Hobson that more needs to be done to protect our most vulnerable children.

    Our wide-ranging reforms will put strong relationships at the heart of the care system. From supporting our brilliant foster carers, kinship carers and social workers to getting early help to families and improving children’s homes, we want every child to get the support and protection they need.

    Measures announced today in the strategy, Stable Homes, Built on Love, include:

    Introducing more effective, joined-up family help for those that are struggling.

    Up to 12 local areas will get over £45m to test a new approach to Family Help to provide increased, evidence-based support for families to overcome issues to prevent problems from escalating. In a welcoming and non-judgemental way, the new service will help families with issues such as domestic abuse or poor mental health, giving them access to local support with the focus on the help they need rather than bureaucratic boundaries and assessments between services and professionals.

    Where a child is at risk of harm, experts will intervene swiftly and decisively to protect them.

    A new Child Protection Lead Practitioner role will have advanced, specialist training, and will work in a fully joined up way with other services such as the police, to better identify and respond to significant harm. The change will mean services work more effectively to protect children from harms that happen outside of the home, such as criminal exploitation and serious violence.

    Harnessing the value of family networks by supporting the kinship care system.

    There will be a focus on improved support and reducing barriers to kinship care, including investing £9 million in a kinship care training and support offer for all kinship carers. The government will explore the case for a new financial allowance, possible additional workplace entitlements and options for an extension of legal aid for kinship carers who become Special Guardians or who hold Child Arrangement Orders.

    Transforming the experiences of children in care and care leavers, by prioritising children in care living in homes close to their family, friends, communities and schools.

    In addition to the recruitment programme and the above inflation increase to allowances, the government is investing £30m in family finding, befriending and mentoring programmes to support children in care and care leavers to find and maintain loving relationships.  The government will also increase the leaving care allowance from £2,000 to £3,000 from April this year, an above inflation increase to help them set up home independently. For care leavers undertaking apprenticeships, there will be an increase to the bursary available from £1000 to £3,000.

    Expanding and strengthening the children’s social care workforce.

    Local authorities will be supported to recruit up to 500 new child and family social worker apprentices and there will be consultation on proposals to reduce over-reliance on agency social workers. The government will also introduce a new Early Career Framework for social workers that will make sure that social workers have the knowledge and skills they need to support and protect children.

    Setting clearer direction for everyone who works in the system, through a new Children’s Social Care National Framework and Dashboard.

    The National Framework, published today for consultation, sets out clear outcomes that should be achieved across all local authorities to improve the lives of children and families, raising the quality of practice across the country.

    The government has now reached its target to reduce the number of children’s social care services judged to be ‘Inadequate’ to 10% or lower. This collective effort from government and the Children’s Social Care sector, has halved failure rates across the country within five years, bringing improved standards for thousands of children and families across the country. The strategy builds on this work, to support more children within the care system.

  • PRESS RELEASE : New research hub to help tackle decarbonisation and improve transport resilience [February 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : New research hub to help tackle decarbonisation and improve transport resilience [February 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Transport on 2 February 2023.

    Government pledges £10 million to support innovation in transport decarbonisation.

    • new research hub, backed by £10 million in government funding, to boost innovation and decarbonise transport
    • organisations are invited to host the new centre and provide expertise to fuel a low-carbon transport revolution that will help deliver on net zero targets
    • new hub will support resilience across all transport modes and boost UK skills, jobs and innovation

    A new research hub is being launched to boost innovative measures to decarbonise and improve transport, as the country works towards its net zero goals.

    Decarbonisation Minister Jesse Norman has announced applications are open today (2 February 2023) for organisations to host the new hub, with the government pledging £10 million in funding for the centre, which will establish a UK centre of excellence for transport innovation.

    Currently, transport accounts for 27% of the UK’s emissions and the Net Zero Transport for a Resilient Future Hub will drive decarbonisation solutions, such as greater use of recycled materials and reducing the carbon footprint of repairs and maintenance.

    The hub will also develop and implement innovative ideas to ensure future transport is resilient and meets the challenges of climate adaption, such as changes to weather and water levels.

    It will focus on the UK’s transport sector’s needs over the next 25 years as the government works to meet its 2050 net zero goals, helping to ensure the sector can build UK skills, jobs and innovation.

    Decarbonisation Minister Jesse Norman said:

    Innovation is key to the growth of the transport sector, and the creation of high-skilled jobs and business opportunities across the UK.

    This new UK research hub will build a centre of excellence for the future development of low-carbon transport.

    By working to develop real-world solutions across a wide range of academic disciplines, such as architecture and design, computing and behavioural sciences, the hub will help support innovation in the UK which could lead to high-skilled jobs across the UK.

    It will aim to provide a link for early-stage innovation and later stage demonstration across multiple transport modes to create, develop and test climate-resilient solutions that recognise how different places and types of transport will require different answers.

    By researching the challenges of the transport sector in adapting to climate change and securing UK innovation, the centre will look to offer responsive, practical, evidence-based support to transport decision-makers and develop and implement sustainable, low-carbon solutions across existing and new infrastructure.

    Some of the areas the hub will be expected to research include:

    • solutions for resilient transport infrastructure – researching ways to improve the design of transport related infrastructure to better cope with potential climate impacts and reduce emissions, for example increasing use of recycled materials, increasing biodiversity in projects, or ways to use fewer materials
    • streetscape – designing streets to minimise carbon emissions, improve drivers’ and pedestrians’ mental health and wellbeing, and ensure their resilience to potential climate impacts
    • localised climate modelling of temperature, sea-level and weather – gaining a better understanding of potential climate impacts on specific areas, in part, to prioritise those places most in need for possible adaptive measures and projects
    • bridge the gap between infrastructure research and policy – researching ways to shorten the time between developing innovative solutions and their wider adoption

    UK Research and Innovation Building a Green Future lead, Professor Sir Duncan Wingham, said:

    A partnership between the Department for Transport and UK Research and Innovation (UKRI), the Net Zero Transport Infrastructure for a Resilient Future Research Hub will lead the cross-UK research that is needed to effect transformational change in the transport sector.

    It will lead future developments to decarbonise our transport sector, a crucial component of achieving the UK’s net zero 2050 target.

    It will also help to ensure our transport systems remain resilient to hazards caused by extreme weather events and climactic changes that are already apparent.

    The hub will be funded through UKRI’s Building a Green Future strategic theme to accelerate the UK’s transition to a secure and prosperous green economy by 2050. This theme is a partnership between government departments, industry and UKRI to fast-track the development of innovative solutions needed to meet the UK’s net zero goals, keeping the UK at the forefront of the green industrial revolution.

    Over 80% of the funding for the hub will come from government through the Department for Transport, UKRI (via the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council), and organisations in the Transport Research and Innovation Board, with the remaining coming from the winning research centre, which will become the home of the hub.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Problems being caused to medicines supply by Protocol “indefensible” – Doug Beattie [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Problems being caused to medicines supply by Protocol “indefensible” – Doug Beattie [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Ulster Unionist Party on 6 January 2023.

    UUP Leader Doug Beattie MC MLA said:

    “The report from the Nuffield Trust confirms what we have been warning – that the Protocol is affecting the availability of certain medicines in Northern Ireland that are accessible in the rest of the United Kingdom.

    “We have long said that medicines should not be included within the scope of the Protocol.  It is indefensible that people in Northern Ireland do not have equitable access to medicines available in other regions of the UK.  There needs to be a lasting solution found that provides equitable access and gives manufacturers certainty.

    “The problems flowing from the Protocol are already starkly manifesting here in medicines but will only grow as the divergence between the United Kingdom and European Union increases.  We need to have confidence that the UK Government is tracking divergence, so these problems aren’t only being dealt with once they have already arisen.

    “The Lords Sub-Committee on the Protocol on Ireland/Northern Ireland wrote to the Foreign Secretary on 6 December 2022 asking what, if any, work was being taken by the Foreign Office to track and log these divergences.  To date there has been little clarity on how this is being handled, if at all.

    “This latest revelation is further evidence of the need to deal with the Protocol.  Obviously, the best way is through a negotiated outcome that provides lasting solutions and removes the Irish Sea Border.  However, the UK Government must be robust in defending equality of access to medicines for citizens in Northern Ireland.”

  • PRESS RELEASE : Ulster Unionists remember Kingsmills Massacre [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Ulster Unionists remember Kingsmills Massacre [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Ulster Unionists on 5 January 2023.

    Ulster Unionist Councillor David Taylor said:

    “My thoughts are with the Kingsmills families and sole survivor Alan Black today on this 47th Anniversary of the Kingsmills Massacre. We remember the 10 innocent Protestant men murdered by the IRA as they returned home from their day’s work. This was one of the most shocking and cruel incidents carried out by Republicans during the troubles and left a lasting impact on the Protestant community in South Armagh.

    “I was privileged to attend a service at the Kingsmills roadside memorial organised by FAIR this morning to mark the Anniversary.”

  • PRESS RELEASE : Foreign Secretary’s meeting with Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong [February 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Foreign Secretary’s meeting with Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong [February 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 1 February 2023.

    The UK Foreign Secretary James Cleverly and Australian Minister for Foreign Affairs Penny Wong met in London.

    A Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office spokesperson said:

    The Foreign Secretary and Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong had a warm and productive meeting in London today.

    The Foreign Secretary highlighted the UK’s commitment to work alongside Australia to support Pacific Island states’ priorities, particularly on the climate emergency and economic development. He looked forward to visiting in the coming months.

    The Foreign Secretary also welcomed Australia’s recent sanctioning of leading figures in the Iranian and Myanmar governments, alongside similar sanctions imposed by the UK.

    He and Foreign Minister Wong agreed that these were a clear illustration of the UK and Australia as staunch defenders of freedom and democracy.

    Both looked forward to continuing discussions alongside their defence ministers tomorrow. They agreed the summit in Portsmouth would cement the UK-Australia relationship as modern and forward-looking, in the face of growing global challenges.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Aid delivery without the participation of women cannot be normalised, and impairs the entire population [February 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Aid delivery without the participation of women cannot be normalised, and impairs the entire population [February 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 1 February 2023.

    Statement by Ambassador James Kariuki at the UN Member States Briefing on the Humanitarian Situation in Afghanistan.

    Thank you, Martin, and thank you to your IASC colleagues for this important briefing.

    The UK welcomes your mission to Afghanistan just as we welcome that of the Deputy Secretary-General previously. We believe that regular senior UN level engagement, in close coordination with NGOs, will be important in the weeks and months ahead as we navigate a way forward.

    As you have told us, the consequences of the Taliban’s edicts on the humanitarian community’s ability to tackle one of the world’s biggest humanitarian crises are painfully evident.

    Female humanitarian workers play a critical role in accessing Afghan communities in need: they reach populations their male counterparts cannot.

    The consequences of the edicts will not be limited to our ability to provide humanitarian assistance to the Afghan people. They will also have a wider impact across our collective interests – across counter-terrorism, counter-narcotics, and regional stability.

    The Taliban’s systematic attempts to erase women from society will have clear costs on Afghanistan’s economy, stability and security. We are clear there can be no movement on recognition until the Taliban meets the expectations of the international community which have been set out repeatedly in successive Security Council resolutions.

    We must remain united, firm and unequivocal in our message to the Taliban: aid delivery without the participation of women cannot be normalised, and impairs the entire population – not only women and girls.

    So the UK calls on the Taliban to guarantee the safety and status of all humanitarian staff, female and male, international and national. Their critical role needs to be understood at all levels – from national representatives to provincial security forces and district level officials.

    As we continue to monitor development in Afghanistan, the international community needs to listen and respond to the voices of Afghan women. Their voices must be heard at all levels of the humanitarian response. That means high levels of transparency from humanitarian partners on the challenges they are facing in ensuring that women are able to access and participate in the delivery of assistance.

    We should continue to use evidence-based arguments to demonstrate to the Taliban the impact of their edicts.

    So Martin, to close, the UK calls on the Taliban to reverse their damaging edicts and take action to ensure all communities have access to aid and basic services.

    And we, the UK, will continue to support the humanitarian community as you engage the Taliban on these challenges in the weeks and months ahead.

    Thank you.