Tag: 2023

  • PRESS RELEASE : Patients and pharmacies to benefit from changes to supervision [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Patients and pharmacies to benefit from changes to supervision [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department of Health and Social Care on 7 December 2023.

    Plans to make better use of pharmacies, improve access to primary care and maximise the contribution of pharmacy professionals set out in new consultation.

    • Skilled pharmacy technicians to play greater role supporting customers and patients with the safe dispensing of medicines as part of the Primary Care Recovery Plan
    • Rule change designed to free up pharmacists to provide more clinical care
    • Consultation is latest step in improving access to care for patients and releasing capacity in the wider NHS

    Plans to make better use of pharmacies, improve access to primary care and maximise the contribution of pharmacy professionals across healthcare have been set out in a government consultation, launched today.

    As part of its Primary Care Recovery Plan the government is considering changes to medicine supervision requirements in pharmacies.

    Currently, the preparation, assembly, dispensing, sale and supply of pharmacy and prescription only medicines can only be carried out by, or under the supervision of, a pharmacist. However, as registered and regulated health professionals, pharmacy technicians are qualified to work without direct supervision.

    These proposals would allow pharmacists to safely delegate more allowing them to spend more time delivering patient-facing clinical services – in turn freeing up more appointments in general practice.

    Health Minister Andrea Leadsom said:

    This is about making the most of the talents of our excellent and highly trained pharmacy staff, to benefit them and their patients, and improve service delivery more generally.

    By giving pharmacy technicians the chance to use their skills in a safe way and take on more responsibility for dispensing, pharmacists will have more time to carry out the clinical assessments they are trained to do.

    These include providing advice on oral contraception, common conditions and blood pressure tests rather than patients having to book an appointment at a general practice.

    Following the 12-week consultation and subsequent work by regulators and professional bodies, a pharmacist would be able to authorise pharmacy technicians to run a dispensary with reference to a pharmacist only where necessary.

    Extensive engagement with the sector and profession has informed these proposals which have the support of the four Chief Pharmaceutical Officers of the UK.

    In a joint statement, the four Chief Pharmaceutical Officers, said:

    These proposals will improve future patient care across the four UK nations by making appropriate, safe and productive use of pharmacy technicians’ knowledge and skills while at the same time enabling pharmacists to deliver a wider range of clinical services to support patients in hospitals and community pharmacies.

    Recognising and more effectively using the skills of pharmacy technicians will enable pharmacists to spend a greater proportion of their time delivering patient-facing clinical services – using their training and expertise, including prescribing, to improve healthcare outcomes for patients and local communities.

    This will improve career progression for pharmacists and pharmacy technicians and ensure they are using their training and skills to contribute to the best of their professional ability as part of the NHS team.

    The government’s Primary Care Recovery Plan, announced in May 2023, is designed to stop the 8am GP appointment rush, make it easier to get an appointment at a general practice and develop Pharmacy First to make the most of trained pharmacist staff. This consultation is delivering on the government’s commitment to provide greater flexibility to community pharmacies about how they deploy staff and release pharmacists’ time for more patient-facing services.

    The proposals aim to:

    • Enable pharmacists to authorise registered pharmacy technicians to perform tasks that would otherwise need to be performed by or under the supervision of pharmacists;
    • Let registered pharmacy technicians take primary responsibility for the preparation and assembly of medicinal products in highly specialised sterile manufacturing units in hospitals;
    • Allow checked and bagged prescribed medicines to be handed out in a retail pharmacy in the absence of a pharmacist – where authorised by a pharmacist. This aims to bring an end to situations where a patient cannot pick up their prescription when the pharmacist is at lunch or otherwise unavailable.

    There are over 67,000 pharmacists registered in the UK who will be empowered to have greater say in how staff are deployed and how medicines are dispensed. This would represent a significant shift in how medicines dispensing is supervised and help make pharmacy services more efficient and fit for the future.

    This follows the recent consultation launched to enable pharmacy technicians to supply and administer medicines under a patient group direction – a written instruction that permits listed healthcare professionals to supply or administer medicines to make it easier for patients to get the medicines they need when they need them. Responses to that consultation are being considered.

    Pharmacy First plans – backed by up to £645 million – mean that from 1 December 2023 thousands of women are able to get their contraceptive pill from their local pharmacy with up to 25% of all women on oral contraception able to benefit from this new service.

    Pharmacists are also increasing the number of life-saving blood pressure checks given to at-risk patients over the next year with a commitment to deliver 2.5 million a year by Spring 2025 – up from 900,000 carried out last year.  It is estimated this could prevent more than 1,350 heart attacks and strokes in the first year.

    In addition, from early next year patients will be able to get treatment for seven common conditions directly from a pharmacy, without the need for a GP appointment or prescription. The new service will cover sinusitis, sore throat, earache, infected insect bites, impetigo, shingles, and uncomplicated urinary tract infections in women.

    At the same time the government has reached its commitment of 50 million more GP appointments, as well as recruiting over 34,000 additional direct patient care staff working in general practice and committed to a 50% increase in the number of GP trainees.

    Recognising the importance of strengthening the depth of talent in pharmacy teams, the NHS Long Term Workforce Plan, backed by over £2.4 billion funding, sets out the ambition to increase training places for pharmacists by nearly 50% to around 5,000 by 2031/32, and to grow the number of pharmacy technicians. There is further potential to continue to expand training via an apprenticeship route for pharmacy technicians.

  • Robert Halfon – 2023 Speech at the Times Higher Education Conference

    Robert Halfon – 2023 Speech at the Times Higher Education Conference

    The speech made by Robert Halfon, the Minister for Skills, Apprenticeships and Higher Education, in Liverpool on 7 December 2023.

    Times Higher Education is such an important voice for the sector, and I’m delighted to be speaking to you again.

    I want to start with a personal story about my relationship with higher education.

    I was born with a form of cerebral palsy, spastic diplegia. The doctors told my father I’d never be able do anything – to walk, live independently or, for example, go to university.

    Thanks to a Great Ormond Street doctor, I did learn to walk and went on to do things no one would have predicted – included going to university. I never imagined I’d be able to walk or cycle up the steep hills of Exeter, but I did. Going to university was the greatest time of my life. I greatly enjoyed getting my degree, and then staying on to do a masters.

    My experience taught me not just to highly value higher education – but to cherish it.

    A sector to be proud of

    I’m proud that Britain has some of the best universities in the world.

    4 in the top 10, and 17 in the top 100. Students travel from over 200 nations to study here. And our universities lead the world in producing valuable research:

    We rank 1st in the G7 for publications’ impact.

    We also have excellent technical and vocational universities, which are expanding the concept of degree education. They are equipping students with premium skills for high-powered jobs, and collaborating with further education to deliver sought-after degree apprenticeships.

    And data released todRobetay shows that we’re flinging wide the doors to university like never before. Thanks to the commitment you’ve shown to access and participation, disadvantaged English 18-year-olds are now 74% more likely to enter higher education than they were in 2010.

    I want to congratulate everyone in this room for their contribution to the picture I’ve described: the deans, lecturers, admissions tutors – all the academic teaching and research staff. And I also want to thank all those who aren’t in the room, but are just as important to making a university successful: the support staff, administrators, student counsellors and caterers. Everything that all of you do has made this sector what it is today.

    I recognise the financial pressures universities are under – and appreciate the work you are doing to manage these and deliver outstanding outcomes for young people.

    We’re working in a very challenging financial context across government. This means we must continue to make tough decisions to control public spending – but also try to help students with the cost-of-living, and ensure they receive value-for-money.

    Beveridge’s 5 Giants

    Last year I laid out my 3 aims for higher education: jobs, skills and social justice.

    This year, to look to the future, I want to first look back to December 1942.

    Twentieth Century historians among you will recognise the year that Sir William Beveridge published his report on Britain’s social ills. As you will know, the Beveridge report went on to become the founding document for the welfare state.

    Beveridge described 5 giants that were standing in the way of the nation’s progress.

    They were idleness, ignorance, disease, squalor and want.

    Although the report was a blueprint for social security, Beveridge also acknowledges the evils he considered just as bad as income, housing or healthcare deficits.

    Namely, lack of education and employment.

    Beveridge described ignorance as something “no democracy can afford among its citizens”, and idleness as a force that ‘destroys wealth and corrupts men, whether they are well fed or not’.

    My 5 Giants

    So taking my cue from Beveridge, I want to talk about my 5 giants – the 5 challenges I believe higher education faces in this decade and beyond.

    They are higher education reforms, HE disruptors, degree apprenticeships, the lifelong learning entitlement and artificial intelligence and the fourth industrial revolution.

    I will end by talking about an unwelcome shift in culture on campus this autumn, and what we must do about it.

    HE reform

    I want to start with our ongoing higher education reforms, and the challenge they present to universities.

    The sector has evolved in the last 25 years to a widely-accessed, fee-paying model. Data from the Office for Students shows that students overwhelmingly progress to good employment, further study or other positive outcomes. However, government has a duty to monitor provision funded by tuition fees, to ensure that students receive value-for-money from the finance it provides – and which they must eventually pay back.

    Jobs, skills and social justice are what drives our higher education reforms. By legislating on what courses should cost and the outcomes students should expect, we are ensuring the sustainability and efficacy of the market. The challenge is for institutions to anticipate student needs and outcomes, and adapt their courses accordingly.

    One example is checking the rapid rise in foundation years in classroom-based subjects, such as business and management. We were concerned that lower delivery cost, rather than student need, was driving this growth. That’s why we’ve announced that from next year, we will reduce the maximum tuition fees and loans for foundation years in classroom-based subjects to £5,760.

    This lower fee limit represents a fairer deal for students.

    I believe this comes back to social justice.

    I’m glad to say that we have the highest completion rate in the OECD.

    But all courses that cost this much should have good continuation, completion and progression.

    Why should only those in-the-know, who apply for the right courses, go on to reap the greatest rewards from their HE investment? While others paying the same money receive poorer teaching with poorer outcomes. Everyone should be able to approach this market clear-eyed about what they can expect for their time and money.

    Disruptors of HE and tertiary education – Institutes of Technology and the Dyson Institute

    The second challenge is that presented by the new disruptors to higher education.

    Institutions that ensuring that students’ studies at university boost to their professional lives afterwards.

    The movement to link degrees with graduate jobs is exemplified by the Dyson institute of engineering and technology. As the first private employer in the country to be granted its own degree-awarding powers, the institute has streamlined students’ route to their graduate roles. They believe it’s worth teaching and awarding their own degrees, because it’s clearly the best way to get the candidates they need. And they’re not short of applicants vying for places! I commend Dyson’s extraordinary investment in their campus, where students are reaping the rewards of their work-focussed programmes. Everyone involved knows it’s worth their while.

    On a regional level, our government-backed Institutes of Technology (IoTs) are also challenging the status quo. As collaborations between business, HE and FE, they are a fast-track to good jobs.  They provide higher technical training in STEM specialisms, using the industry-standard equipment that colleges and training providers find prohibitively expensive. IoTs are employer-led, offering specialised courses tailored to local business needs, for local students. These multi-way relationships benefit all concerned, including the universities. Undergraduates who’ve experienced IoTs’ unique employer relationships arrive in their first job with higher occupational competency than traditional degree students.

    Degree Apprenticeships

    The third challenge for HE is degree apprenticeships.

    They epitomise jobs, skills and social justice by eroding the false divide between further and higher education. Maintaining partition does nothing for either sector – particularly when there is so much to be gained from collaborating.

    Degree apprenticeships allow universities to reach students who could not otherwise afford undergraduate study. They offer a unique package of earning while learning at world-leading universities, and working for some of Britain’s top employers. 94% of Level 6 degree-apprentices go onto work or further training upon completion, with 93% in sustained employment. And all with no student finance to repay. With 170 to choose from, degree apprenticeships are opening-up professions previously closed to those not studying a traditional degree – a brilliant outcome which speaks for itself.

    What do degree apprenticeships have in common with the previous challenge – the disruptor institutes? They’re about preparing students for the world of work, so they’re ready to grab it with both hands.

    Many of you agree with me on how important this is. The University of East London encourages every student to do a work placement, no matter what they’re studying. Teesside University had over 2,000 degree-level apprentices on roll last year. And Warwick University’s Vice-Chancellor, Prof. Stuart Croft, has said he’d like 10% of his student body to be degree apprentices within the next decade. I applaud this, and encourage others to follow his lead. But I want a time to come when degree apprentices match the number of academic students on campus.

    I don’t see why we can’t get there. Degree-level apprenticeships have enjoyed year-on-year growth since their introduction, and now made-up 14% of all apprenticeships. But we need to diversify beyond the programmes that have fuelled expansion. That’s why I’ve made £40 million available for degree apprenticeship growth in the next two years – to get new courses off the ground, and engage with new candidates and businesses.

    It will take time, but the demand is already there! UCAS reports huge interest in these courses.

    The lifelong learning entitlement, and what it means for HE

    The fourth challenge is the lifelong learning entitlement.

    William Beveridge said of adult education:

    The door of learning should not shut for anyone at 18, or at any time.

    Ignorance to its present extent is not only unnecessary, but dangerous.

    To open wide the door of learning we will expand student finance in 2025, creating parity between higher and technical education. The loan entitlement will be equivalent to four years of higher education funding (£37,000 in today’s fees) to use throughout a person’s working life.

    As well as conventional higher technical or degree level studies, it will be redeemable against high-value modular courses such as higher technical qualifications. HTQs are designed in collaboration with employers, giving students confidence that they provide the required skills for associated careers.

    This will galvanise people to train, retrain, and upskill across their careers, fitting shorter courses around their personal commitments. Like getting on and off a train, learners will be able to alight and board their post-school education when it suits them, rather than being confined to a single ticket. These are the students of the future, a new market seeking high quality tuition that universities are well-placed to provide.

    AI and the fourth industrial revolution

    The fifth and final challenge is Artificial Intelligence and the fourth industrial revolution.

    It is difficult to comprehend how much the world will change in the working lives of today’s undergraduates – much as it would have been difficult to explain the internet to our younger selves. Eventually, almost every daily transaction and interaction will have a digital archetype.

    The government is taking a proactive approach to AI research, with HE playing a pivotal role. The department for science, innovation and technology has funded over 2,600 postgraduate scholarships for underrepresented students to study AI and data science. Since 2018, UK Research and Innovation has invested £217 million in 24 Centres for doctoral training across the country, supporting over 1,500 PhDs. This investment is creating a new generation of researchers, developing AI usage for areas like healthcare and climate change.

    The fourth industrial revolution is already underway, creating new jobs and extinguishing others. Universities UK estimates that we’ll need 11 million extra graduates by 2023 to fill newly-created roles. Unit for Future Skills’ research shows that professional occupations are more exposed to AI, particularly clerical work in law, finance and business management.

    To build a workforce for this revolution, we need to expose undergraduates to real-world work whilst building a culture of lifelong learning and re-training.

    Sophie Scholl and antisemitism

    I want to turn now to someone else who, like William Beveridge, was trying to make the world a better place in 1942. Someone who ultimately paid for it with her life.

    My political hero is a young woman called Sophie Scholl. Again, I expect 20th Century historians will recognise the name. She was a member of the White Rose resistance group who distributed anti-Nazi leaflets in Germany. She was a university student in Munich, where her final act of defiance led to her arrest and execution.

    The White Rose called on citizens to resist the Nazis and denounced the murder of Jewish people. But Sophie wasn’t Jewish – one of the reasons I admire her so much. She didn’t lose her life through any self-interest. She and her comrades knew what was happening was wrong, and did something about it.

    So why mention Sophie today? Because the antisemitism in our universities this autumn has been horrific. Since the terrorist attack by Hamas on Israel, the University Jewish Chaplaincy has documented threatening door-knocking – “we know where you live” – verbal and physical abuse, graffiti, Palestinian flags draped over Jewish students’ cars..

    I have welcomed statements condemning antisemitism from vice chancellors across the country. But we need to be proactive, not just reactive. That’s why the secretary of state and I have written twice to universities on this. And why we’re looking introduce an antisemitism charter to give teeth to the IHRA Working Definition of Antisemitism.

    Sophie Scholl once said that the real damage is done by “those with no sides and no causes… Those who don’t like to make waves – or enemies.”

    I want Sophie Scholls to exist in every university. Non-Jews prepared to stand-up for their Jewish friends, who’s done nothing to deserve the stigma and hatred they’ve endured.

    Government can only do so much. Action against antisemitism needs to come from within.

    I‘ve laid-out 5 – or rather 6 – challenges to you today.

    They are substantial, but I have full faith in your ability to meet them.

    While it’s right that the government holds the sector to account, your universities are an enormous source of national pride. You contribute £130 billion a year to the economy, supporting three quarters of a million jobs. The Liverpool universities here alone contribute £2.7 billion, and support nearly 19,000 jobs.

    I want to thank you again – all of you – for making our system the envy of the world.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Over 200,000 businesses set to get free advice settling energy supplier disputes [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Over 200,000 businesses set to get free advice settling energy supplier disputes [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero on 7 December 2023.

    More businesses will be able to get support from the Energy Ombudsman, under new proposals.

    • New proposals to expand support from Energy Ombudsman to cover small businesses with fewer than 50 employees
    • move would boost protection, offer an alternative to costly court fees, and resolve disputes quicker
    • follows survey finding 94% of total respondents supported the move

    More than 200,000 businesses could for the first time get access to specialist support for disputes with their energy supplier, under plans announced today (Thursday 7 December).

    Under new proposals, companies with up to 50 employees would qualify for support from the Energy Ombudsman – with issues ranging from disputes over bills and energy supply, to how an energy product or service has been sold, or wider customer service issues.

    Currently, this support is only available to businesses of up to 10 employees, and households.

    Making this move will enable these companies to settle disputes with their energy supplier without facing costly court fees – ultimately saving them money.

    It follows a survey conducted by regulator Ofgem, which found that 94% of the total respondents, which included businesses organisations, consumer groups, and suppliers, said they would welcome this move.

    Minister for Energy Consumers and Affordability Amanda Solloway said:

    This government has always stood by businesses, and we want to ensure they are getting proper support and service in dealing with energy suppliers.

    That’s why we’re proposing expanding the reach of the Energy Ombudsman to cover an extra 200,000 businesses, allowing them to access free, impartial advice and resolve issues with their supplier without the need for an expensive trip to court.

    See the consultation on a New threshold for businesses accessing the Energy Ombudsman which is open until Wednesday 31 January 2024.

  • PRESS RELEASE : BBC licence fee review launched as action taken to ease rises [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : BBC licence fee review launched as action taken to ease rises [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department of Culture, Media and Sport on 7 December 2023.

    BBC licence fee review launched as action taken to ease future price rises.

    • Review launched into the future of the licence fee and alternative funding options, supported by a panel of leading industry experts
    • Comes as government intervenes to minimise increases to the cost of the TV licence fee for households
    • Next year’s licence fee will be £20 cheaper than it would have been had the government not acted

    A review into how the BBC should be funded in the future has been launched by Culture Secretary Lucy Frazer, as new action is taken to reduce the impact of price rises on licence fee payers.

    The review, supported by a panel of independent experts soon to be announced from across the broadcasting sector and wider business world, will assess a range of options for funding the BBC. It will look at how alternative models could help secure the broadcaster’s long-term sustainability amid an evolving media landscape, increased competition and changing audience behaviour, while reducing the burden on licence fee payers.

    As set out in the terms of reference published today, the review will explore the sustainability of the BBC’s current licence fee model, and build an evidence based understanding of alternative models for funding the BBC. The review will be supported by analysis which will include externally commissioned research.

    The licence fee will also rise by less than previously expected next year following changes brought in by the government to minimise the cost to households. In 2022, the government froze the licence fee for two years to protect families from the sharp rise in the cost of living. It was agreed that the current annual fee of £159 would remain unchanged until April 2024, before rising by inflation for the following four years.

    However, in recognition of the ongoing cost of living pressures faced by families, the government has today decided to change how the inflation-linked uplifts to the licence fee are calculated for 2024.

    This means the annual cost of a TV licence will be £169.50 from April 2024 – the equivalent of an additional 88p per month.

    The previous methodology for calculating inflation was the averaged annualised October to September CPI figure of 9 per cent. The new methodology for 2024 uses the annual rate of CPI in September 2023 of 6.7 per cent, and is the approach used to calculate uplifts to benefits.

    As a result of today’s announcement and the two-year freeze, from April next year the annual licence fee will be more than £20 cheaper than it would have been had the government not acted. By the end of 2024, licence fee payers will have saved £37 since 2022 due to the measures.

    The decision will ensure the additional cost to licence fee payers is kept as low as possible while giving the BBC over £3.8 billion in annual licence fee funding to spend on world leading content and deliver on its mission as set out in the Charter: to serve all audiences with impartial, high-quality and distinctive output and services which inform, educate and entertain. It will also ensure S4C can maintain its unique role promoting the Welsh language and supporting our wider public service broadcasting landscape.

    Culture Secretary Lucy Frazer said:

    This is a fair deal that provides value for money for the licence fee payer while also ensuring that the BBC can continue to produce world leading content.

    We know family budgets are stretched, which is why we have stepped in again – following two years of licence fee freezes – to reduce this year’s increase to less than a £1 a month.

    But this settlement has highlighted other challenges faced by the BBC with the changing media landscape making the battle for audiences more competitive and the number of people paying the licence fee decreasing. This raises fundamental questions as to sustainability of the current licence fee system.

    So we are also launching a funding review of the BBC that will take a forensic look at the licence fee, and whether a reformed funding model could better support our national broadcaster to remain sustainable and affordable for audiences while driving growth in our creative industries. I want a thriving BBC, supported to inform, educate and entertain and this funding review will help us make sure we can deliver this for decades to come.

    This announcement follows an additional £20 million the government awarded to the BBC World Service earlier this year as part of the refresh of the Integrated Review. The money, which is on top of £94 million provided annually, was to protect all 42 World Service language services over the next two years, support English-language broadcasting, and counter disinformation.

    The findings of the Funding Model Review will feed into the review of the BBC’s Royal Charter ahead of its expiry at the end of 2027. Any public consultation and final decision on the BBC’s funding model will be reserved for Charter Review itself.

    Notes to editors

    • An announcement of the membership of the expert panel for the Licence Fee Review will follow in due course. The panel will incorporate a broad range of views from experts in the broadcasting sector.
    • The black and white TV licence fee will increase from £53.50 to £57.
  • PRESS RELEASE : MOD signs infrastructure contracts at RAF Waddington – the new home of the Red Arrows [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : MOD signs infrastructure contracts at RAF Waddington – the new home of the Red Arrows [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Defence on 7 December 2023.

    The MOD have signed contracts to provide new and refurbished infrastructure for the Red Arrows at their new home of RAF Waddington.

    These contracts, signed with construction company Galliford Try, also include work to build or refurbish facilities at three other RAF stations. The Royal Air Force Aerobatics Team (RAFAT), better known as the Red Arrows, moved to RAF Waddington in October last year. New facilities are now required for the team and their distinctive red Hawk fast jets.

    The project is part of the MOD’s wider Defence Estate Optimisation (DEO) Portfolio, which is investing £5.1bn in the infrastructure needed by our service people through construction activity, unit and personnel moves, and the release of sites that are no longer suited to the needs of our modern military.

    Air Officer Airbases, Air Commodore Portlock welcomed senior leaders from DEO, Defence Infrastructure Organisation (DIO) and representatives from Galliford Try to RAF Waddington. They signed four contracts to deliver a project which spans RAF Leeming, RAF Saxton Wold, both RAF Boulmer sites and RAF Waddington.

    Speaking at the signing, Air Commodore Portlock said:

    This significant milestone marks an exciting transition into the much-awaited design and build phase of the project. Providing this essential infrastructure will enable the RAF to make best use of its estate, whilst also delivering our capabilities which are critical to defence.

    Earlier this year, multiple contractors from the construction industry were awarded packages of work across the DEO Portfolio in a landmark move to speed up project delivery. The move will also provide a more collaborative way of working, and a consistent approach to sustainable building practices.

    Director of Major Projects and Programmes for DIO, Charles Hoskins said:

    Our first DEO project for Air Command under the new contracting mechanism is embarking on a journey to turn vision into reality. Today we sign the design and build contracts and look forward to collaborating with Galiford Try to deliver all capabilities within this project.

    These contracts, which have enabled the disposal of RAF Scampton, will now see Galliford Try design and deliver the required infrastructure for Battlespace Management (BM) Force’s Deployable Air Surveillance and Control System (DASCAS), the Mobile Meteorological Unit (MMU) and the Red Arrows.

    Jon Marston, Managing Director of Galliford Try Building East Midlands, said:

    We are delighted to be signing these contracts and look forward to continuing our strong partnership with the MOD to successfully deliver these projects for the RAF and defence.

    The project team are set to deliver a combination of refurbishments, new build facilities and single living accommodation across the sites.

    DEO Air Programme Manager, Frank Green said:

    Today’s signing ceremony is the result of an exhaustive process that required hard work and a collaborative attitude from all. Moving forward, I am excited to be part of a truly collegiate venture, bringing key improvements to the supported RAF units.

    RAFAT will benefit from refurbishment and the modernisation of existing infrastructure, including space for aircraft parking and runway access, as well as maintenance capabilities, a refurbished aircraft hangar and office space.

    Plans also include new, modern Single Living Accommodation (SLA) to replace the existing life-expired accommodation as part of a wider scheme to replace SLA. The increase in facilities will see about 150 additional personnel operating from the site once complete.

  • Rishi Sunak – 2023 Speech on Illegal Migration

    Rishi Sunak – 2023 Speech on Illegal Migration

    The speech made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, in London on 7 December 2023.

    Today the government has introduced the toughest anti-illegal immigration law ever.

    I know it will upset some people and you will hear a lot of criticism about it.

    It’s right to explain why I have decided to do this.

    I’m the child of immigrants…

    I understand why some people take the risk of getting into unsafe dinghies to cross open waters…

    …it’s because the United Kingdom is an incredible country… it offers opportunity, hope and safety.

    But the difference is… my family came here… legally.

    Like most immigrants, they integrated into local communities…

    …worked hard to provide for their family

    …built lives and businesses, found friends and neighbours…

    … and most of all… they were really proud to become British.

    That feeling of pride… it cascades down the generations and grows… and that’s why you see so many children of immigrants sitting around the Cabinet table.

    But it’s not a given… illegal immigration undermines not just our border controls… it undermines the very fairness that is so central to our national character.

    We play by the rules. We put in our fair share. We wait our turn.

    Now if some people can just cut all that out… you’ve not just lost control of your borders… you’ve fatally undermined the very fairness upon which trust in our system is based.

    That’s why this legislation is necessary.

    To deliver an effective deterrent to those who wish to come here illegally…

    …to restore people’s trust that the system is fair…

    … and ultimately: to stop the boats.

    And so, our Bill today fundamentally addresses the Supreme Court’s concerns over the safety of Rwanda.

    I did not agree with their judgement, but I respect it.

    That is why I have spent the last three weeks working tirelessly to respond to their concerns…

    …and to guarantee Rwanda’s safety in a new legally binding international treaty.

    The Supreme Court were clear that they were making a judgement about Rwanda at a specific moment 18 months ago…and that the problems could be remedied.

    Today we are confirming that they have been…

    …and that unequivocally, Rwanda is a safe country.

    And today’s Bill also ends the merry-go-round of legal challenges that have blocked our policy for too long.

    We simply cannot have a situation where our ability to control our borders…

    …and stop people taking perilous journeys across the channel…

    …is held up in endless litigation in our courts.

    So this Bill gives Parliament the chance to put Rwanda’s safety beyond question in the eyes of this country’s law.

    Parliament is sovereign. It should be able to make decisions that cannot be undone in the courts.

    And it was never the intention of international human rights laws…

    …to stop a sovereign Parliament removing illegal migrants to a country that is considered safe in both parliamentary statute and international law.

    So the Bill does include what are known as “notwithstanding” clauses.

    These mean that our domestic courts will no longer be able to use any domestic or international law…

    …including the Human Rights Act…

    …to stop us removing illegal migrants.

    Let me just go through the ways individual illegal migrants try and stay.

    Claiming asylum – that’s now blocked.

    Abuse of our Modern Slavery rules – blocked.

    The idea that Rwanda isn’t safe – blocked.

    The risk of being sent on to some other country – blocked.

    And spurious Human Rights claims – you’d better believe we’ve blocked those too…

    …because we’re completely disapplying all the relevant sections of the Human Rights Act.

    And not only have we blocked all these ways illegal migrants will try and stay…

    …we’ve also blocked their ability to try and stay by bringing a Judicial Review on any of those grounds.

    That means that this Bill blocks every single reason that has ever been used to prevent flights to Rwanda from taking off.

    The only, extremely narrow exception will be if you can prove with credible and compelling evidence…

    ….that you specifically have a real and imminent risk of serious and irreversible harm.

    We have to recognise that as a matter of law – and if we didn’t, we’d undermine the treaty we’ve just signed with Rwanda.

    As the Rwandans themselves have made clear…

    …if we go any further the entire scheme will collapse.

    And there’s no point having a Bill with nowhere to send people to.

    But I am telling you now, we have set the bar so high…

    …that it will be vanishingly rare for anyone to meet it.

    And once you have been removed, you’ll be banned for life from travelling to the UK, settling here, or becoming a citizen.

    But, of course, even with this new law here at home…

    …we could still face challenges from the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg.

    So let me repeat what I said two weeks ago –

    I will not allow a foreign court to block these flights.

    If the Strasbourg Court chooses to intervene against the express wishes of our sovereign Parliament…

    …I will do what is necessary to get flights off.

    And today’s new law already makes clear that the decision on whether to comply with interim measures issued by the European Court…

    …is a decision for British government Ministers – and British government Ministers alone.

    Because it is your government – not criminal gangs, or indeed foreign courts –who decides who comes here and who stays in our country.

    Now of course, our Rwanda policy is just one part of our wider strategy to stop the boats.

    And that strategy is working.

    I’ve been Prime Minister for just over a year now and for the first time, small boat arrivals here are down by a third….

    …even as illegal crossings of the Mediterranean have soared by 80 per cent.

    Let me just repeat that: small boat arrivals here are down by a third.

    To help achieve that, we’ve signed returns and co-operation agreements with France, Bulgaria, Turkey, Italy, and Georgia.

    Illegal working raids are up by nearly 70 per cent.

    50 hotels are being returned to their local communities and we are housing people in a new barge and in former military sites.

    The initial asylum backlog is down from 92,000 to less than 20,000.

    We’ve returned over 22,000 illegal migrants.

    And as our deal with Albania shows – deterrence works.

    Last year, a third of all those arriving in small boats were Albanian.

    This year we have returned 5,000 people and cut those arrivals by 90 per cent.

    And Albanian arrivals have far more recourse to the courts than anyone under this new legislation.

    That’s why I’m so confident that this Bill will work.

    Lord Sumption, the former Supreme Court Judge, believes this Bill will work.

    We will get flights off the ground.

    We will deter illegal migrants from coming here.

    And we will, finally, stop the boats.

  • Rishi Sunak – 2023 Message for Chanukah

    Rishi Sunak – 2023 Message for Chanukah

    The message issued by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, on 7 December 2023.

    As we welcome the beginning of Chanukah, it’s important to recognise the challenging times being faced by our Jewish friends everywhere.

    For many families, the tragedy of recent events will hang heavily on celebrations, but the resilience you have shown is humbling.

    As we commemorate the recovery of Jerusalem all those centuries ago, I want to celebrate the enduring strength of Jewish communities.

    I will be lighting the menorah with you as you mark this important festival and want you to be in no doubt that I will always stand with you.

  • Oliver Dowden – 2023 Speech on Cyber Operations

    Oliver Dowden – 2023 Speech on Cyber Operations

    The speech made by Oliver Dowden, the Deputy Prime Minister, on 7 December 2023.

    Of all the risks that this country faces… there are none that are evolving more rapidly than those in the cyber domain.

    More actors…

    Have more sophisticated tools…

    To target more people…

    Than ever.

    Protecting the public from cyber attack is a matter of the utmost importance.

    Let’s be clear what’s being targeted here.

    The critical services that government delivers:

    Our public finances…

    Our roads and railways…

    Our schools…

    Our health service…

    Our armed forces…

    Even the heart of central government itself.

    Of all the vaults that cyber criminals are desperate to crack into…

    … this one contains some of the greatest rewards.

    That’s why we see so many attempts to breach our digital defences.

    Last year, 40 per cent of the attacks addressed by the National Cyber Security Centre were against the public sector.

    In a world where the new frontline is online…

    …the people in this room are manning the barricades to keep us safe and secure…

    … and for that I want to say thank you.

    Despite the challenges we face, our cyber defences are stronger than ever.

    Since it was published two years ago, the Government Cyber Security Strategy has been a game-changer.

    Work is well underway to ensure that government’s most critical functions are significantly hardened to cyber attack.

    And we have established ambitious targets that will see all government organisations made resilient to known vulnerabilities and common attack methods.

    Through GovAssure – which I launched in April – we have transformed the oversight of governmental cybersecurity…

    And the new ‘Government Cyber Coordination Centre’ – better known as ‘GC3’ is bringing together a community of cyber defenders from across government…

    …sharing best practice…

    … and showing that a “whole of government approach” is not a slogan, it’s a reality.

    Working together with the National Cyber Advisory Board… (which I Chair)…

    …and of course the National Cyber Security Centre.

    All of you play a crucial role in iterating the strategy…

    … and ensuring it is implemented right across Government.

    Your work never stops… because the risk of attack never stops.

    The threats we face are increasing and the nature of those threats is evolving.

    Technologies are developing at an exponential rate…

    …and have lowered the bar for hostile actors – states and criminals.

    The biggest cyber threats are not just to our public services but the democratic means by which we deliver them.

    Some states are likely to be harnessing significantly more sophisticated technology to sow confusion and dissension and chaos in our society.

    Malicious actors continue to target high profile people within the political process.

    This is not an abstract possibility. We have already seen it…

    In Ukraine – with deep-fakes of President Zelensky…

    In the US – where Iranian hackers have been indicted for undermining voter confidence and sowing discord…

    And here in the UK – with our Electoral Commission targeted by a complex cyber attack.

    As I warned at CYBERUK in Belfast in April…

    …the greatest risks still emanate from the “usual suspects”…

    …China, Iran, North Korea, and Russia.

    But they are increasingly using ‘Wagner-style’ sub-state hackers to do their dirty work.

    Today in concert with our Five Eyes and Euro-Atlantic partners….

    I can tell you that a unit within the Russian Federal Security Service, known as Centre 18, has been behind sustained hostile cyber operations…

    …aimed at interfering in parts of the UK’s democratic processes…

    This has included targeting members of parliament…

    …Civil servants, think tanks, journalists, and NGOs…

    …through a group commonly known as Star Blizzard.

    This group, operated by FSB officers, has also selectively leaked and amplified information designed to undermined trust in politics, both in the UK and in like minded states.

    A senior representative of the Russian government has been summoned to the Foreign Office this morning and appropriate sanctions have been levelled.

    Our political processes and institutions will continue to endure in spite of these attacks.

    But they serve to prove that the cyber threat posed by the Russian Intelligence Services is real and serious.

    It is a stark reminder that…

    as we in government develop our capabilities…

    …so do our adversaries, and those who do their bidding.

    We are in a cyberspace race…

    …them – to develop the tools to do us harm…

    …us – to build the defences needed to protect against their attacks.

    Next year, 3 billion people in 40 countries will head to the polls …

    … and it is a fact that hostile state actors will continue to seek to undermine these collective expressions of democracy…

    …because they fear the freedoms they represent.

    We must – all of us – do all we can to resist.

    There are two main ways in which we can get ahead:

    Strengthening our cyber security systems…

    …and improving our skills.

    First, our systems.

    It wasn’t that long ago that the government was still using fax machines.

    I worked for the administration that helped to bring Whitehall into the digital age…

    …and made our services “digital by default”.

    The challenge is to make those digital systems “secure by design”…and to embed effective cyber security practices into our digital delivery.

    That’s why I am announcing today that we will make security everyone’s responsibility…

    …and make “secure by design” mandatory for central government organisations.

    This approach is already inspiring our partners around the world…

    …and, like our earlier digital revolution, is likely to be emulated around the world.

    Your role in embedding this approach at home will be crucial.

    Then there is the question of skills.

    In this room we have a wealth of deep technical expertise…

    …and we have the ability to share and collaborate with our international partners.

    But we need the experts of the future to be coming up, through that pipeline, to meet the challenges of the future.

    In the UK, as around the world, the shortage of cyber skills affects both the public and private sectors.

    It is estimated that we have a shortfall of around 14,000 professionals….

    …and that shortfall is particularly stark in the public sector.

    As one of the largest employers of cyber security experts, the government’s actions can make a real difference to the makeup of the national profession.

    So we have launched apprenticeship and fast stream programmes focused specifically on finding and developing  cyber talent.

    This is the new frontline.

    And we must form a united front…

    …government, business, academia, individuals, all coming together to pre-empt and ward off these risks.

    Not just “whole of government” – but “whole of society”.

    It is what we have that our adversaries and their agents lack: unity.

    And there are huge opportunities in that…

    …particularly for our entrepreneurs and innovators.

    They will develop the defensive technologies that will protect not just this country… but the world.

    Britain has the opportunity to lead … in tech, in AI and in cyber…

    …because the best place in the world to do business must also be the safest place in the world to do business…

    …and together we can make that a reality.

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : More lawyers sought to stop domestic abusers interrogating victims [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : More lawyers sought to stop domestic abusers interrogating victims [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Justice on 7 December 2023.

    More legal professionals are being encouraged to help prevent domestic abusers cross-examining their victims in court with a new expenses policy launched today ( 7 December 2023).

    • abusers banned from cross-examining victims under Domestic Abuse Act
    • hundreds of independent lawyers already signed up to take on this role instead
    • new expenses policy to help more sign up and attend courts across the country

    Hundreds of lawyers signed up to be Qualified Legal Representatives after the landmark Domestic Abuse Act banned abusers from interrogating their victims in family and civil courts.

    Cross-examination is, instead, carried out by these court-appointed legal professionals, to ensure that justice is done fairly for both sides and reduce the risk of victims being retraumatised.

    To encourage more lawyers to join, they will now be able to claim for travel to hearings up and down the country. Previously no expenses were available but lawyers will now be able to claim up to £180 for their travel and up to £161 per day for other expenses, including hotel stays and food.

    Minister for Victims and Safeguarding, Laura Farris, said:

    It takes unimaginable strength to bring your abuser to court which is why our Domestic Abuse Act provides vital protections, preventing vile ex-partners from cross-examining those they have tormented.

    Today’s changes will incentivise more legal professionals to take up these important roles ensuring no victim feels unsafe in the pursuit of justice.

    Domestic Abuse Commissioner, Nicole Jacobs, said:

    In my Family Court report I called for greater funding for the Qualified Legal Representative scheme, and I am delighted that government have committed to this today.

    I hope to see an uptake following this announcement, and look forward to continuing my work with government to improve the Family Court’s response to domestic abuse.

    The measures in the Act followed concerns that domestic abuse perpetrators were using the process as a means of extending their abuse and victims were being retraumatised by their experiences in family and civil court.

    Full details of the expenses policy will be set out in guidance when the policy comes into force on 2 January 2024.

    To make it as easy as possible for domestic abuse victims to bring their attackers to court, the government has pledged an additional £25 million per year to expand legal aid so victims on universal credit seeking a protective order for themselves or their children against their attackers can access legal aid funding without facing a means test.

    This followed recommendations made by the ‘Harm Panel’ to better safeguard vulnerable people against domestic abuse in family courts. Other changes the government has introduced in response to the report include:

    • pioneering pilot at family courts in North Wales and Dorset to improve information sharing between agencies such as the police, local authorities and the courts and give a greater voice to children at every stage of the process.
    • automatic special measures for victims such as protective screens and giving evidence via video link
    • clarifying the law on ‘barring orders’, to prevent perpetrators from bringing their ex-partners back to court, which can be used as a form of continuing domestic abuse.

    Notes to editors

  • PRESS RELEASE : Recreational fishing for Atlantic bluefin tuna set to start in English waters next year [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Recreational fishing for Atlantic bluefin tuna set to start in English waters next year [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs on 7 December 2023.

    New permitting regimes for a recreational catch and release fisheries in UK waters expected to be in place by summer.

    Recreational anglers will have broader access to a catch-and-release Atlantic bluefin tuna fishery in English waters, the government has announced today (Thursday 7 December).

    Responding to overwhelming support for proposals in a consultation, Defra has confirmed that it will introduce legislation in the spring to establish permitting regimes for the recreational targeting of bluefin tuna.

    This will mean that the English fishery should open from summer 2024, supporting skippers and helping to bring more tourists to coastal communities.

    The opening of the fishery has been made possible following the UK’s exit from the EU, with the establishment of UK-specific quota for bluefin tuna opening opportunities to manage the species sustainably outside the EU.

    Data from the fishery will be used to improve monitoring of bluefin tuna populations and ensure that the species is managed in English waters in a sustainable manner.

    Fisheries Minister Mark Spencer said:

    “This announcement has been made possible following the UK’s exit from the EU and follows overwhelming support for our proposal across the fishing industry and environmental groups.

    “It will bring social and economic benefits to the fishing industry and coastal communities, whilst ensuring the ongoing sustainable management of Atlantic bluefin tuna.”

    The announcement also follows the success of the catch-and-release (CHART) tagging programmes, delivered by the Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science, Swansea University and the Agri-Food and Biosciences Institute, which have allowed some recreational anglers to target bluefin tuna for the last three years.

    Following the success of CHART, a formal consultation was held between July and September 2023 to gather views on the design for a permitting regime to enable the opening of catch-and-release recreational fisheries for bluefin tuna in UK waters. Stakeholders were asked for views on the key principles for the design of permitting regimes, the level of interest and the social and economic benefits the fishery could bring.

    Stakeholders gave overwhelming support for the proposals in the consultation, which included an outline of the design of new permitting regimes for the recreational targeting of bluefin tuna in the UK and an outline of Defra’s operational approach to implementing the English fishery.

    Each UK fisheries administration will determine if and when to introduce a bluefin tuna catch-and-release recreational fishery in its waters. Defra intends to open a catch-and-release fishery for bluefin tuna in English waters in 2024.

    Defra is currently trialling a separate commercial fishery for bluefin tuna. This trial will run until 31 December 2023.