Tag: 2024

  • PRESS RELEASE : Government wins landmark case against freeholder owned by multibillion pound railway pension fund [May 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Government wins landmark case against freeholder owned by multibillion pound railway pension fund [May 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities on 9 May 2024.

    The Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities has won a landmark legal challenge against freeholder Grey GR.

    • Court rules in favour of government in legal case forcing freeholder Grey GR, owned by Railpen, to fix safety issues at Vista Tower
    • Judgment gives tower residents assurance through the Court that their homes will be made safe without further delay
    • The Vista Tower case was the first legal action brought by the Government under powers introduced through the Building Safety Act

    The Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities has won a landmark legal challenge against freeholder Grey GR forcing it to fix serious building safety issues in Vista Tower in Stevenage.

    Legal action was launched by the Government against Grey GR in October 2022 following unacceptable delays in fixing multiple serious fire safety issues, first identified in the building in 2019.

    Grey GR is ultimately owned by Railpen, a scheme that manages £34bn in assets.

    Following the trial in March, the Court has decided in favour of the Government and will issue a Remediation Order imposing a legally binding requirement on Grey GR to fix building safety issues within a mandated timeframe.

    Levelling Up Secretary Michael Gove said:

    Leaseholders have lived with uncertainty for far too long while Grey GR delayed essential works to make homes safe. This decision is a victory for leaseholders in Vista Tower and across the country.

    It is hugely disappointing that Railpen – the ultimate owner of Grey GR and who manage £34bn in ‘assets’ – has kept leaseholders in limbo in this way. Railway workers with their pensions invested in this fund, as well as innocent leaseholders, deserve better.

    This court case should serve as a warning to all building owners. If you fail to fix your unsafe buildings and ensure the safety of residents, we will see you in court. We will not stop until we secure justice for leaseholders.

    Sophie Bichener, leaseholder in Vista Tower said:

    I am very pleased to see this remediation order has been made. This gives leaseholders the reassurance we deserve and is the closest we have been to regaining our freedom after what has been an extremely difficult few years.

    We thank the Secretary of State for bringing this remediation order – it will have a huge impact on our lives and we hope our involvement in this case will bring hope to many others who are waiting for their freeholders to do the right thing and make their homes a safe place to live too.

    The Vista Tower case was the first legal action brought by the Government under robust new powers introduced through the Building Safety Act 2022.

    Following commencement of legal action, Grey started work on Vista Tower in January 2024. The Remediation Order will provide an exact date by which the work must be completed or Grey could face sanction by the Court.

    The Government is also seeking remediation orders on a further five Grey GR buildings that have or will be going to trial over the next year. This includes The Chocolate Box in Bournemouth where, as a result of government legal action, Grey has now started remediation works.

    The Government has also already secured four remediation orders against freeholder Wallace Estates, benefitting approximately 400 leaseholders that had faced delays to remediation.

    Councils, fire and rescue services and the Building Safety Regulator all have powers under the Building Safety Act to take enforcement action against building owners not complying with their obligations and discharging their responsibilities to leaseholders.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Report by the Head of the OSCE Mission in Kosovo – UK response [May 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Report by the Head of the OSCE Mission in Kosovo – UK response [May 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 9 May 2024.

    Ambassador Holland welcomes the Report by the Head of the OSCE Mission in Kosovo, and the work of the Mission over the last six months across the three pillars of its mandate.

    Firstly, I would like to welcome Ambassador Davenport back to the Permanent Council for the final time as Head of the OSCE Mission in Kosovo. I would like to express my sincere gratitude for your expert leadership of the Mission over the last three (plus) years, during such a pivotal time for the Western Balkans region. Thank you, as always, for the written report on the activities of the Mission over the last six months, and the comprehensive presentation this morning.

    Madam Chair, the United Kingdom shares the assessment in the Report of the concerning lack of progress towards Kosovo-Serbia normalisation, which continues to have negative implications for stability in the Western Balkans.

    While the UK welcomes the progress in December on the energy roadmap and licence plates, many fundamental issues remain unresolved. We encourage both sides to engage constructively in the EU-facilitated Dialogue and to deliver on their respective obligations, including on establishing an Association of Serb-Majority Municipalities.

    The UK will continue to encourage Kosovo to ensure that non-majority communities can play a full and equal role in the country’s future. In this respect, we urge Kosovo and Serbia to continue to work with the EU Special Representative to agree technical solutions to the implementation of the new regulation on foreign currencies.

    We are also clear that Kosovo Serbs should be free to exercise their democratic rights and further integrate into Kosovan society. The recent boycott of the mayoral recall votes in the four northern municipalities is a step away from securing the representative democracy that the local population deserves, and we encourage Kosovo Serbs to return to institutions and serve their communities.

    The UK reiterates the importance of ensuring justice and accountability for all acts of violence. We call on Serbia to cooperate fully with efforts to hold to account those responsible for the shocking attacks in Banjska last September, and on NATO KFOR troops last May. We also urge Serbia to take action to tackle cross-border arms smuggling.

    In this context, the UK commends the work of the OSCE Mission during the last six months across the three core pillars of its mandate. In particular, we highly appreciate the Mission’s continued prioritisation of monitoring and early warning functions in light of the fragile security situation in northern Kosovo.

    We value the Mission’s ongoing support to government institutions on human rights and inter-community relations, including recent support to delivery of the Kosovo government’s Strategy for the Protection and Promotion of the Rights of Communities. We also welcome the Mission’s continued work to strengthen institutional cooperation in tackling domestic and gender-based violence.

    Madam Chair, the United Kingdom will remain a long-standing and strong supporter of Kosovo as an independent and sovereign state. We remain committed to supporting an inclusive, diverse and multi-ethnic democracy in Kosovo, and its full participation in the international system.

    I would like to end by again thanking you, Ambassador Davenport, for your leadership of the OSCE Mission in Kosovo – both during this reporting period, and throughout the last three years. I commend your team’s expertise, engagement and hard work, and I wish you well in your future endeavours.

    Thank you, Madam Chair.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Government to fund 180 local projects to boost water quality [May 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Government to fund 180 local projects to boost water quality [May 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs on 9 May 2024.

    £11.5m extra funding announced to boost tree planting, habitat restoration and flood management across England through the Water Environment Improvement Fund.

    • Millions of pounds of extra funding to boost tree planting, habitat restoration and flood management
    • Expanded fund to help plant thousands of trees and improve the quality of rivers up and down the country
    • 180 projects set to benefit, including in York, Lincolnshire and North Devon

    Local projects across England will be able to clean up lakes and rivers, protect communities from flooding and plant thousands of trees, thanks to £11.5 million of government support.

    The funding, which includes money from the Nature for Climate Fund, will also unlock up to an extra £11.5 million from organisations including the National Lottery, local rivers and wildlife trusts or from private investment, bringing the total possible investment to £23 million.

    This uplift will be allocated to local catchment partnerships through the Water Environment Improvement Fund (WEIF) supporting 180 local projects across England. Projects to be funded this year include:

    • The Limestone Becks River Restoration project in Lincolnshire, which will provide improved habitats for wildlife from water voles to invertebrates;
    • Phase II of The York Urban Becks project, which aims to create a more natural river course and support local habitats; and
    • The Woods for Devon project, creating woodlands to improve water quality, support wildlife, and carbon capture.

    Overall, the additional funding is expected to lead to an additional 300km of English rivers being protected and improved. It will also support the creation and restoration of around 160 hectares of inland and coastal waters.

    Catchment partnerships take a collaborative approach to improving river quality and enhancing biodiversity at a catchment level, using local knowledge and expertise.

    They bring together government, local authorities, landowners, local eNGOs, regulators, farmers, academia, local businesses and water companies.

    Delivered by the Environment Agency, the Water Environment Improvement Fund (WEIF) was established in 2016 and funds projects that deliver on the government commitments set out in the Plan for Water to ensure clean and plentiful water for the future.

    Water Minister Robbie Moore MP said:

    These local catchment partnerships do excellent work and I am pleased that we are able to give this additional funding to help deliver projects where rivers need it most.

    It builds on recent measures to clean up our rivers including consulting on a ban on water company bonuses, launching a new Water Restoration Fund to reinvest water company fines and penalties back into the water environment, and a fourfold increase in Environment Agency inspections.

    Chair of the Environment Agency Alan Lovell said:

    We welcome this uplift in funding for local projects across the country which will help us work collaboratively with a range of organisations and stakeholders to achieve our ambitions for the water environment.

    It builds on the steps we are taking to improve water quality and protect the environment, including expanding our specialised workforce and increase water company inspections this year, along with our powers to levy uncapped penalties on those who pollute our waterways.

    CEO of The Rivers Trust Mark Lloyd said:

    Increased funding is a very important ingredient in the recipe for successfully restoring our rivers to good health and so this is welcome news.

    We are increasingly seeing the private and philanthropic sectors getting involved to match this kind of funding which enables this government support to go even further, enabling us to have a greater positive impact in more places.

    In recent years, the Fund has supported a number of projects across the country. In 2021-22, £888,000 was given to the Developing the Natural Aire project in Yorkshire to install fish passes. It resulted in 50km of habitat being reconnected, 8,410 trees being planted and delivered 220 volunteer days and 123 community events.

    The £11.5 million funding uplift is in addition to the existing £3 million the Environment Agency has already been allocated for this financial year for local project to improve water quality.

    Today’s announcement follows recent measures delivered to improve the water environment, including:

    • A new £11m Water Restoration Fund to reinvest water company fines and penalties back into the water environment.
    • Requiring companies to monitor 100% of storm overflows in England – providing a complete picture of when and where sewage spills happen.
    • Removing the cap on civil penalties for water companies and broadening their scope so swifter action can be taken against those who pollute our waterways.
    • Requiring the largest infrastructure programme in water company history – £60 billion over 25 years – to revamp ageing assets and reduce the number of sewage spills by hundreds of thousands every year.
    • Increasing protections for coastal and estuarine waters by expanding the Storm Overflow Discharge Reduction Plan, prioritising bathing waters, sites of special scientific interest and shellfish waters.
    • targeted plan to better preserve and protect the River Wye, including £35m in funding.
    • Speeding up the process of building key water supply infrastructure, including more reservoirs and water transfer schemes.
  • John Glen – 2024 Keynote Speech at Reform’s ‘Reimagining Whitehall’ Conference

    John Glen – 2024 Keynote Speech at Reform’s ‘Reimagining Whitehall’ Conference

    The speech made by John Glen, the Cabinet Office Minister, at BT Tower on 9 May 2024.

    Good morning, everyone, it’s a pleasure to be here with you all.

    I would like to thank Reform for hosting this conference today.

    And I am grateful, too, for Reform’s thought-provoking ‘Making the Grade’ Report published last week – I was fortunate enough to receive it a few days in advance.

    It sets out a series of radical recommendations – a couple stand out to me, like establishing a mid-career fast stream and overhauling the methods by which we assess candidates, all of which I am keen to investigate further.

    But I was particularly taken with your description of the Civil Service having ‘a people problem’, and it’s what I would like to touch on today as we “reimagine Whitehall”.

    Indeed, if we really want to reimagine Whitehall, to make it more efficient to deliver better services for the public then we must focus on the half a million people who make up our Civil Service.

    Because it’s not the buildings that make up Whitehall, or even the physical location itself – it is the people.

    And following our Places for Growth programme, these people are now spread across the United Kingdom. With the relocation of 18,283 roles out of London, a civil servant can now work their entire career without ever having to step foot into Whitehall.

    When I spoke about this in January at the Institute for Government, I was clear that we must increase productivity in the Civil Service. Part of that work is, undoubtedly, about getting the Civil Service headcount under control.

    The Chancellor has been clear about getting it back to pre-pandemic levels. Doing so will allow us to reallocate resources to our most pressing priorities, like national security.

    But the heart of this is to get the most out of our people and deliver more with what we have.

    So, I am clear that we should have a Civil Service where the most skilled, innovative and inspired minds are called to serve, to stay and to be successful and fulfilled.

    There are three main areas of focus.

    First, performance – specifically making sure excellent performance is encouraged and poor performers are managed appropriately.

    Second, recruitment – attracting the brightest minds from the broadest backgrounds to public service.

    And third, skills – making sure the Civil Service is fit to fight the challenges we face, like the threat of climate change or cyber attacks.

    And I have seen in the Cabinet Office the transformation of our capabilities to respond urgently to the challenges around us.

    So, starting with performance.

    Now, I know from my first hand experience that there are many talented, high performing, highly motivated civil servants who work incredibly hard to serve the public each and every day.

    And for the last seven years as a minister, I’ve relied on them day in, day out – and as five years as a PPS, I observed them very closely.

    But too often, high performance doesn’t get recognised, rewarded or incentivised properly.

    The National Audit Office’s recent ‘Civil Service Workforce’ report highlighted that less than 1% of the total Civil Service pay in 21 – 22 was performance-related.

    We’re overlooking a crucial opportunity here.

    So let me be clear, I’m not advocating for hefty bonuses for civil servants. However, our current pay structure and the absence of recognition for outstanding performance can breed significant issues.

    It not only drives talented individuals towards the private sector for better compensation, but it can also fuel grade inflation, where promotions are used to circumvent government-wide pay freezes.

    This can result in a loss of expertise and excellence where it’s most needed.

    So, reimagining how we reward performance could unlock unprecedented levels of quality work within the Civil Service, sharpen our policy focus and ensure that taxpayers see tangible improvements.

    That’s why I am pleased to announce that we are developing a model of milestone based pay for some specialist functions.

    Such a system would allow departments to award performance based incentives for the delivery of specific milestones agreed with ministers.

    As a first step, we will pilot this with our most senior grades, and I hope that this will prove to be a first step in moving towards a wider system of performance related pay.

    Of course, a crucial part of ensuring a high performing Civil Service is tackling poor performance when it arises.

    From my experience in the private sector – I am sure many here would agree – there are no qualms with rooting out poor performance. Either you’re in step or you’re out of line.

    I feel this acutely, because we must never forget – as politicians – that we are stewards of taxpayers’ money, and we have a duty to do all we can to allocate efficiently.

    But we know it’s not always like that in the Civil Service. Performance management processes can be long and complicated and, frankly, that complexity means that many don’t engage at all.

    In fact, it can be all too easy for leaders to let people move to another team, to let the poor performer become someone else’s problem.

    Now, it’s understandable behaviour but it serves no one well.

    Civil servants recognise this as a problem – indeed Reform’s recent report highlighted their deep frustration with the survey work they undertook.

    We simply cannot allow poor performers to go on hiding in plain sight, dragging down their hard working colleagues and hindering  progress.

    I’m not attacking anyone – I’m just stating plainly the reality of what isn’t working.

    That’s why, during my speech in January, I announced that we were reviewing the performance management regime, in order to ensure staff are supported to tackle poor performance.

    And as part of this, we are looking at options to strengthen exit processes around capability issues.

    We’ve already started this work with our most senior civil servants.

    In fact, we’re gathering evidence from all departments about how they have implemented performance arrangements for their senior leaders. Including, how they set their strategic policy objectives, how they lay down what they expect from their people and how they tackle poor performance.

    I’m pleased to say that good progress is being made and should conclude next month.

    We are also making sure that the system which our departmental leaders use to manage their staff is up to scratch by reviewing the Civil Service Performance Management Framework.

    It’s a framework that is used across the Civil Service, and its flexibility means it suits all different departments. But my concern is how it is being used.

    The Cabinet Office does not always – or, perhaps, rarely – have the force to mandate each Department’s behaviour, but we can and will guide it with the soundest frameworks and advice.

    That’s why data is being collected from all government departments to assess how effective the approach actually is, and how consistently it deals with poor performance effectively.

    By autumn, we will have a better understanding of how these tools are being used, we will then act accordingly and if required, make radical changes ahead of the next performance year.

    Next, recruitment.

    Previously, I spoke about the difficulties many new civil servants encountered in their first weeks in the role.

    The timeline from that vacancy arising to a new civil servant being sat at their desk is – frankly – just too long.

    I’m pleased to say today that we have made huge progress in this area, using automation to replicate manual tasks at a speed 84% faster than a human equivalent with reduced errors, freeing up time for civil servants to be getting on with their day jobs.

    While I’m immensely pleased by these achievements, the long-term effects of an overly lengthy recruitment process can leave key posts unfilled. Of course some will walk away from that journey, creating a strong incentive to bypass external recruitment competitions or even forgo competitions altogether to swiftly appoint an internal candidate. Even if they are not ideally suited to the position.

    Correcting this is crucial, especially when it comes to our senior roles.

    Many of our senior civil servants rise to that status without ever leaving the Civil Service ranks. This is the type of career trajectory you can plot in the public sector if you work hard.

    The trouble with such a rise is that we are in danger of group-think:  by remaining the same, we do the same things.

    That’s why, in May 2022, we reinforced the External by Default policy, to ensure all senior civil service roles were open to external candidates unless agreed otherwise by a Minister.

    We have had some tremendous success here, and thanks to this policy, we now see over 93% of permanent Director and Deputy Director roles open to the external market.

    But, as with so many things, what is a great start, we need to go further, because this figure drops to just over 61% when including temporary roles.

    So, I’m pleased to say today that we’ve asked the Civil Service Commission to review how the external by default policy is applied, so that we can reinforce this ambition.

    And I would like to extend this principle beyond senior grades.

    Opening up recruitment in this way means we can benefit from the skills and experience of those internally, but also from the wider public, voluntary and private sector.

    I want to create conditions that allow for civil servants to leave and gain skills outside the Civil Service but return efficiently and enriched at a later date – and for people with expert skills to join, whilst leaving open opportunities to return to outside sectors further down the line.

    Creating a more flexible and agile workforce matters greatly if we are going to instil technical innovation that we need in the civil service, where we really need ground-breaking leadership to bring the public sector in line with the tech sector.

    It is no secret that we have big ambitions to make the Civil Service a world-leader in technology-led public services, I believe that Dr. Laura Gilbert and Mike Potter will be delving into this in one of your panels later.

    And in this area many ways we are making progress.

    We’ve seen success here in lower grades, through our digital apprenticeships and talent programmes.

    But to turn that vision into reality, we need leadership from outside the Civil Service, we need beacons of innovation – setting an example of the type of tech-focused work which we need to adopt across Whitehall.

    And that’s something which is highlighted in Reform’s report, too, specifically how specialist roles need their own system of reward.

    That’s why I am announcing today – as part of the Senior Civil Service Strategy – that we will be developing a recruitment pathway specifically for experienced specialist talent to join the Civil Service.

    This new pathway would recruit specialists at a senior level, pay them competitively, on the right terms and conditions, so they can have real influence and drive innovation.

    But it will free them from some of the responsibilities that would come with a senior role in the civil service, such as line management, so they can remain solely focused on driving transformation.

    I look forward to updating more on this soon.

    Finally,  I would like to turn to skills.

    Of course, we cannot just rely on our innovative experts to ensure the Civil Service keeps pace with the rapid advances in technology we are witnessing.

    To get the very best from our public services now and into the future, we need a Civil Service that is adept, agile and resilient.

    The capabilities and skills we valued in the past are changing, and they’re changing rapidly.

    Now more than ever before we need to embrace people’s potential, and that’s why we’re focusing on our peoples’ skills.

    Not only does investing in skills increase retention and staff motivation, it also ensures that civil servants can adapt to the changing world of work.

    We need to Invest in leadership and management skills so that organisations are agile in the face of rapid change – and in digital and data skills, so that our people are confident in designing and using efficient processes that deploy new technologies

    And we must keep investing in professional skills – commercial, financial, analytical – to boost productivity and to deliver more efficient public services to our citizens.

    That’s why we’re investing in a new digital platform to make it easier for civil servants to identify and access the right training, and are working on a skills plan and new curriculum that will develop the skills we need for the future with training delivered around the country, supporting our places for growth agenda.

    It’s why we are developing digital and data skills to make the best of new technology.

    We also need to look at our organisational structures and whether these are setting us up for success.

    Within the Civil Service, managers oversee too few staff, leading to micromanagement, disempowerment and inefficiency.

    Conversely, there’s an excessive number of hierarchical levels, resulting in bureaucratic bottlenecks and delayed decision-making.

    I’m determined to address these issues by broadening management spans and flattening organisational structures to promote agility and responsiveness.

    Ladies and gentlemen, if we want to reimagine Whitehall, that act starts and ends with our civil servants.

    It’s about getting the right people in the right job, and enabling them to fulfil their potential.

    Across every department, every function and profession and across the United Kingdom.

    I’m pleased to have set out today the real progress we have made since I last spoke on this in January.

    But, I know we can and must do more.

    We need to embrace innovation.

    Make sure that skills keep pace with that innovation.

    All driven by inspiring leaders to make these ambitions a reality.

    I know the Civil Service can be a universally high achieving organisation, I also know we’re capable of so much more.

    So my message is: let’s realise the full potential of our workforce and as a consequence provide better public services to those we serve. Thank you very much.

  • PRESS RELEASE : International law must be “fit for the challenges of 21st century” [May 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : International law must be “fit for the challenges of 21st century” [May 2024]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Justice on 9 May 2024.

    International law must remain in lockstep with the changing 21st century world and the needs of citizens or face irrelevance the Lord Chancellor, Alex Chalk, will stress to the G7’s justice leaders today (9 May 2024).

    • Lord Chancellor will warn that international law must be “a living instrument”, and “not suspended in time”
    • he will also outline the government’s lawful approach to combating illegal migration
    • it comes as Justice Ministers attend G7 forum to discuss increasing issues relating to law and justice

    At the G7 Justice Ministers’ Meeting in Venice, the Lord Chancellor will acknowledge the unique value the forum brings in tackling the issues of law and justice currently facing the international system.

    Speaking at the meeting, the Lord Chancellor is expected to say:

    The international rules-based order, and so many of the legal frameworks we rely on for our peace and prosperity, emerged out of the ashes of World War II –- a completely different world from the one we live in today. Our nations are now grappling with new, thorny issues, from how to respond to mass migration as millions march across the world to the spectre of climate change, and the advent of new technologies, like AI, with all the opportunities and risks they bring.

    If the law is to be respected by our citizens, it must deliver for them. Its frameworks must be capable of responding to 21st century problems. To be irrelevant is to be ignored, or still worse held in contempt – which risks damaging our freedom, safety and security.

    The Lord Chancellor is expected to discuss the UK government’s priorities on illegal migration and demonstrate the UK’s action as proportionate and necessary:

    The Rule of Law isn’t just about ensuring all are equal before the law – important though that is. It also means ensuring that those who don’t abide by the law aren’t materially advantaged by doing so. Illegality must have consequences.

    The UK is not alone in facing these pressures – all of us are. Tackling smuggling gangs requires coordinated sustained international cooperation, including targeted upstream intervention.

    He will conclude by outlining how the rule of law must help countries to protect their borders and will describe the law as a “living instrument” which must be up to date and tailored to reality:

    There will be some who take the view that the law should be no impediment to tackling irregular migration. But it is important for all of us here to be the voice that says “no”. We must uphold the rule of law, but it can also help us to protect our borders if we approach it in the right way.

    The law is a living instrument, not suspended in time. It must underpin our citizens’ rights and freedoms, and to do that, it must also be up to date, and tailored to reality.

    As a group of nations, it’s right that we should consider together the direction of travel for international law, to reinvigorate the rules-based order, so that it is fit to respond to the challenges of the 21st century.

    The remarks come as the Lord Chancellor attends the G7 in Venice over the 9 and 10 May. Whilst there, he will meet with his counterparts to discuss key issues facing the world – including continued support for Ukraine, and how to best tackle illegal migration and drug trafficking.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Reforms piloted to link pay to results in the Civil Service [May 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Reforms piloted to link pay to results in the Civil Service [May 2024]

    The press release issued by the Cabinet Office on 9 May 2024.

    New measures to improve performance and ensure the civil service can recruit and retain the best talent were announced this morning by Minister for the Cabinet Office, John Glen at the Reform Think Tank Annual Conference at the BT Tower in London.

    New measures to improve performance and ensure the civil service can recruit and retain the best talent were announced this morning by Minister for the Cabinet Office, John Glen at the Reform Think Tank Annual Conference at the BT Tower in London.

    In the second of a series of speeches on Civil Service reform, the Minister set his focus on performance management, attracting the best from the private sector and ensuring that Civil Servants are backed to deliver for the British public.

    Plans to encourage and reward those that deliver high quality public services were unveiled with a new pilot to test milestone based pay – where certain Senior Civil Service (SCS) staff would be rewarded for delivery of pre-agreed milestones for projects they manage.

    The plans will ensure that pay and reward is more closely aligned to how staff are performing and delivering for the public.

    This new approach would also support recruitment in priority areas – making reward packages more attractive to potential new hires, without increasing basic salaries to ensure public resources are spent carefully.

    It also aims to encourage SCS staff to remain in post for the whole of the project, helping to tackle Whitehall churn at the senior level, and ensuring that there is full accountability for a project’s long term results.

    The new system is being delivered at pace and pilots will begin in the Summer.

    The Government has set out its plan to deliver on people’s priorities, and today’s announcement will deliver on these.

    Minister for the Cabinet Office John Glen said:

    To build a world-class Civil Service that truly delivers for the public, we must start with the people.

    We need to recruit the brightest minds, ensure they have the tools and skills to succeed, and take swift action when performance falls below expected standards.

    The measures I’ve set out today will help to meet today’s productivity challenge head on, building a resilient and high performing Civil Service that is fit for the future.

    The Minister also announced a review of the external-by-default recruitment policy for SCS roles, which ensures that all senior roles are open to external applicants unless there is a genuine reason not to do so – enhancing competition.

    The Civil Service Commission will monitor data on SCS recruitment, to ensure the policy is being implemented and that any exceptions are properly justified and do not undermine efforts to bring external expertise into senior leadership roles.

    Building on plans unveiled in his speech in January to tackle poor performance, the Minister announced that work to improve the performance management system for SCS staff is well underway and will conclude in June.

    Work has also begun to gather data and insight across departments on the current performance management situation across the Civil Service, with a view to looking at what works, and crucially where changes are needed.

    Today’s announcement builds on measures set out by the Chancellor to increase Government efficiency by capping Civil Service headcount and reducing staffing numbers to pre-pandemic levels by the end of the next spending review.

    This will enable the government to channel resources where they are most needed, for example increasing defence spending and sending vital aid to Ukraine.

    Additional measures and updates announced today include:

    • Part of the SCS Strategy, a new pathway will be delivered to recruit external technical specialists at a senior level to the Civil Service. Those recruited under the pathway will not have all the same responsibilities that come with a traditional SCS level role, including line management responsibilities. This is designed to ensure their focus remains on driving innovation and transformation.
    • Work to automate recruitment processes has shown promising results, with over 2400 working hours saved since some pre-employment processes were automated, and more identified to be automated in the next 12 months.
  • PRESS RELEASE : Russia must end the unlawful detention of our OSCE colleagues in Ukraine: UK statement to OSCE [May 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Russia must end the unlawful detention of our OSCE colleagues in Ukraine: UK statement to OSCE [May 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 9 May 2024.

    Ambassador Holland calls on Russia to release members of the OSCE Special Monitoring Mission who have been unlawfully detained in Ukraine for more than two years.

    Thank you, Madam Chair. It is with regret that we feel compelled, once again, to raise the cases of Vadym Golda, Maxim Petrov, and Dmytro Shabanov. All three are members of the Special Monitoring Mission in Ukraine (SMM) and have been unlawfully deprived of their liberty for more than two years by the Russian Federation and its proxies in Ukraine.

    The SMM was established in 2014 through a decision of this body. Its mandate was agreed by all participating States, including Russia. For eight years the SMM, through its monitoring and reporting, acted as the eyes and ears of the international community, giving us much needed insight on the security situation in Ukraine.

    In the years leading to Russia’s illegal full-scale invasion, independent and objective reporting of the SMM – which was provided equally to all participating States – was of significant value. It observed that an overwhelming majority of ceasefire violations took place in non-government-controlled areas of Ukraine. It observed advanced weaponry in these areas, weaponry that we know could only have been supplied by Russia. And it observed no unusual military build-up on the Ukrainian government-controlled side of the Line of Contact, demonstrating that Russia’s claims of a Ukrainian threat to the Donbas region were a fabricated pretext for Russia’s aggression.

    So, you can see why Russia feared the impartial and fact-based reporting of the SMM.  The truth was an inconvenience.

    So, over several years, Russia picked away at the ability of the SMM to operate; critically undermining the Mission’s freedom of movement and levelling unjustified criticisms.  Ultimately Russia was able to close down the SMM by blocking consensus on the extension of their mandate in the same way that it had closed down the Border Observation Mission.

    Madam Chair, my government has previously put on record our sincere gratitude to the brave women and men of the SMM in Ukraine. They performed their OSCE-mandated roles with integrity and professionalism. They did so despite the risks to their safety, a risk underlined by the tragic loss of our two late colleagues:  Joseph Stone and Marina Fenina.  We should all be proud of them.

    What none of us imagined was that our colleagues faced the risk of unlawful detention by the very people who asked them to do this difficult and dangerous job. Russia signed the SMM mandate, contributed to its operating costs and then betrayed their – and our – colleagues. It is truly shocking. The suffering that they and their loved ones are enduring remains a constant concern to us.

    Russia’s actions fit a pattern, one that was set out very clearly in the report by the latest Moscow Mechanism expert mission. This found that: Russia had detained thousands of Ukrainian civilians, cutting them off from access to, or communication with, their loved ones; detainees were often subjected to torture and other ill treatment; and, the Russian authorities were restricting access to lawyers and denying fair trials.

    As the expert mission noted “The continued detention of staff members of the OSCE SMM is incompatible with OSCE commitments”.

    Madam Chair, we continue to call on Russia to end its unlawful detention of our colleagues and all Ukrainian citizens it has illegally detained. Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Secretary of State visits Air Ambulance NI operational base [May 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Secretary of State visits Air Ambulance NI operational base [May 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department of Northern Ireland on 9 May 2024.

    The visit highlighted the crucial work the Air Ambulance carry out and how the UK Government can continue to support the charity.

    The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, Chris Heaton-Harris, has visited the Air Ambulance site in Lisburn to show the UK Government’s continuing support to this vital service.

    Along with touring the base, the Secretary of State met some of the HEMs crew members and was able to hear how the service has impacted the lives of local people and the generosity that keeps the charity going.

    The Air Ambulance works in partnership with Northern Ireland Ambulance Service (NIAS) to provide the Helicopter Emergency Medical Service (HEMS) for the region.

    The Secretary of State also heard how on average, every single day in Northern Ireland, two individuals find themselves in critical need of Air Ambulance Northern Ireland.

    Secretary of State Chis Heaton-Harris said:

    It has been a real privilege to visit the Air Ambulance site today and hear about the amazing work that is ongoing to help people all across Northern Ireland.

    Over 4,000 people have benefited from this service since it started in 2017, and that is thanks to the generosity and kindness of those who fundraise and donate.

    As the prime minister said during his trip here a few months ago, Northern Ireland faces a brighter future and today’s visit highlights the vital work that can be done when people work together.

    Ian Crowe, Joint Vice-Chair of Air Ambulance Northern Ireland

    Together with our Partners Northern Ireland Ambulance Service, we are delighted to welcome the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland to our operational base.

    It is only with continued support of our donors that we can continue to be there for every patient that needs the service.

  • Julia Lopez – 2024 Speech to the Digital Television Group Summit

    Julia Lopez – 2024 Speech to the Digital Television Group Summit

    The speech made by Julia Lopez, the Media Minister, at King’s Place in London on 9 May 2024.

    Thank you very much, Damian and thank you, Richard. It’s really great to be with you this morning, and I think it’s a testament to the reputation of the DTG that so much of the industry is represented here today, particularly on a rail strike day.

    Last time I was here I was heavily pregnant and now I’m just extremely tired.

    I know there’s a lot of excitement here in this room for the future of television and some anxiety too, and I suspect we’ll be hearing a lot during the summit about how new technology like IPTV and generative AI will support that.

    I think you’re right to be excited. If leveraged properly and responsibly, new technology offers us the opportunity to take our creativity to the next level – to make things that used to be difficult and frustrating so easy, and the impossible possible.

    The UK has the chance to be at the forefront of this technological revolution.

    With our world-class digital infrastructure…

    …top notch engineers, like you and data scientists…

    …and a set of creative industries impatient to innovate.

    In her speech to the Royal Television Society last year, the Culture Secretary Lucy Frazer promised to give you the support you need as a sector to navigate this changing world. Not just to survive the current wave of innovation, but to drive the next one.

    One advantage of being a joint Minister in both the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology and the Department for Culture, Media and Sport is that I get chance to be involved in and drive that support.

    So today I want to say a bit more about three of the remaining challenges you’ve told us about; how we as a Government are supporting you in meeting those challenges; and what we’re doing to make sure that audiences are at the heart of our plans for the future of television.

    The first challenge is one of uncertainty. Not just the usual worries about which programmes will do well, but a more fundamental challenge about the where, what and why of TV.

    The numbers speak for themselves. In the five years from 2017, the reach of broadcast TV fell from 91% to 79%, while the number of households subscribing to a video-on-demand service more than doubled.

    And I’ve seen that change in my years as the Media Minister going through the pandemic and seeing the challenges coming out of that.

    Of course such disruption isn’t new to this sector. The very existence of the DTG speaks to that, founded to help the industry navigate the arrival of DTT on the scene some thirty years ago.

    But it comes at a time of significant financial pressures, particularly for those reliant on TV advertising.

    In an industry experiencing near constant change, the important thing is that the sector is able to respond to that.

    Too often innovative products and services are held back by self appointed gatekeepers. And I understand the commercial imperatives that many of you are governed by.

    But the Government will continue to encourage long term thinking that recognises that, when it comes to innovation in TV, this doesn’t have to be a zero sum game.

    Because the sector benefits most when audiences are able to choose the product that works best for them – to vote with their remotes.

    I know this challenge is felt particularly acutely by our broadcasters.

    You are being asked to serve an ever wide variety in the ways we watch TV. At home, on the go; on the small screen and the big. High end drama and lean back daytime. We as viewers want it all.

    So we are pressing ahead with the pro-competitive interventions in both our Digital Markets and Media Bills.

    And we will continue to champion, in particular, the vital role that our public service broadcasters play in bringing high quality public service content to our screens.

    That’s updating our communications laws for the first time in two decades.

    The second challenge is one of outdated and inconsistent regulation.

    The message I hear from many of you is that you want a regulatory regime that is both fair but also consistent. One that encourages innovation – but gives audiences the confidence to adopt these new technologies.

    To the majority of viewers, TV is TV – and they would expect it to always have the same regulation and protections. But we all know, it doesn’t.

    Take, for example, Gordon Ramsey, a man known principally for two things: first being an award winning chef, and second, swearing a lot.

    When his show Hell’s Kitchen airs on ITV2, it has to comply with the broadcasting code, and it’s no great shock that ITV chooses to air new episodes after the watershed.

    But when ITV puts that previous episodes of the same show on their on-demand service, it doesn’t have to comply with that Code – and you can’t complain to Ofcom if you see something inappropriate.

    Thankfully ITV have nevertheless voluntarily put robust audience protection measures in place.

    From a compliance perspective, this is already starting to sound complicated. And that’s before we add in internet delivered television, like the Hell’s Kitchen FAST channel, which can be found on some smart TV’s electronic programme guides and broadcasts episodes “round the clock”.

    I am not sure everyone in this room, let alone most viewers could say with certainty whether that has to comply with the Broadcasting Code or not.

    It doesn’t, by the way – but the Homes under the Hammer FAST channel does.

    Updating our regulatory regime to embrace the new ways that content is being delivered is necessarily a long term project.

    But I’m pleased to say that we’re addressing two of the most pressing issues: the creation of a new Video-on-demand Code, through the Media Bill, that mainstream VoD services must comply with, and consulting on updating the boundaries of linear regulation by designating additional electronic programme guides.

    Together, these changes will give audiences more confidence in adopting new services, and give broadcasters the fair and level playing field they need to ensure that it is the best content that wins out.

    So you’ve got good products and robust regulation, but third and finally we need to decide – collectively – on the mechanics.

    How will audiences get their TV in the future? And that’s the question I want to turn to now.

    It seems clear from everything I’ve heard from the sector over the last year that IPTV is going to be a big part of the way we get our television in the future.

    At the heart of that future is a potentially amazing proposition for audiences:

    Many more programmes, broadcast in ultra high definition…

    …more features, better accessibility, greater personalisation…

    …and almost limitless choice, both live and on-demand.

    Is it any wonder that next year an estimated 99% of TVs sold will be internet enabled?

    As Minister for Digital Infrastructure, I’ve been doing everything I can to ensure that both our fixed and mobile networks are ready for those extra demands that this change will make on them.

    I am particularly pleased by the progress made over recent years to roll out gigabit-capable broadband and 5G mobile connectivity across the UK.

    Driving the deployment of fixed and wireless broadband is the  centrepiece of the government’s work.

    The pace of change is enormous. Working in partnership with industry and Ofcom, our policies have helped us collectively increase coverage of gigabit broadband to 82% – that’s up from just 6% in 2018.

    Of course, the opportunity presented by this investment hasn’t gone unnoticed. Both Sky and Virgin have launched subscription-based IP propositions – and they are joined by services like LG Channels, Samsung TV Plus, and – most recently – Freely.

    Free to view television, however delivered, is a really important part of our television landscape.

    We in Government want to encourage the sector to keep embracing innovation and technological development, but we’re not going to pull the rug from under the devoted audiences of Freeview channels.

    That’s why we’ve committed to the future of DTT until 2034.

    I know many of you will be interested in what happens at that point. And you’re looking to us to provide the answer.

    As the Culture Secretary has said: we will. But it’s not a decision we can or should take in isolation. We have to look at the evidence……not just what is happening now – but to look ahead to ten years’ time…

    …not just a simple dichotomy between DTT and IPTV – but the potential to enable audiences to choose between multiple competing platforms, just as they can now…

    …and not just what the government can do, but what industry can do as well.

    I am very grateful to Ofcom for their early work in this space, and we will be considering the conclusions of their call for evidence carefully.

    In parallel we have been working to identify and fill the emerging evidence gaps, by commissioning independent research on this topic.

    This is going to be published shortly, demonstrating that many of us are already using internet-based services on our TVs – whether we realise it or not…

    … that by 2040, 99% of homes will have an IP enabled TV…

    …and that, on current trends, the number of homes without access to IPTV will fall to one and a half million by 2035 – but this still represents 7% of homes.

    And as Richard said, we have to make sure that those audiences are not left behind.

    Now we in government want to help you take advantage of these changes.

    But we also have a responsibility to audiences – to ensure they continue to have access to reliable, free to view television in a format that’s familiar to them.

    And the further and faster the transformation, the stronger this responsibility becomes.

    So it’s clear we need to do more to understand what drives viewers’ decisions, and how we can help everyone to take advantage of these new technologies.

    Giving them not just the tools they need, but a compelling reason to make the leap. And supporting them if they don’t want to.

    This is something that industry, government and audiences will need to work together on – to ensure we collectively provide the best answer for your businesses and for the public.

    So I can announce today the launch of an audience engagement programme to ensure that audiences are at the heart of our plans.

    We will use this to engage audiences directly, understand their needs and preferences and make sure these are reflected as we develop policy.

    I want to hear from the sector too.

    So we’re going to be creating a new dedicated stakeholder forum, to support this project and ensure industry and audiences come together to deliver on the ambitions I’ve been discussing today.

    We hope this will ensure we hear voices from across this industry. We’ll be setting out more detail on both of these in due course.

    Because new ways of consuming TV should not come at the expense of those who still enjoy terrestrial television.

    I am proud of what we’ve already achieved as a Government.

    Connecting more than 80% of homes to gigabit broadband…

    …expanding our world-leading creative industry tax reliefs…

    …and hopefully, passing a Media Bill – soon, I hope, to be a Media Act – that will protect the mixed ecology that has worked well for the best part of a century…

    Setting the platform for an exciting future – with more to come.

    It’s a busy agenda and one I am looking forward to working with the DTG and its members on.

    I hope you enjoy the rest of the summit today

    Thank you very much.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Change of His Majesty’s Ambassador to Paraguay – Ms Danielle Dunne [May 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Change of His Majesty’s Ambassador to Paraguay – Ms Danielle Dunne [May 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 9 May 2024.

    Ms Danielle Dunne has been appointed His Majesty’s Ambassador to the Republic of Paraguay in succession to Mr Ramin Navai who will be transferring to another Diplomatic Service appointment.  Ms Dunne will take up her appointment during January 2025.

    CURRICULUM VITAE

    Full name:  Danielle Dunne

    Date Role
    2021 to present Abuja, Head of Counter-Terrorism Network West Africa & Sahel
    2017 to 2021 FCDO (formerly Department for International Development), Head of Evaluation Unit
    2016 to 2017 DFID, Senior Evaluation Adviser
    2015 to 2016 DFID, Evaluation Adviser on Methods
    2013 to 2015 DFID, Evaluation Adviser for Afghanistan and Pakistan
    2012 to 2013 Office of Security and Counter-Terrorism, Senior Researcher Officer
    2009 to 2012 National Policing Improvement Agency, Research Officer
    2005 to 2009 Queen Mary’s University, Research Associate