Tag: 2024

  • PRESS RELEASE : New Defence treaty with Romania deepens relations and supports collective security [November 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : New Defence treaty with Romania deepens relations and supports collective security [November 2024]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Defence on 13 November 2024.

    Defence Secretary, John Healey MP, signed the new agreement in London with his Romanian counterpart.

    The UK’s defence relationship with Romania has been expanded following the signing today of a new treaty promoting greater cooperation between the two countries’ armed forces.

    Defence Secretary, John Healey MP, hosted his Romanian counterpart, Angel Tîlvăr, at the Ministry of Defence in London this morning to sign the treaty.

    United as NATO allies and in steadfast support of Ukraine, the defence relationship between the UK and Romania continues to grow.

    Both ministers agreed to enhance bilateral defence cooperation to maintain peace and security in Europe, improve the effectiveness and efficiency of each nation’s armed forces when operating together, and develop information sharing.

    The UK and Romania both share a steadfast support for Ukraine. Romania has sent military personnel to the UK to help train more than 45,000 Ukrainian recruits as part of Operation Interflex, which teaches basic infantry and combat skills.

    Defence Secretary John Healey MP said:
    This agreement demonstrates how quickly the UK’s defence relationship with Romania is growing and it shows our shared commitment to peace and security in Europe.

    This Government is resetting Britain’s relations across Europe, and this agreement builds on that commitment as we continue to deepen our ties.

    The UK’s security starts in Ukraine and, together with Romania as our NATO allies, we will continue to support Ukraine against Putin’s illegal invasion.

    The treaty agrees to establish a joint defence committee, which will provide a framework through which we can reinforce our relationship with a key NATO Ally and European partner, and better work together to combat the shared threats we face.

    The UK Armed Forces have worked closely alongside Romania’s Armed Forces for many years – earlier this year, a Royal Air Force fighter squadron of six Typhoons and around 200 personnel deployed to Romania to fly NATO air policing missions for four months.

    Since then, numerous exercises have seen the UK and Romania operate alongside each other, including a British Army deployment to the Carpathian Mountains in Romania through September and October to practice training in difficult terrain alongside NATO allies as part of Exercise Sarmis.

  • Jacqui Smith – 2024 Speech at the Association of Colleges

    Jacqui Smith – 2024 Speech at the Association of Colleges

    The speech made by Jacqui Smith, the Skills Minister, in Birmingham on 12 November 2024.

    Thank you AoC for inviting me to join you today.

    I notice that a theme of this conference is a year of change.

    So I’m excited to be part of a mission-led government that’s determined to create a new era of opportunity and economic growth.

    To see a fairer society for everybody, where success is the reward for effort and enterprise, whatever your background.

    And I know you share these ambitions.

    Colleges are engines of opportunity, responsible for 38 per cent of disadvantaged young people progressing to higher education, and 68 per cent progressing to sustainable employment.

    And Colleges are great at what they do. 86 per cent were judged good or outstanding in their most recent inspection.

    So I’d like to thank you for all you do. I’m proud to be your minister in government.

    Let me start by acknowledging the very real challenges you face.

    One in eight young people not in education, training or work.

    Nine million adults without basic English and maths skills.

    We have one of the lowest rates of technical skills at level 4 or 5 in the OECD.

    And in spite of your dedication and commitment, many learners often feel sidelined.

    Employers feel the system is fragmented.

    Providers spend more time competing over funding pots than meeting the challenges of the future.

    We know we must take steps to fix the foundations of our skills system.

    That is why the Budget last month recognised and valued further education.

    Committing £300m of additional funding for the FE sector.

    £950m of capital skills investment, including £300m for the capital estate.

    £40m for the Growth and Skills Levy, to help take the first steps towards more flexibility in apprenticeships.

    I can also confirm that there will be funding for the public sector – including colleges – to support them with the additional cost of changes to employers’ National Insurance Contributions.

    But we must go further.

    That is why I intend to set out how, with your help, we can reverse the decline of the past 14 years.

    Today I am reiterating our manifesto commitment to bring forward a comprehensive strategy for post-16 education and skills.

    Of course, there have been plenty of previous attempts to improve the skills system.

    You would be well within your rights to ask “what will be different this time”?

    Well, I think there are three key differences in our approach.

    First, we are a mission-led government.

    The focus is on driving growth and opportunity. But also fixing our NHS. Creating clean energy. Ensuring safer streets.

    These are long-term missions to kick off a decade of national renewal.

    And skills are essential to delivering them.

    Second, this is not a government that imposes on you what we think is right.

    Instead, I want to see the whole of society – businesses, trade unions, providers, and learners, come together to reimagine how we deliver skills.

    Third, we need a whole cultural shift in our approach, where we recognise skills are part of a much wider ecosystem.

    One linked with our industrial strategy. Our NHS. The green energy revolution. Devolution, and so on.

    So we are setting up Skills England, which will work with the Industrial Strategy Council and the Migration Advisory Committee to identify the skills needed to drive economic growth.

    We will set out our vision for the skills system shortly. But today, I want to set out three key differences between what has gone before, and what I want to work with you on to change the system in the future.

    First, we need to go from a system where certain learners are ‘sidelined’, to one where everyone is supported.

    Currently, too many young people do not have their personal circumstances or needs taken into account.

    They might have caring responsibilities, health issues, or it could be down to mental health struggles or even a lack of confidence.

    Or the many in further education with special educational needs and disabilities.

    It is disheartening, but not surprising, that the number of young people aged 16 to 24 Not in Education, Employment or Training in June this year was up nearly 10%.

    And this skills gap is not confined to the young. There are also many adults who are looking for new skills to progress in their current job or change to a new career path.

    They rely on colleges to get them where they want to be in life.

    We have already taken important steps on this.

    We are working with DWP and HMT to publish a Get Britain Working white paper, explaining our ambition for an 80 per cent employment rate.

    We are introducing a youth guarantee, which will provide tailored support to 18-21- year-olds who need it.

    Helping more young people to make the most of local education, training and employment support and opportunities.

    We will rejuvenate the careers system by creating a new jobs and careers service that will enable everyone to access good, meaningful work, and give them the support they need to progress in that work once they’ve got there.

    And we have recommitted to introducing the Lifelong Learning Entitlement from January 2027.

    Because we want a culture of lifelong learning – it should not stop at 18 or 21.

    And – as you know – it is not just learners that have been sidelined, but colleges and FE teachers and the workforce too.

    This government will treat colleges, teachers, technicians and the people that support students with respect.

    That is why I am pleased to announce that, in addition to the funding package announced in the budget, I have today laid a Parliamentary Minute in the House introducing a Crown Guarantee for the Local Government Pension Scheme for the FE sector, mirroring the guarantee we already provide academies.

    We estimate that the overall value of this guarantee to the sector is up to £30m, freeing up much needed funding to support our fantastic FE sector.

    The second key change I want to see is to move from a fragmented skills system to a coherent one.

    Skills shortages in this country doubled between 2017 and 2022, with a staggering 36% of all job vacancies caused by skills shortages.

    We have had a decade of failure in assessing what our national skills needs are. And it’s not hard to see why.

    Too many funding streams spread across different providers;

    Employers pay half the amount per employee on skills training compared to other European countries and are often uncertain about the return on their investment;

    Too many regulatory bodies with overlapping responsibilities;

    And all that’s before you even start on the number of different learning programmes.

    Leaving many learners confused as to how to progress through the system.

    How a Higher Technical Qualification can support them into the career they want, or on to further study.

    Or how a T Level can help them secure a higher apprenticeship.

    So we will bring together the currently fragmented system into a coherent one that learners, employers and providers alike can understand.

    We have already started this by launching the independent Curriculum and Assessment Review, for ages 5 to 18.

    We are consulting on its scope now and there is still time for you to comment. I urge you to do so if you haven’t already.

    And in July, the Secretary of State for Education announced a review of Post-16 Qualifications and paused the planned defunding of a number of qualifications.

    Because we need to ensure a range of high-quality qualifications alongside T Levels and A levels to meet the needs of learners and employers.

    I would like to thank David [Hughes], the AoC, and all colleagues who have fed into this review.

    We are also reforming the apprenticeship levy into a new, more flexible Growth and Skills Levy, giving employers confidence to invest in skills.

    The third key area of change is to move from a competitive system to a coordinated one.

    I have heard, loud and clear, that the current hands-off approach to the skills provider market has failed.

    It has meant providers have spent more time competing over shrinking pots of money, and dealing with reporting burdens.

    Rather than doing what you do best – providing the education and training that people need to thrive.

    It has meant mixed signals on priorities for providers – with too many government agencies trying to set the agenda.

    That is why as Skills Minister I am thrilled that one of the first pieces of major legislation relates to the introduction of Skills England.

    Skills England is part of a shift to consider the system as a whole, with greater coordination to stimulate growth.

    It will focus on understanding the skills needed to deliver the long-term industrial strategy and helping providers, policy makers, and combined authorities respond.

    It will be fully operational as an arm’s length body next year.

    My vision is for a framework of local coordination between providers, responding to local skills needs, informed by national skills priorities.

    By bringing together local skills improvement plans with local growth plans.

    And linking these with the sectoral national workforce plans set out by the industrial strategy.

    With employer representative bodies and other local stakeholders closely involved in the design and delivery of skills programmes.

    We know that colleges have a key role to play here.

    Like Harlow College, where employers and stakeholders’ contributions mean that courses contain the knowledge and skills needed in the local economy.

    And with a central role for specialist Technical Excellence Colleges.

    These will be FE colleges that work a wide range of skills partners to provide young people and adults with better opportunities and the highly trained workforce that local economies need.

    That is not to say there will be no competition at all in the skills system.

    Rightly targeted, healthy competition, with well-defined incentives can drive better results for our young people.

    Underpinned by a clear system of accountability, improvement and intervention.

    Higher education is a core part of our skills agenda and we are clear that we need a new approach to higher education.

    We expect our higher education providers to play a stronger role in expanding access and improving outcomes for disadvantaged students.

    To make a stronger contribution to economic growth.

    To play a greater civic role in their communities.

    To improve value for money as part of a more sustainable funding model.

    And to raise the bar further on teaching standards.

    We also want to improve pathways for students to move between further and higher education. We know we need much closer collaboration between FE and HE providers if we are to achieve this.

    That is why we are pressing ahead with the rollout of the Lifelong Learning Entitlement, which we know will play a central role in facilitating greater collaboration.

    And in the coming months we will be working in partnership with the FE and HE sector to deliver against the priorities I have set out.

    Today, I have set out what I see as the three overarching changes we need for a stronger skills system.

    A skills system that drives forward our long-term government missions. Delivering growth for the economy. Break down barriers to opportunity for individuals.

    Changes that mean the least advantaged learners aren’t sidelined, but supported.

    Changes that turn our fragmented skills system into a coherent one.

    Changes that move us from unproductive competition, to coordinated delivery for learners and our communities.

    To deliver this, I want to start a national conversation on skills, in which everyone will have their say… and for you to feel this is being done with you, not to you.

    Because we all have a role to play – in development, as well as implementation.

    Frankly, it is going to take a superhuman effort on all parts to reverse 14 years of systemic decline.

    But I have seen the difference good government can make.

    Together I know we can do it.

    Thank You.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Venki Ramakrishnan has been reappointed as a Board Member of the British Library [November 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Venki Ramakrishnan has been reappointed as a Board Member of the British Library [November 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport on 13 November 2024.

    The Secretary of State has reappointed Venki Ramakrishnan as Board Member for the British Library for a 4 year term from 15 June 2024 to 14 June 2028.

    Venki Ramakrishnan

    Appointed for a 4 year term commencing 15 June 2024 to 14 June 2028.

    Venki is a scientist at the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge. He is best known for his work on how the ribosome, a large molecular complex, translates genetic information to synthesize the thousands of proteins required for life, and how this process is regulated. For his work, he shared the 2009 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. Venki was the President of the Royal Society from 2015-2020.

    He is the author of two books: Why We Die: The New Science of Aging and the Quest for Immortality (2024), and Gene Machine (2018), a memoir about the race for the structure of the ribosome.

    Remuneration and Governance Code

    Trustees of the British Library are remunerated £9,130 per annum. This appointment has been made in accordance with the Cabinet Office’s Governance Code on Public Appointments. The appointments process is regulated by the Commissioner for Public Appointments. Under the Code, any significant political activity undertaken by an appointee in the last five years must be declared. This is defined as including holding office, public speaking, making a recordable donation, or candidature for election. Venki Ramakrishnan has not declared any significant political activity.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Universal Periodic Review 47 – UK Statement on Qatar [November 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Universal Periodic Review 47 – UK Statement on Qatar [November 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 13 November 2024.

    Statement by the UK’s Human Rights Ambassador, Eleanor Sanders, at Qatar’s Universal Periodic Review at the Human Rights Council in Geneva.

    Thank you, Madam Vice President,

    I’d like to warmly welcome the delegation and congratulate Qatar on its re-election to the Human Rights Council. We recognise progress since its 2019 review including on improved protections for migrant workers, particularly the removal of the Kafala system.

    We call on Qatar to recognise the importance of Freedom of Expression and Freedom of Religion or Belief for all, and to make its death penalty moratorium permanent.

    We have three recommendations :

    1. Adopt legislation that ensures effective prosecution of violations against domestic workers, while protecting their rights to remain in Qatar.
    2. Adopt legislation to ensure workers’ rights are protected when employers issue a certificate of good conduct.
    3. Adopt legislation to ensure non discrimination on the grounds of disability, gender, sexual orientation, race, religion or belief.

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Reforms to flood funding and investment to protect farming communities [November 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Reforms to flood funding and investment to protect farming communities [November 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs on 13 November 2024.

    £50 million investment into internal drainage boards and plans to consult on new strategic vision for floods investment.

    The government is bolstering England’s resilience to flooding through additional financial support to farmers and rural communities, as well as refreshing its approach to delivering funding to make sure it works for communities, Floods Minister Emma Hardy will announce today (Wednesday 13 November).

    Recognising the significant impact of flooding on farmers, an additional £50 million will be distributed to internal drainage boards (IDBs), the public bodies responsible for managing water levels for agricultural and environmental needs in a particular area.

    This transformational investment will put IDBs on a firm footing to deliver their vital role in flood and water management for years to come. IDBs that submit successful bids will be able to spend the £50 million on projects over the next two years. This will benefit projects that will improve, repair or replace IDB assets – including flood barriers, embankments and maintenance of watercourses. The funding will support projects which reduce risks and impacts from flooding to farmers and rural communities across England. The Environment Agency has begun work with IDBs to distribute the funding from today.

    But the government has also committed to going further to protect communities from flooding. The government inherited an outdated funding formula for allocating money to proposed flood defences. Established in 2011, the existing formula slows down the delivery of new flood schemes through a complex application process, and also neglects more innovative approaches to flood management such as nature-based approaches and sustainable drainage.

    A consultation will be launched in the new year which will include a review of the existing formula to ensure that the challenges facing businesses and rural and coastal communities are adequately taken into account when delivering flood protection.

    The government has also today confirmed payments to farmers impacted by last year’s severe weather through the Farming Recovery Fund. A total of £60 million will be distributed to eligible farmers, via recovery payments of between £2,895 and £25,000 to around 13,000 farm businesses. Payments are expected to land in farmers’ accounts from 21 November.

    Floods Minister Emma Hardy said:

    Farmers are the backbone of the nation, with their hard work helping to put food on the family tables across the country.

    More intense weather events are destroying homes, businesses and livelihoods across the country, with farming communities facing the heaviest consequences.

    That is why this Government is reforming how flood funds are distributed to protect businesses, rural and coastal communities as we invest over £2.4 billion in flood defences across the country.

    The government is investing £2.4 billion until March 2026 to improve flood resilience and better protect communities across the country, including from coastal erosion, with further decisions for 2026/27 and beyond made at the next Spending Review.

    In September, the Secretary of State also convened the first meeting of the new Floods Resilience Taskforce. This brings together representatives from central and local government, Local Resilience Forums, emergency responders and the National Farmers Union, among others, to discuss how they will speed up and co-ordinate flooding preparation and resilience.

  • PRESS RELEASE : These sanctions are crucial to maintaining pressure on the Houthis – UK explanation of vote at the UN Security Council [November 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : These sanctions are crucial to maintaining pressure on the Houthis – UK explanation of vote at the UN Security Council [November 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 13 November 2024.

    Explanation of vote by Ambassador Barbara Woodward, UK Permanent Representative to the UN, at the UN Security Council meeting on Yemen.

    We thank the Council for its show of unity in the adoption of a twelve-month technical rollover. The Council’s continued positive engagement on this file is crucial to rejuvenating the Yemeni peace process.

    This demonstration of consensus sends a clear signal that the Council continues to value the critical role Resolution 2140 plays in maintaining pressure on the Houthis, who continue to block the pathway to peace in Yemen.

    The international community continues to strongly support the UN’s institutions and mandates, which ensure effective implementation of sanctions, contained in 2140, and the arms embargo, contained in Resolution 2216.

    These tools play a vital role in limiting the ability of the Houthis to destabilise Yemen, threaten the Red Sea and hamper peace efforts.

    As a Council, we stand ready to support the efforts of UN Special Envoy Grundberg and Yemeni stakeholders in securing a durable peace in Yemen.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Next steps set out to permanently cut business rates for the high street [November 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Next steps set out to permanently cut business rates for the high street [November 2024]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 13 November 2024.

    Legislation has today been introduced to allow government, for the first time, to permanently cut business rates for retail, hospitality and leisure properties.

    • To fund this sustainably, the top one percent of high-value properties, such as large warehouses used by online giants will be asked to pay more to support the high-street.
    • 865,000 employers will not pay National Insurance next year as Employment Allowance increase set to become law.

    Draft legislation has today been published to, for the first time, permanently cut business rates for retail hospitality and leisure properties from 2026.

    High streets across the UK will benefit from business rates for retail, hospitality and leisure properties being permanently cut for the first time from 2026, following the introduction of legislation in Parliament today.

    This begins the delivery of the government’s promise to reform business rates and help the high street.

    The tax cut will be funded by a tax rise for the very largest business properties, such as online sales warehouses.

    Until then, 250,000 retail, hospitality and leisure (RHL) properties will receive 40% relief off their business rates bills up to £110,000 per business to help smooth the transition to the new system. This support is alongside the Budget announcement to freeze the small business multiplier, together with Small Business Rates Relief protecting over a million properties from inflationary increases. Taken together, this is a package worth over £1.6 billion in 2025-26.

    To further support retailers, the government is today also introducing legislation to increase the Employment Allowance from £5000 to £10,500, meaning 865,000 employers will not pay employer national insurance next year.

    James Murray, Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury, said:

    For too long the business rates system has been working against our high streets.

    Today is a major step towards our new system that will support retail, hospitality and leisure businesses on our high streets to succeed.

    This Bill paves the way for a permanent cut to their tax rate, helping to level the playing field between them and online and out-of-town businesses.

    The government today is also legislating to increase the Employment Allowance – a discount in National Insurance bills – from £5,000 to £10,500 from April 2025.

    The increase to the Employment Allowance will mean that 865,000 employers will not pay any employer National Insurance next year, and 250,000 employers will pay less National Insurance than they are now.

    It will allow firms to employ up to four National Living Wage workers full time without paying employer National Insurance on their wages.

    The eligibility of the allowance will also be expanded to include all eligible employers, rather than just those with a wage bill of less that £100,000 a year.

    Craig Beaumont, Federation of Small Businesses Executive Director, said:

    We are pleased to see James Murray and the whole Treasury team take this important step forward today – legislating for the significant increase to the Employment Allowance which FSB strongly championed, to protect smaller businesses with employment costs. But also taking a decisive step forward on business rates reform.

    For far too long, permanent business rates reform has been put into the too difficult box. It is extremely encouraging on rates to see Ministers standing up for small firms in retail and hospitality and taking long-term action necessary to the future of our high streets – we look forward to continuing to work in partnership with the new Government to make sure no small businesses whatsoever are blocked from achieving their ambitions by a rates system that has not simply not kept pace with the needs of a modern economy.

    This follows important action announced by the Business Secretary to tackle the scourge of late payments and to take forward an Industrial Strategy to unblock the supply side barriers holding small firms back from their full potential.

    To calculate a property’s business rates bill, the rateable value of a property is multiplied by the relevant multiplier (tax rate).

    Today’s Non-Domestic Rating (Multipliers and Private Schools) Bill means that new permanently lower multipliers for RHL properties can be introduced from 2026. This permanent tax cut will ensure that they benefit from much-needed certainty and support.

    This will help the government achieve its goal for a fairer business rates system that protects the high-street and supports investment – one that is fit for the 21st century.

    With public services crumbling and a £22 billion fiscal hole to address, ministers have been clear that the new RHL tax rates must be sustainably funded.

    This will be achieved by a higher tax rate for the top 1% most valuable properties – those with a rateable value of at least £500,000. Large distribution warehouses, including those used by online giants, will help fund the high street tax cut.

    Until 2026, 250,000 RHL premises will see 40% relief off their bills next year up to a cash cap of £110,000 per business.

    The new RHL tax rates will provide meaningful support to RHL businesses of all sizes in recognition of the role RHL chains play in attracting footfall to the high-street. A discussion paper has also been published to engage with businesses over the next six months on how to further reform the system outside of retail, hospitality and leisure.

    Sebastian James, former CEO of Boots and Dixons Carphone, said:

    It is very welcome to see the Government take steps to rebalance the heavy business rates load on bricks and mortar retail and hospitality as businesses, both large and small, in this vital sector seek to mitigate cost pressures in order that our high streets up and down the country can flourish as the centres of their communities.

    The National Insurance Contributions Bill which will increase the Employer Allowance, also increases National Insurance for businesses to invest in public services, including to help fund the NHS by an extra £22.6 billion over two years compared to 2023/24, as well as other measures to avoid austerity.  This will support the NHS to deliver its First Step on its Health Mission of 40,000 extra elective appointments a week and make progress towards the commitment that patients should expect to wait no longer than 18 weeks from referral to treatment.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Zero tolerance for failure under package of tough NHS reforms [November 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Zero tolerance for failure under package of tough NHS reforms [November 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department of Health and Social Care on 13 November 2024.

    Health and Social Care Secretary will outline how government and NHS leaders have a duty to patients and taxpayers to get the system working well.

    • Wes Streeting to reveal package of reforms and announce new league table of NHS providers, with top talent attracted to most challenging areas and persistently failing managers to be sacked
    • Turnaround teams sent into struggling hospitals, while best performers given greater freedoms over funding to modernise technology and equipment
    • No more rewards for failure, with reforms to ensure every penny of extra investment into NHS is well spent and waiting times for patients slashed

    NHS league tables will be introduced to help tackle the NHS crisis and ensure there are ‘no more rewards for failure’, as part of a tough package of reforms to be announced by the Health and Social Care Secretary Wes Streeting today (13 November 2024).

    Addressing the nation’s health leaders at the NHS Providers annual conference in Liverpool, he will outline how government and NHS leaders have a duty to patients and taxpayers to get the system working well and get better value for money.

    NHS England will carry out a no holds barred sweeping review of NHS performance across the entire country, with providers to be placed into a league table. This will be made public and regularly updated to ensure leaders, policy makers and patients know which improvements need to be prioritised.

    Persistently failing managers will be replaced and turnaround teams of expert leaders will be deployed to help providers which are running big deficits or poor services for patients, offering them urgent, effective support so they can improve their service.

    High-performing providers will be given greater freedom over funding and flexibility. There is little incentive across the system to run budget surpluses as providers cannot benefit from it. The reforms today will reward top-performing providers and give them more capital and greater control over where to invest it in modernising their buildings, equipment and technology.

    The government will deliver a health service fit for the future, fixing the foundations while delivering change with investment and reform to deliver growth, get the NHS back on its feet and rebuild Britain.

    Health and Social Care Secretary,Wes Streeting, said:

    The budget showed this government prioritises the NHS, providing the investment needed to rebuild the health service. Today we are announcing the reforms to make sure every penny of extra investment is well spent and cuts waiting times for patients.

    There’ll be no more turning a blind eye to failure. We will drive the health service to improve, so patients get more out of it for what taxpayers put in.

    Our health service must attract top talent, be far more transparent to the public who pay for it, and run as efficiently as global businesses.

    With the combination of investment and reform, we will turn the NHS around and cut waiting times from 18 months to 18 weeks.

    Amanda Pritchard, NHS Chief Executive, said:

    While NHS leaders welcome accountability, it is critical that responsibility comes with the necessary support and development.

    The extensive package of reforms, developed together with government, will empower all leaders working in the NHS and it will give them the tools they need to provide the best possible services for our patients.

    The NHS Oversight Framework, which sets out how trusts and integrated care boards are best monitored, will be updated by the next financial year to ensure performance is properly scrutinised.

    Deep dives into poorly performing trusts will be carried out by the government and NHS England to identify the most pressing issues and how they can be resolved.

    Louise Ansari, Chief Executive of Healthwatch England, said:

    People value the hard work of NHS staff, but it’s frustrating when services fail to operate effectively. So, a fresh approach to improving NHS performance is welcome.

    Currently, living in an area with either an outstanding or poorly performing NHS trust feels like a postcode lottery. When a service is underperforming, it often takes far too long for patients to see the necessary improvements.

    This is because the current system focuses on evaluating service performance based on the number of tasks it completes and it does not do enough to measure patients’ overall outcomes and experiences.

    Establishing a better system that encourages NHS managers to focus on delivering the best care as efficiently as possible, and leads to quicker changes at struggling trusts, would be good news for everyone.

    NHS senior managers who fail to make progress will also be ineligible for pay increases. There will be financial implications for very senior managers (VSMs) such as chief executives if they are failing to improve their trust’s performance, or letting patients down with poor levels of care.

    A new pay framework for VSMs will be published before April 2025. Senior leaders who are successfully improving performance will be rewarded, to ensure the NHS continues to develop and attract the best talent to the top positions.

    The changes are made in response to Lord Darzi’s investigation into the NHS, which found that:

    The only criteria by which trust chief executive pay is set is the turnover of the organisation. Neither the timeliness of access nor the quality of care are routinely factored into pay. This encourages organisations to grow their revenue rather than to improve operational performance.

    The cost to the health service of hiring temporary workers sits at a staggering £3 billion a year. Under joint plans to be put forward for consultation in the coming weeks, NHS trusts could be banned from using agencies to hire temporary entry level workers in bands 2 and 3, such as healthcare assistants and domestic support workers. The consultation will also include a proposal to stop NHS staff resigning and then immediately offering their services back to the health service through a recruitment agency.

    Rachel Power, Chief Executive, Patients Association, said:

    We welcome today’s commitment to improving NHS performance and accountability. These reforms signal an important drive for positive change in our health system. The focus on tackling poor performance and rewarding excellence sends a clear message about raising standards across the NHS.

    At the same time, we know from the experience of patients that real transformation comes through genuine partnership with patients. We look forward to working with NHS England to ensure patient voices help shape how any league tables are developed and how success is measured.

    The proposed support teams for struggling trusts could be particularly effective if they include patient representatives and focus on building a culture of patient partnership. This is an opportunity to combine better management with deeper patient involvement – creating an NHS that is both more efficient and more responsive to people’s needs.

    We hope trusts who receive greater funding freedom will use this money wisely – to cut waiting times, make the waiting experience better for patients, and strengthen the ways they work with patients to improve services. These are the things that matter most to people using the NHS.

    Lord Darzi’s investigation into the NHS found that hospital productivity has nosedived in the past 5 years. During that time resources have increased by 20%, but the number of patients treated has only increased by 3%.

    This comes a month after the Health and Social Care Secretary kicked off the biggest national conversation about the future of the NHS since its birth, calling on the entire country to share their experiences of our health service and help shape the government’s 10 Year Health Plan.

    Members of the public, as well as NHS staff and experts, are sharing their experiences, views and ideas for fixing the NHS via the Change NHS online platform, which will be live until the start of next year, and available via the NHS App.

  • Wes Streeting – 2024 Speech on the Reform of the NHS

    Wes Streeting – 2024 Speech on the Reform of the NHS

    The speech made by Wes Streeting, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, in Liverpool on 13 November 2024.

    I’ve come along today to lay down some direction.

    Not just to make the case for reform, which I’ve done before, but to spell out how we’ll do it and what I need you to do with me for us to collectively succeed.

    When it comes to the condition of the NHS today, the Darzi diagnosis is clear:

    • the NHS has not been able to meet its most important promises to patients since 2015
    • A&E waits are causing thousands of avoidable deaths
    • 50 years of progress on cardiovascular disease has gone into reverse
    • 345,000 people are waiting more than a year for mental health treatment – that’s more than the entire population of Leicester
    • as the performance of the NHS has deteriorated, so has the health of the nation
    • adults are falling into ill-health earlier in life
    • and children are less health today than a decade ago
    • Ara’s [Lord Darzi’s] conclusion was that the state of the health service is heartbreaking

    And I’m yet to hear anyone seriously contest this analysis, which was entirely based on the data.

    In my experience, not just as a patient, but in the last 3 years talking to frontline staff and NHS leaders – most people appreciate the honesty and recognise that the biggest barrier to patients accessing care is long waiting times.

    As I’ve argued before, a culture that puts sparing political blushes or protecting the reputation of the NHS above protecting the interests of patients is one that stifles inconvenient truths being spoken to power, that silences whistleblowers and that ultimately puts patient safety at risk.

    In the last few years I’ve come to know many of you in this room and in the last 4 months I’ve toured the country talking to leaders and frontline staff, so I think I know you well enough to know that you share my view that honesty is the best policy, you agree with the Darzi diagnosis and that you share my optimism that the NHS is broken, but not beaten. Every day there are outstanding episodes of care being delivered, by dedicated people working with some of the best science in the world. As Ara put it: “The NHS is in critical condition, but its vital signs are strong.”

    Our collective challenge is to take the NHS from the worst crisis in its history, put it back on its feet and make it fit for the future.

    The budget was important. The Chancellor gave us the investment we need to arrest the decline, begin fixing the foundations and start turning the service around.

    The NHS was the standout winner. We’re the biggest cash uplift in day-to-day spending of any government department.

    There have been 2 predictable reactions to this: the first says that the NHS is getting too much money. That this is a black hole that consumes ever-increasing amounts of taxpayers’ cash and that the NHS will complain it is never enough.

    So right on cue, some NHS leaders popped up in the newspapers, aided and abetted by the health think tanks, to complain that this isn’t enough.

    One of the luxuries of leading a think tank is that you don’t have to engage with the choices and trade-offs that government does.

    The Chancellor had to raise more than £40 billion to plug not just the £22 billion black hole we walked into in July and to fix the foundations so that our economy and our public services can recover.

    When the Chancellor announced the settlement for my department, she joked about how unpopular it would make me around the cabinet table.

    The truth is, at the cabinet meeting in which she set out the contents of her budget, I did feel uncomfortable.

    Not because I was worried about the opinions of the people in the room – because they support the NHS and the investment – but because I am worried about the jobs they have to do. As I look around that cabinet table I see a Justice Secretary who inherited overflowing prisons. A Work and Pensions Secretary who inherited more than 4 million children living in poverty. A Defence Secretary charged with securing our nation, at a time when there is a ground war in Europe, as well as the constant threat of cyber warfare in a more dangerous and unpredictable world.

    Every penny of extra investment that goes into the NHS was a penny that didn’t go towards child poverty reduction, extra prison places, or bolstering our armed forces.

    More than that, every penny spent on treating sickness is a penny that doesn’t go on preventing illness. You know as well as I do, that around only 20% of the nation’s health is affected by the NHS. The rest is dictated by the poverty we live in, the damp on our walls, the food we eat, the air we breathe and so on.

    So, you can’t pretend to care about the social determinants of ill-health if you only ever ask for more money for the NHS.

    So then, the argument goes, we must do both.

    Of course that’s right, but the choices and trade-offs aren’t just about spending money but raising it. The tax burden in this country is at record levels. We chose, rightly in my view, not to hit working people in their payslips. The extra investment in the NHS, as well as other public services, meant asking employers and the wealthiest to pay more.

    You will have seen in the past few weeks, that there are those who disagree with the Chancellor’s decisions. That’s the nature of tough choices.

    We stand by our decision to prioritise the health service: healthy businesses depend on a healthy workforce and a strong economy depends on a strong NHS.

    But if you want to know where the average taxpayer stands on NHS spending it’s quite straightforward: they welcome the investment, but they worry it won’t be spent wisely.

    They agree with the central argument we made at the last general election that investment must be matched with reform.

    Tight fiscal constraints mean that reform needs to do a lot more heavy lifting.

    We would still need to reform our public services because we are in the foothills of a scientific and technological revolution that is changing the world around us.

    Citizens are used to choice, voice, ease and convenience at the touch of a button. We expect everything faster.

    Unless our public services are modernised to meet the needs of our people, they’ll become increasingly redundant and irrelevant to people’s lives, unable to meet their needs.

    The failure to reform the state to meet the needs of the people is one of the fertilisers of populism we see across liberal democracies. The other is failure to ease the pain in their pockets. We need to address both – with NHS reform that delivers better outcomes for patients and better value for taxpayers’ money.

    By now you will be familiar with the 3 big shifts that will underpin our 10-year plan for health:

    • from hospital to community
    • from analogue to digital
    • from sickness to prevention

    These shifts are not radical new ideas, but delivering them truly would be.

    They’re necessary to tackle the challenges of our growing ageing society, rising levels of chronic disease and rising cost pressures; as well as to seize the opportunities of a scientific revolution in which AI, machine learning, genomics and data offer us the chance to transform our system of healthcare to one that can not only diagnosis earlier and more accurately and treat more quickly and effectively, but also predict and prevent illness.

    But we’re not waiting for the 10-year plan in May to get cracking with reform.

    Over the last few years, I’ve regularly heard the criticism of the top-down nature of the NHS. It can be a difficult criticism for those at the top to hear, but for the last 4 months I’ve found myself at the top of the system – at the peak of the mountain of accountability – and I not only recognise the criticism, I agree with it.

    The NHS in 2024 is more hierarchical than almost any other organisation I can think of. Even our armed forces, as the Messenger Review argued, is less locked into centralised command and control.

    Those of you who have studied the birth of the NHS will know that there were vigorous debates within the Attlee government about how the new NHS should be organised. Given the vital role that a strong state and central planning had played in Britain’s success in the Second World War it was perhaps inevitable that Nye Bevan’s centralised model won the day, albeit with concessions to the doctors to overcome opposition from the British Medical Association. But Herbert Morrison and others in the Labour movement had argued strongly for a municipally based model, with power and control exercised locally.

    Attlee and Bevan could scarcely have imagined in 1948 that the single payer system they created would make the NHS ideally placed to seize the opportunities of data, genomics, AI and machine learning. The ‘N’, the national, in NHS is important. It should be the guarantee that patients everywhere are treated according to the same values and the same standards.

    The framework I’m setting out today is based on triple devolution: with power shifting out of the centre to integrated care boards (ICBs), to providers and, crucially, to patients. I want to lead an NHS where power is moved from the centre to the local and from the local to the citizen. Morrison meets Bevan.

    It starts with clarity. The centre should be deciding strategy, policy and clear objectives for the system to deliver on behalf of patients. We should allocate resources against those objectives and provide the overall accountability framework for improving performance. We should ensure the same standards of care in every part of the country and we should unlock the unrealised potential of the NHS as a single payer model by making the NHS the best partner in the world for the development of new treatments and medical technology and to make the most of our collective purchasing power to deliver value for money.

    And the centre should be smaller.

    As power flows from the centre over time, resources should flow with it. Otherwise it will keep swamping local services with diktats and demands that distract them from the job of meeting patients’ needs and improving the communities they serve. We need more doers and fewer checkers and the centre needs to learn the words ‘stop’ and ‘or’ after years of ‘start’ and ‘more’.

    Clear priorities mean a few, not 50 different targets. So the instructions coming out in the forthcoming NHS mandate and following planning guidance will be short. I want to see waiting times cut, urgent and emergency care when people need it and improved access to primary care. The shift from hospital to community needs to start now.

    Amanda set out yesterday that NHS England, not ICBs, will be responsible for managing performance of trusts. When I talk to ICB leaders I hear mixed views about where they should be focusing their efforts. There is no uniformity and too much confusion.

    So let me be clear: I want to see local commissioning back and I want to see ICBs leading it.

    ICB chiefs, I am talking directly to you: you will lead the transformation of care – the pioneers of reform. Your organisations will play a critical role in doing what we’ve never pulled off before.

    I want ICBs to focus on their job as strategic commissioners and be responsible for one big thing: the development of a new neighbourhood health service. It will focus on building up community and primary care services with the explicit aim of keeping patients healthy and out of hospital, with care closer to home and in the home.

    All the evidence suggests that 1 in 4 patients in hospital should not be there and that 1 in 5 emergency hospital admissions are preventable – so long as earlier diagnosis takes place. There’s your challenge.

    We need to design services around people – particularly more than 15 million people with long-term conditions who are too often passed from pillar to post, from one service to another. Fragmentation needs to give way to integration and that is the job of ICBs.

    That will leave providers – whether NHS foundation trusts or regular trusts in mental health, community or acutes – to get on with the job of improving frontline services for patients, including restoring the 18-week waiting time standard.

    Over the past decade, provider freedoms have been curtailed. I view that as a retrograde step.

    Starting with the best performing trusts, providers should be given greater freedom and flexibility to innovate, run community services and manage their own house to meet the needs of their patients.

    Our long-term ambition is that all providers should enjoy the same freedoms as foundation trusts so long as they deliver improved performance.

    Critically, those ICBs that perform best – particularly in developing neighbourhood health services – should also enjoy greater freedom and flexibility.

    We will no longer treat all providers and ICBs as if they’re all performing equally, when you and I know it’s a mixed ability class.

    We’ll assess systems against a set of criteria and publish the results, starting from next year.

    Those systems and providers that are in the middle of the pack will get support to improve to bring them to where the best are now.

    Those ICBs and providers that are doing well will be rewarded with greater freedoms over how to spend their capital, with fewer ringfences for example.

    Those that demonstrate the best financial management will get a greater share of capital allocation. We want to move to a system where freedom is the norm and central grip is the exception to challenge poor performance.

    So improving services for patients should be rewarded. The quid pro quo is that there will be no more rewards for failure.

    The work you do couldn’t be more serious. When you get it right, lives are saved. When you don’t, the consequences can be tragic.

    If performance dips, I reserve the right to take those freedoms away.

    For those judged to be persistently failing, we will act. We will go from zero consequences for failure, to zero tolerance.

    Our new pay framework for very senior managers (VSM), which I know has been long awaited in the system, will be published ahead of the next financial year and will set out substantial reforms.

    It will drive consistency, increase transparency and limit VSM pay inflation whilst giving sufficient flexibility to attract talented candidates to the most challenging roles and providers. It will also ensure that those who are in charge of organisations that persistently fail to provide decent care or fail to keep a grip on their finances, do not receive annual pay uplifts.

    Failure to have appropriate regard to the framework will be considered a governance issue and therefore be backed by the full range of regulatory levers at NHS England’s disposal.

    Failing integrated care systems will not have access to capital flexibility, and neither will trusts, including foundation trusts that have the badge but don’t meet the mark.

    Turnaround teams will be sent in to diagnose the problem and help fix the problem, financial controls will be imposed if necessary and where leadership is found lacking, they will be removed.

    But there is one thing I am sure of over the last few months – one person behind a desk in Whitehall cannot deliver the mammoth task ahead of us. Taking the NHS from the worst crisis in its history and making it fit for the future will require first class leadership at every level of the system. The journey of reform is one I am determined to take with you, not impose upon you.

    And that’s where you can expect a grown-up break from the past. No more manager bashing for manager bashing’s sake.

    Lord Darzi’s investigation into the NHS concluded that the problem is not too many managers, but too few with the right skills and capabilities.

    And let me tell you, that is not the most convenient conclusion for a politician to receive. I could be no more popular than announce the sacking of lots of managers, but that would not be the right thing to do.

    I am prepared to make an unpopular argument with the public about the value of good leaders. The NHS is one of the biggest organisations in the world. We should be competing with global businesses to attract top talent, and for that we need to attract and retain the best.

    So we will invest in you and support you. Yesterday, Amanda laid out our plans to develop a new NHS management and leadership framework with a single code of practice, set of competencies and national curriculum to help develop essential leadership capabilities.

    And today I can announce that we are establishing a college of executive and clinical leadership, to help train and develop excellent NHS leaders. Non-clinical leaders should be working in lockstep with clinical leaders and that’s why I want this resource to be available to every type of leader in our NHS.

    And I have asked Sir Gordon Messenger, to help us develop and attract the talent we need to develop our 10-year plan.

    The most important person in all of this is the patient. Since we launched the national conversation on the future of the NHS with the Prime Minister a few weeks ago, I’ve been struck by how loud the patient voice has been during the exercise. It’s almost the inverse of my experience in my average working day.

    Popular and familiar ideas – like allowing patients to choose where and when to be treated, making it easier to rearrange appointments and grouping tests and scans together in one visit to save time – rarely pass the lips of most people of the people who walk through my door with something to say to me.

    I said in opposition I would be the patients’ shop steward. Now I’m in government I’m here to be the patients’ champion.

    They will be at the heart of the 10-year plan next year, their priorities will be reflected in a new NHS mandate shortly and when the elective recovery plan is published in the coming weeks you’ll see that greater choice and control is at the heart of it.

    We start from a low bar and we’re not going to change the experience overnight, but the direction is clear: patients should be able to choose where we’re treated and when. The ease and convenience with which we organise most of our lives – and the best performing providers allow us to organise our health care – should be available to everyone, in every part of the country. That’s why I welcome Amanda’s announcement yesterday about the new ‘ping and book’ service for breast and cervical cancer checks.

    Power to the patient is my mantra and it needs to be yours, too.

    Finally, right now, I know that many of you are feeling battered and bruised.

    I know it won’t be easy to turn the tide, but my message to you today is a message of hope.

    The Prime Minister pledged the biggest reimagining of our NHS since its birth.

    And it falls upon all our shoulders to deliver this – the jewel in the crown of this government’s decade of national renewal.

    The challenge is huge. But the prize is enormous.

    And the change has begun.

    The package of reforms I’ve announced today is how we will get more out of the NHS for what we put in.

    This is how we will make sure the investment announced in the budget delivers real change for patients.

    This can only be a team effort, based on a shared national mission, to recover and renew our National Health Service.

    You have dedicated your careers to public service and I know that, among you, I am not alone in the scale of my ambition.

    To coin a phrase, we are in this together. The NHS is already living on borrowed time.

    If we get this right, we can look back on our time with pride and say we were the generation that took the NHS from the worst crisis in its history, got it back on its feet and made it fit for the future.

    Many of you in this room have done it before. We can do it again.

    Thank you very much.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Transport Secretary launches review of train company revenue protection practices [November 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Transport Secretary launches review of train company revenue protection practices [November 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department for Transport on 13 November 2024.

    The review will help restore passengers’ confidence in the system.

    • rail regulator asked to review how train operators tackle suspected fare evasion
    • rigorous enforcement against deliberate fare evasion, abuse, and violence will continue

    The Transport Secretary has commissioned a review into the way train companies tackle suspected fare evasion.

    This will include how clear terms and conditions are for passengers and how they are communicated, as well as when prosecution is an appropriate step.

    Train operators are able to use a variety of methods to ensure customers are paying the correct amount – including, in some cases, prosecuting. However, reports have emerged of instances where a disproportionate approach might have been taken to those making a genuine mistake.

    The Transport Secretary has therefore requested the independent regulator, the Office of Rail and Road (ORR), carry out a review of the issue and assess operators’ enforcement and broader consumer practices in this area, including the use of prosecutions.

    Transport Secretary Louise Haigh said:

    Make no mistake, deliberate fare-dodging has no place on our railways and must be tackled, but innocent people shouldn’t feel like a genuine mistake will land them in court.

    An independent review is the right course of action, and will help restore passengers’ confidence in the system.

    It is clear that ticketing is far too complicated, with a labyrinth of different fares and prices which can be confusing for passengers. That’s why we have committed to the biggest overhaul of our railways in a generation, including simplifying fares to make travelling by train easier.

    ORR director of strategy, policy and reform Stephanie Tobyn said:

    We welcome the opportunity to conduct this review.

    It is important passengers are treated fairly and dealt with consistently and proportionately when ticketing issues arise, whilst also balancing the legitimate revenue protection interests of operators and taxpayers.

    In commissioning the review, the Transport Secretary encouraged the ORR’s review team to draw upon advice from independent experts, including legal and industry specialists, as well as engaging fully with passenger representatives.

    Officials at the Department for Transport will work at pace with the ORR to finalise the scope, timings and terms of reference.