Judges were bowled over by local entrepreneur Jared Wilson when he spoke about his business ‘Cricket Jobs Ltd’ during the Derry City and Strabane District heat of Go Succeed: The Ultimate Pitch at the Guildhall.
This exciting new initiative, backed by the government’s business support service, is aimed at individuals, businesses, and social enterprises across all sectors that have been trading for less than two years.
A number of local applicants had the opportunity to present their ‘ultimate pitch’ to a panel of experienced judges, but it was Jared Wilson who impressed the most and walked away with a £1,000 prize as well as a year’s hot desk space and 12 months’ membership of the Derry Chamber of Commerce.
Jared will join the Special Category winners from the Derry/Strabane heat at The Ultimate Pitch Final in Belfast in November. The Special Category Winners are as follows: The Rising Star winner – Clare Hamilton, The Influencer Hub; The Social Inclusion winner – Alannah Kerrigan, Wildflower Weddings; and The Social Enterprise winner – Caroline McGinness Brooks, Repair & Share Foyle.
A professional cricketer, Jared’s innovative idea revolves around his company ‘Cricket Jobs’ which gives amateur and professional cricketers the opportunity to view playing and job opportunities around the world.
Reflecting on the success of the local heat of the competition Business Development Manager with Derry City and Strabane District Council, Danielle McNally said: “We were really impressed with the calibre of applicants at the local heat of Go Succeed: The Ultimate Pitch. Our Pitchers had some great ideas which, with the right support, could become sustainable businesses. I would like to thank everyone who took part and to wish Jared, Clare, Alannah and Caroline all the best in the final in Belfast.”
Anna Doherty, Chief Executive of Derry Chamber of Commerce, was one of the judges at the local heat. She said, “We were delighted to see so many local entrepreneurs coming forward to Pitch to us. Every one of them had obviously put a lot of work into their Pitch and I know many of them will go on to build successful businesses and contribute to our local economy. We at the Chamber of Commerce are delighted to be able to offer Jarad membership for one year and use of a hot desk space – we hope the networking opportunities this will present will help him bolster his future business plans.”
Overall winner Jared Wilson was delighted to secure the top prize. He said: “I’m delighted that the judges were impressed with my Pitch. The prize money and support from the Chamber of Commerce will be invaluable in helping to take ‘Cricket Jobs’ to the next level. I am really looking forward to taking part in the Final in Belfast next month and hopefully I can bring The Ultimate Pitch prize back to the North West.”
Go Succeed (www.go-succeed.com) is funded by the UK Government and delivered by Northern Ireland’s 11 councils. The service supports entrepreneurs, new starts and existing businesses with easy-to-access advice and support including mentoring, master classes, peer networks, access to grant funding and a business plan, at every stage of their growth journey.
To find out more information about Go Succeed: The Ultimate Pitch, view a full list of terms and conditions, and apply, visit www.go-succeed.com/TheUltimatePitch.
With just under a week to go until the Chancellor’s first budget, Council Leader Liam Robinson, explains why Liverpool City Council continues to manage our finances in a sound and prudent way.
You’d have to have been living under a rock for the last three months not to know that the mood music coming from HM Treasury has not been positive.
The inherited 14 years of austerity, the cost of living crisis and a £22 billion black hole in the nation’s finances means that difficult decision will need to be made.
But we are seeing positive steps from the Government.
A commitment to longer term financial settlements for councils; a pay rise for public sector workers; a commitment to planning reform to improve growth; funding for 300 new school-based nurseries and money for councils to build on brownfield sites is just the beginning of the change.
Whilst we wait for the budget and for the dedicated spending review in the Spring, in Liverpool we are prudently basing our financial planning assumptions to make sure we manage our spend and make sure we account for every pound.
In terms of spending, most of our money goes on things we are legally obliged to provide, such as adults and children’s social care to keep vulnerable people safe. These two departments alone account for well over half of our total net budget – and demand for them has been rising due to a growing older population and more families needing support.
We’re also putting a huge amount of emphasis on making sure we bring in all the money we’re owed. Successes this year include:
Business Rates revenue up £7.2 million
Council Tax revenue up £9.3 million
Council Tax arrears collection up £1.7 million
In addition, a review of the single person Council Tax discount to make sure only eligible households are claiming has brought in an additional £750k, while property debt enforcement has recovered £318k.
This programme of work will only accelerate, as we put ourselves on a firmer financial footing for the long-term. This is vital if we are to protect and improve the services each and every resident of Liverpool cherishes.
Quarterly financial information as of September 30, 2024 IFRS – Regulated information – Not audited
Cegedim: Revenue growth continued in the third quarter of 2024
Revenue of €156.8 million in Q3 2024, up 5.7%
Marketing, BPO, HR, and cloud businesses led the way
Revenue for the first nine months of 2024 grew 5.9% to €475.8 million
Boulogne-Billancourt, France, October 24, 2024, after the market close. Revenue
Third quarter
Change Q3 2024 / 2023
in millions of euros
2024
2023 reclassified(1)
Reclassification(1)
2023 Reported
Reported vs. reclassified(1)
Like for like(2)(3) vs. reclassified(1)
Software & Services
75.6
76.0
-4.8
80.8
-0.5%
-4.2%
Flow
23.7
22.4
-0.4
22.8
5.5%
5.4%
Data & Marketing
28.2
24.1
0.0
24.1
17.0%
17.1%
BPO
21.6
19.0
0.0
19.0
13.9%
13.9%
Cloud & Support
7.7
6.8
+5.2
1.6
12.5%
12.5%
Cegedim
156.8
148.3
0.0
148.3
5.7%
3.8%
First 9 months
Change 9M 2023 / 2022
in millions of euros
2024
2023 reclassified(1)
Reclassification(1)
2023 Reported
Reported vs. reclassified(1)
Like for like(2)(4) vs. reclassified(1)
Software & Services
227.7
226.6
-15.7
242.3
0.5%
-2.6%
Flow
73.2
69.2
-1.8
71.0
5.7%
5.6%
Data & Marketing
87.5
79.0
0.0
79.0
10.8%
10.8%
BPO
61.5
51.8
0.0
51.8
18.8%
18.8%
Cloud & Support
25.8
22.6
+17.5
5.1
13.9%
13.9%
Cegedim
475.8
449.3
0.0
449.3
5.9%
4.3%
Cegedim posted consolidated third quarter revenues up 5.7% as reported and 3.8% like for like(2) compared with the same period in 2023. Revenues to end-September rose 5.9% as reported and 4.3% like for like compared with 9M 2023. Marketing, BPO, HR, and cloud businesses all delivered solid growth in the third quarter. As expected, the Software & Services division felt the impact of comparisons with Ségur public health investment spending in 2023 and a slowdown in international sales owing to the decision to refocus the Group’s UK doctor software activities on Scotland. Analysis of business trends by division
Software & Services
Software & Services
Third quarter
Change Q3 2024 / 2023
First 9 months
Change 9M 2024 / 2023
in millions of euros
2024
2023 reclassified(3)
Reported vs. reclassified(1)
Like for like(2) vs. reclassified(1)
2024
2023 reclassified(1)
Reported vs. reclassified(1)
Like for like(2) vs. reclassified(1)
Cegedim Santé
20.1
18.6
8.0%
-6.2%
58.9
58.4
0.9%
-9.8%
Insurance, HR, Pharmacies, and other services
42.7
43.9
-2.7%
-2.7%
129.5
128.4
0.9%
0.8%
International businesses
12.8
13.5
-5.0%
-6.1%
39.3
39.8
-1.3%
-2.8%
Software & Services
75.6
76.0
-0.5%
-4.2%
227.7
226.6
0.5%
-2.6%
Revenues at Cegedim Santé grew 8.0% as reported in the third quarter but fell 6.2% like for like. We did not fully meet our 2024 goal of offsetting last year’s Ségur impact and keeping like-for-like sales stable, but we are closing the gap with each quarter. Reported growth figures include Visiodent as of March 1, 2024. Visiodent’s gradual transition to Cegedim Group products for scheduling, databases, and so on is generating internal sales, which do not appear in the consolidated scope.
Other French subsidiaries had a challenging quarter, with revenues down 2.7%. We saw positive growth at our insurance businesses, thanks to robust project-based sales, and in HR, which is still getting a boost from its client diversification strategy. Conversely, the €2 million in Ségur public health investment subsidies we recorded in Q3 2023 made for a demanding comparison in the pharmacy business, where equipment sales also flagged after accelerating last year.
Internationally, revenues from software sales to UK doctors declined, as expected, following the decision to refocus the activity on Scotland.
Flow
Flow
Third quarter
Change Q3 2024 / 2023
First 9 months
Change 9M 2024 / 2023
in millions of euros
2024
2023 reclassified(1)
Reported vs. reclassified(1)
Like for like(2) vs. reclassified(1)
2024
2023 reclassified(1)
Reported vs. reclassified(1)
Like for like(2) vs. reclassified(1)
e-business
13.5
13.5
-0.2%
-0.4%
43.5
41.3
5.1%
4.8%
Third-party payer
10.2
8.9
14.3%
14.3%
29.7
27.9
6.7%
6.7%
Flow
23.7
22.4
5.5%
5.4%
73.2
69.2
5.7%
5.6%
Third-quarter growth in e-business, e-invoicing, and digitized data exchanges was nearly flat, at -0.2%. Healthcare flows offset a relative slowdown in the Invoicing & Procurement segment, which last year enjoyed sustained growth in France ahead of the e-invoicing reform scheduled to take effect July 1, 2024, but which has since been postponed to September 2026.
The digital data flow business dealing with reimbursement of healthcare payments in France (Third-party payer) experienced 14.3% yoy growth in Q3. It was boosted by strong growth in demand for its fraud and long-term illness detection offerings.
Data & Marketing
Data & Marketing
Third quarter
Change Q3 2024 / 2023
First 9 months
Change 9M 2024 / 2023
in millions of euros
2024
2023 reclassified(1)
Reported vs. reclassified(1)
Like for like(2) vs. reclassified(1)
2024
2023 reclassified(1)
Reported vs. reclassified(1)
Like for like(2) vs. reclassified(1)
Data
15.1
14.6
3.4%
3.4%
43.1
43.4
-0.7%
-0.7%
Marketing
13.1
9.5
38.0%
38.0%
44.4
35.6
24.8%
24.8%
Data & Marketing
28.2
24.1
17.0%
17.1%
87.5
79.0
10.8%
10.8%
Data business posted 3.4% yoy growth in the third quarter, resulting in nearly stable growth over nine months. Growth was led by French sales, which were more dynamic than international sales.
The Marketing segment had a record third quarter, up 38% owing to special ad campaigns during the Olympics. The rising popularity of our phygital media offerings in pharmacies helped the segment post 24.8% growth over the first nine months.
BPO
BPO
Third quarter
Change Q3 2024 / 2023
First 9 months
Change 9M 2024 / 2023
in millions of euros
2024
2023 reclassified(1)
Reported vs. reclassified(1)
Like for like(2) vs. reclassified(1)
2024
2023 reclassified(1)
Reported vs. reclassified(1)
Like for like(2) vs. reclassified
Insurance BPO
15.9
13.8
15.7%
15.7%
44.6
35.9
24.2%
24.2%
Business Services BPO
5.7
5.2
+9.2%
+9.2%
16.9
15.9
6.5%
6.5%
BPO
21.6
19.0
13.9%
13.9%
61.5
51.8
18.8%
18.8%
The Insurance BPO business grew by more than 15.7% over the third quarter, chiefly owing to its overflow business, which has been flourishing since the start of the year. Growth over nine months amounted to 24.2%, partly thanks to a favorable comparison stemming from the April 1, 2023, launch of the Allianz contract.
Business Services BPO (HR and digitalization) continues to report strong growth, up 9.2% yoy over the quarter on the back of a popular compliance offering and new clients.
Cloud & Support
Cloud & Support
Third quarter
Change Q3 2024 / 2023
First 9 months
Change 9M 2024 / 2023
in millions of euros
2024
2023 reclassified(4)
Reported vs. reclassified(1)
Like for like(2) vs. reclassified(1)
2024
2023 reclassified(1)
Reported vs. reclassified(1)
Like for like(2) vs. reclassified(1)
Cloud & Support
7.7
6.8
12.5%
12.5%
25.8
22.6
13.9%
13.9%
The Cloud & Support division’s trajectory continued over the third quarter, with growth of 12.5% reflecting our expanded range of sovereign cloud-backed products and services.
Highlights
Apart from the items cited below, to the best of the company’s knowledge, there were no events or changes during Q3 2024 that would materially alter the Group’s financial situation.
• New financing arrangement
On July 31, 2024, Cegedim announced that it had secured a new financing arrangement consisting of a €230 million syndicated loan. The arrangement is split into €180 million of lines drawn upon closing to refinance the Group’s existing debt (RCF and Euro PP, which were to mature in October 2024 and October 2025 respectively) and an additional, undrawn revolving credit facility (RCF) of €50 million. This new financing arrangement will bolster the Group’s liquidity and extend the maturity of its debt to, respectively, 5 years (€30 million, payments every six months); 6 years (€60 million, repayable upon maturity); and 7 years (€90 million, repayable upon maturity).
Significant transactions and events post September 30, 2024
To the best of the company’s knowledge, there were no post-closing events or changes after September 30, 2024, that would materially alter the Group’s financial situation.
Outlook
Based on the currently available information, the Group expects 2024 like-for-like revenue(1) growth to be towards the lower end of the 5-8% range relative to 2023. That said, we still expect recurring operating income to continue to improve. These targets are not forecasts and may need to be revised if there is a significant worsening of geopolitical, macroeconomic, or currency risks.
—————
Webcast on October 24, 2024, at 6:15 pm (Paris time)
Disclaimer This press release is available in French and in English. In the event of any difference between the two versions, the original French version takes precedence. This press release may contain inside information. It was sent to Cegedim’s authorized distributor on October 24, 2024, no earlier than 5:45 pm Paris time. The figures cited in this press release include guidance on Cegedim’s future financial performance targets. This forward-looking information is based on the opinions and assumptions of the Group’s senior management at the time this press release is issued and naturally entails risks and uncertainty. For more information on the risks facing Cegedim, please refer to Chapter 7, “Risk management”, section 7.2, “Risk factors and insurance”, and Chapter 3, “Overview of the financial year”, section 3.6, “Outlook”, of the 2023 Universal Registration Document filled with the AMF on April 3, 2024, under number D.24-0233.
About Cegedim: Founded in 1969, Cegedim is an innovative technology and services group in the field of digital data flow management for healthcare ecosystems and B2B, and a business software publisher for healthcare and insurance professionals. Cegedim employs more than 6,500 people in more than 10 countries and generated revenue of €616 million in 2023. Cegedim SA is listed in Paris (EURONEXT: CGM). To learn more please visit: www.cegedim.fr And follow Cegedim on X: @CegedimGroup, LinkedIn, and Facebook.
Aude Balleydier Cegedim Media Relations and Communications Manager
Breakdown of revenue by geographic zone, currency and division at September 30, 2024
as a % of consolidated revenues
Geographic zone
Currency
France
EMEA ex. France
Americas
Euro
GBP
Other
Software & Services
82.8%
17.1%
0.1%
86.2%
12.0%
1.7%
Flow
91.9%
8.1%
0.0%
94.5%
5.5%
0.0%
Data & Marketing
97.9%
2.1%
0.0%
98.0%
0.0%
2.0%
BPO
100.0%
0.0%
0.0%
100.0%
0.0%
0.0%
Cloud & Support
99.9%
0.1%
0.0%
100.0%
0.0%
0.0%
Cegedim
90.1%
9.8%
0.1%
92.2%
6.6%
1.2%
1As of January 1, 2024, our Cegedim Outsourcing and Audiprint subsidiaries—which were previously housed in the Software & Services division—as well as BSV—formerly of the Flow division—have been moved to the Cloud & Support division in order to capitalize on operating synergies between cloud activities and IT solutions integration.
2At constant scope and exchange rates.The positive currency impact of 0.2% was mainly due to the pound sterling. The positive scope effect of 1.8% was attributable to the first-time consolidation inCegedim’saccounts ofVisiodentstarting March 1, 2024.The positive currency impact of 0.1% was mainly due to the pound sterling. The positive scope effect of 1.4% was attributable to the first-time consolidation inCegedim’saccounts ofVisiodentstarting March 1, 2024.
3To take advantage of synergies,Cegedim Outsourcing,Audiprint,andBSVhave been reassigned to the Cloud & Support division.At constant scope and exchange rates.
4To take advantage of synergies,Cegedim Outsourcing,Audiprint,andBSVhave been reassigned to the Cloud & Support division.At constant scope and exchange rates.
Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments
Confidence in the police, and in the systems that hold them to account, will be boosted under a package of reforms announced by the Home Secretary.
The announcement will reassure both the police and the public that the system of vetting and accountability is working.
It will tackle delays in investigations, ensuring the complexity of specialist police roles are considered from the outset, and introduce stronger vetting processes so the highest standards are always upheld and maintained.
This follows the long-awaited accountability review and draws on findings of the reviews undertaken by Dame Louise Casey and Lady Elish Angiolini.
In a statement to Parliament, Yvette Cooper set out the government’s mission to put confidence back into policing, ensuring both that the police have the confidence of the communities they serve, and that officers have the confidence they need to do the vital job of keeping people safe.
She set out new measures that will be taken forward in response to the accountability review started under the previous government, including:
a presumption of anonymity for firearms officers facing criminal proceedings following police shootings, up until the point of a conviction
raising the threshold for the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) to refer police officers to the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), so that only cases that have a reasonable prospect of conviction are referred – as is already the test for members of the public suspected of committing a crime
a rapid independent review to consider the legal test for use of force in misconduct proceedings and the threshold for unlawful killing in inquests
an examination by the Director of Public Prosecutions of CPS guidance and processes in relation to charging police officers for offences committed in the course of their duties
the creation of a national lessons-learned database for deaths or serious injuries following police contact or pursuits to ensure findings are incorporated into future training and guidance
placing the IOPC victims’ right to review policy on a statutory footing
The Home Secretary also announced reforms to address fundamental flaws in police vetting and misconduct processes, including delivering on key manifesto commitments. These will:
for the first time, place vetting standards on a statutory footing
empower chief constables to promptly dismiss officers who fail their vetting
strengthen requirements relating to the suspension of officers under investigation for violence against women and girls
ensure officers convicted of certain criminal offences are automatically found to have committed gross misconduct and create a presumption of dismissal in gross misconduct cases
The Home Secretary set out these reforms to address concerns held by police, local communities and the families of those impacted by police use of force.
As well as legislating for a presumption of anonymity, ministers will take forward 3 measures set out by the previous government. These will align the threshold for IOPC referrals of officers to the CPS to that used by police for members of the public, accelerate processes by allowing the IOPC to send cases to the CPS prior to their final investigation report where there is sufficient evidence, and place the victims’ right to review policy for IOPC decisions on a legislative footing to ensure the voices for victims and bereaved families are heard.
The Home Office and Ministry of Justice have also appointed 2 independent reviewers, Tim Godwin OBE QPM and Sir Adrian Fulford PC, to undertake a rapid review of the legal test for use of force in misconduct cases, and the threshold for determining unlawful killing in coronial inquests, to bring greater clarity and prevent delays in the accountability system following recent legal rulings.
The Attorney General has also requested that the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) reviews CPS guidance and processes in relation to charging police officers for offences committed in the course of their duties, reflecting the complexity of specialist roles.
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said:
The British tradition of policing by consent relies on mutual bonds of trust between the public and the police. For our policing model to work, it is essential that the police have the confidence of the communities they serve and that officers have the confidence they need to do their vital and often extremely difficult job of keeping us all safe.
Too often in recent times, both elements of that confidence have become frayed. The government have made it a mission to put confidence back into policing.
The measures I have outlined are practical steps to rebuild confidence, tackle delays, provide clarity and ensure that high standards are maintained. The government is determined to take the necessary action to strengthen public confidence in the police, and to strengthen the confidence of the police when they are out on the street every day, doing the difficult job of keeping us all safe.
Chief Constable Simon Chesterman, the National Police Chiefs’ Council lead for Armed Policing, said:
Police officers are not above the law, and nobody expects them to be, but the system that holds officers to account when they use force to protect the public, their colleagues and themselves, has become broken.
We are supportive of the Home Secretary’s announcement and welcome their commitment to getting it right for officers and the public they serve and improving overall policing standards.
The ongoing work on the accountability review now has momentum to continue and is a real opportunity to get the balance right in the interests of the public we are here to protect.
We are proud to have the most restrained and professional armed officers in the world, but increasingly they are more afraid of going to prison for doing their jobs, than facing the violent and dangerous individuals we rely on them to protect us from.
“Good police officers need to know that if they do what they are trained to do, they will be supported by the leaders of the police service, government and most importantly the public. > > We remain determined to get police accountability right and we will support government to address concerns about the current accountability system to restore the confidence of police officers and the public.
Good morning, and thank you for the warm welcome. A special thank you to Nodal for inviting me to join your annual Trader Conference again this year. It is truly an honor to address all of you this morning. I am more than two years into my role as a commissioner at the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, and I still feel humbled by the opportunity to stand on a stage with a microphone to address accomplished professionals like all of you. My children, on the other hand, are surprised that anyone would want to hear me talk about anything, and they are even more shocked that I would need a microphone to be heard as they are convinced that the only volume I ever use when speaking is shouting.
The topic for my speech on today’s agenda is: New Perspectives on Energy Trading and Power Markets, and I plan to focus on the road ahead for these markets. But before discussing the road ahead, I will start with a story from my childhood about when I learned to drive. I say this is a story from my childhood because in South Dakota, children as young as fourteen years old are allowed to obtain a driver’s license. As much as I miss my home state, when I look at my fourteen-year-old son and think about him driving, I see the wisdom in Virginia’s approach.
At the ripe old age of twelve, my dad decided it was time for me to learn how to drive. As a tall child, I could reach the gas and brake pedals, which was apparently the minimum criteria for beginning driving lessons on the farm. To be honest, I was scared to death of driving. But my parents said I should learn because if there was ever an emergency, and I was the only one home, I may need to drive for help. That logic just made me scared of driving and being left alone on the farm.
My experience as a parent teaching two teenagers to drive involved multiple practice sessions in empty parking lots before slowly graduating to quiet side roads before paying another adult to do the really scary stuff, such as driving on highways and making left turns across oncoming traffic. I suspect that sounds familiar to many in this room as well.
But that suburban approach is not how I learned to drive. My lesson – notice I said lesson, not lessons—was a little more hands-off. On the day I learned to drive, my dad had me jump in the passenger seat of his 1977 blue Chevy pick-up truck to take a ride with him. Oddly, my older brother jumped in another farm truck and followed close behind.
After driving a few miles away from our house, my dad drove the truck into the middle of a freshly plowed field. Dad threw the truck into park, jumped out, and told me to slide over to the driver’s seat. He then shut the door, leaned into the window, and told me to drive around the field until I was comfortable enough to drive myself home. At that point, I realized why my brother had followed us in another vehicle—it was my dad’s getaway car.
Honestly, I panicked. I screamed, pleaded, and begged. But my dad was confident in his approach. And he left me with this advice: always keep your eyes on the road. But don’t just look at the road immediately in front of the vehicle; be sure to watch the road ahead so you know where you are going—and so that you do not smash into a deer.
I’m sharing this story with you today for two reasons. First, to offer some entertainment.
Second, I found the advice my dad gave me that day relevant to the topic for my speech today. Specifically, I want to share with you some thoughts and observations on energy markets, the road ahead for these markets, and potential down-the-road effects on the derivatives markets that are regulated by the CFTC.
Being a derivatives regulator can feel a little like being that driver who is looking down the road to see what is ahead. Our markets are forward looking, offering a view into points off in the distance so drivers are prepared for the path ahead. But, just like a careful driver needs to see what is right in front of the vehicle as much as what is on the road ahead, careful regulation requires us to also keep our eyes on current market conditions, in addition to ensuring the reliability and safety of the futures markets, which reflect the road ahead. The CFTC is always surveilling markets, spotting trends, and monitoring for risk that could impact the futures markets.
Now, here is where this speech will diverge from my story of learning to drive. While I was left to teach myself how to drive and had no one willing to share their expertise with me, our work at the CFTC in following markets occurs with the benefit of a variety of internal resources (such as the Market Intelligence Branch of the Division of Market Oversight and the Office of the Chief Economist) as well as external resources (such as our advisory committees).
At the CFTC, we have five advisory committees, each of which is sponsored by a commissioner. These committees are comprised of subject matter experts representing a variety of viewpoints, such as private sector stakeholders, non-profit groups, academia, and other governmental entities. As many of you know, especially those who are members, I sponsor the Energy and Environmental Markets Advisory Committee.
Growing up on a farm in South Dakota, I always understood that the price of energy had a major impact on whether it was a good year or a bad year for the farm. Even at a young age, I could tell you the exact cost-per-gallon of diesel because either my dad was grumbling about it as he left for the field, or it was the topic of discussion at the local café in town where the older farmers convened for their morning coffee.
The price of diesel determined the cost of running planters, tractors, combines, and trucks. The cost of fertilizers and pesticides are also directly linked to fossil fuel input prices, and spreading those fertilizers and pesticides required hiring a spray pilot whose services were priced based on the cost of the aviation fuel.
Even after our crops were harvested, energy costs were critical. Energy prices influenced the cost of storage at the grain elevators and transportation; barges and ships run on bunker fuel and trains need diesel. Everything in the farm economy depends on the price of energy. You might have perfect temperatures, exactly the right amount of rain at exactly the right time, and high yields but still see your net profit shrink due to high energy prices.
As the only Commissioner with a background in production agriculture, sponsoring the Commission’s Agriculture Advisory Committee may have seemed like the obvious choice. But I saw the EEMAC as an opportunity to focus on sectors critical to the agricultural economy and to study those energy markets to understand their impact on the markets we regulate. The goal is for the energy futures complex to serve end-users who need to hedge those costs and to mitigate the frequent price volatility experienced by the underlying cash markets.
As the EEMAC has held meetings and participated in discussions around energy markets, we have heard over and over that the United States has critical gaps in its energy and power infrastructure. As those gaps widen, so do risks to the stability of these markets that become more sensitive and less resilient to forces beyond US control. Instability and volatility in spot energy markets and prices have a direct impact on the derivative products we regulate.
Energy infrastructure’s impact on energy prices is something that cannot be ignored, and this reality has become even more apparent in the last decade. Of course, it makes sense that energy transmission and delivery directly impact the cost to the end consumer. However, truly understanding how energy infrastructure market fundamentals influence energy spot and derivatives prices requires hearing directly from hardworking domestic energy producers and seeing the infrastructure up close.
With that in mind, the EEMAC has held a series of meetings on the road, and members of the advisory committee have joined me in getting outside of Washington to see our energy production and infrastructure and to talk directly with the experts who manage these facilities.
In our first meeting, we visited Oklahoma and focused on more traditional energy markets such as crude oil and natural gas.[1] We visited Cushing, Oklahoma, where the WTI Crude Oil contract settles to see the pipelines and storage facilities as well as to talk with those in charge of storing, blending, and moving the oil to locations throughout the US. During the EEMAC meeting, a witness from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission described an anomaly in the price of natural gas in New England.[2] Despite having one of the largest concentrations of natural gas in the Marcellus Shale just over two hundred miles away, a lack of pipeline capacity makes it impossible to fully supply New England with gas from the Marcellus Shale.[3] This situation means that New England relies on liquified natural gas (“LNG”) supplies from tanker ships. As a result, the price New England end users pay is based on the Henry Hub price for exported LNG, rather than the domestic production price. This circumstance creates an unusual situation where the spot price that a natural gas-fired power plant in Massachusetts pays for its fuel is more dependent on Europe’s desire for natural gas and a global market thousands of miles away than on the price and availability of natural gas produced two states away in Pennsylvania.
To examine power markets and electrification, we held meetings in Roy, Utah; Nashville, Tennessee; and Golden, Colorado.[4] In the course of those meetings, we had the opportunity to tour a large Ford EV production facility in Spring Hill, Tennessee, the Bingham Canyon Copper Mine in Utah, and a startup company looking to reuse mine tailings to produce critical metals and minerals in Golden, Colorado.
Here in the United States, we have some of the largest deposits of the metals necessary for power generation, transmission, and use, but large gaps in our infrastructure and policies render these advantages almost meaningless. In Golden, Colorado, we learned that despite a startup company’s cutting-edge technology that can turn mine waste into critical metals and minerals, China’s dominance in rare earth markets means that they can manipulate prices at will and squeeze out competition and force any US production into bankruptcy.
Southwest of Salt Lake City, Utah, we toured the Bingham Canyon Copper Mine. The Bingham County Mine is the largest man-made excavation in the world.[5] It’s also the world’s deepest open pit mine, and it has produced more copper than any other mine in the world.[6] As you can probably guess, the US has abundant supplies of copper; however, because of a lack of domestic smelting capacity, much of the copper mined in the US must be shipped overseas, often to China, to be processed and refined. In fact, since 2000, China has been responsible for 75% of the global smelter capacity growth.[7]
Finally, in Spring Hill, Tennessee, we learned that car companies are increasingly concerned about logistical challenges reducing their ability to provide cost-competitive electric vehicles. This is not an idle concern. Just four weeks ago, Rivian disclosed that it will be forced to reduce production and decrease its sales target in 2024 by almost 20% because of difficulties sourcing a component used in its electric motor.[8] And last week, to secure a steady supply of lithium, GM announced an almost $1 billion investment in the Thacker Pass mine in Nevada.[9]
For years, the problem for domestic energy policy was how to mine, drill, and import enough raw materials to satisfy America’s growing energy demand.[10] Even after the oil glut of the 1980s and lower energy prices, we were still concerned with our reliance on foreign energy.[11] The continuous mantra of Presidents starting with Richard Nixon was the concept of “Energy Independence” as a policy goal.[12] Now, not because of government mandates, plans, or policies, but thanks to technological innovation, hard work, and the deployment of private capital, that goal has largely been achieved. We have the raw materials in the ground that we need to power American energy independence; however, we need our infrastructure to catch-up with our domestic supply.
Returning to my driving lesson, when I look at the road ahead, I see the United States coming to a crossroads. One road leads to more resilient infrastructure, lower prices, and energy abundance. The other road leads to energy scarcity, higher prices, and a loss of energy independence. The direction we take as a country will have a major impact on the energy markets and the futures markets we regulate at the CFTC. Unfortunately, gaps in energy infrastructure lead to instability and volatility in energy markets, which have a direct impact on the derivatives markets. If derivatives markets fail to offer adequate price discovery and risk mitigation, they will no longer serve producers and end users as appropriate tools to hedge their exposure. That is a road we cannot afford to go down.
As a regulator, the CFTC is not the driver of this car, but we definitely have an interest in taking the road that leads to liquid, stable, and vibrant derivatives markets that serve as a tool for hedging against risk. We can do that by ensuring that new derivative products come to market efficiently without the fear of litigation or unreasonable staff positions, and by cultivating new market structures that minimize conflicts and instill market confidence. Our enforcement efforts should be focused on ‘bad actors’ and not on trying to shortcut deliberative policymaking. The CFTC should prefer “responsible regulation” over “regulation by enforcement.” To arrive at our desired destination, we all need to keep our eyes on the road, to see what is right in front of us while simultaneously paying attention to the road ahead.
Thank you for taking this road trip with me today. I look forward to answering your questions.
[1] CFTC Energy and Environmental Markets Advisory Committee meeting in Stillwater, Oklahoma, September 20, 2022.
[4] CFTC Energy and Environmental Markets Advisory Committee meeting in Nashville, Tennessee, February 28, 2023. CFTC Energy and Environmental Markets Advisory Committee meeting in Roy, Utah, June 27, 2023. CFTC Energy and Environmental Markets Advisory Committee meeting in Golden, Colorado, February 13, 2024.
[5] Kristine L. Pankow, Jeffrey R. Moore, J. Mark Hale, Keith D. Koper, Tex Kubacki, Katherine M. Whidden, and Michael K. McCarter. “Massive landslide at Utah copper mine generates wealth of geophysical data.” Geological Society of America, vol. 24, no. 1, January 2014.
[7] Securing Copper Supply: No China, No Energy Transition, WoodsMcKenzie, August 2024, Nick Pickens, Robin Griffin, Eleni Joanides, and Zhifei Liu.
[8] Ed Ludlow and Kiel Porter. “Rivian Misstep Triggered Parts Shortage Hobbling Its EV Output.” Bloomberg, October 7, 2024.
[9] Camilla Hodgson. “General Motors increases investment in lithium mine to nearly $1bn.” Financial Times, October 6, 2024.
[10] US Energy Information Administration, “U.S. energy facts explained, Imports & Exports.” Last updated July 15, 2024, with data from the Monthly Energy Review.
[12] Charles Homans, “Energy Independence: A Short History.” Foreign Policy, January 3, 2012.
Source: The Conversation – UK – By Christopher Hill, Associate Professor (Research and Development), Faculty of Business and Creative Industries, University of South Wales
Nuclear detonations were the backdrop to Teeua and Teraabo’s childhood. By the time the sisters were eight and four, the Pacific island on which they grew up, Kiritimati, had hosted 30 atomic and thermonuclear explosions – six during Operation Grapple, a British series between 1957 and 1958, and 24 during Operation Dominic, led by the US in 1962.
The UK’s secretary of state for the colonies, Alan Lennox-Boyd, had claimed the Grapple series would put Britain “far ahead of the Americans, and probably the Russians too, in super-bomb development”. Grapple, the country’s largest tri-service operation since D-Day, also involved troops from Fiji and New Zealand. It sought to secure the awesome power of the hydrogen bomb: a thermonuclear device far more destructive than the atomic bomb.
Britain’s seat at the top table of “super-bomb development” was emphatically announced in April 1958 with Grapple Y: an “H-bomb” 200 times more powerful than the bomb dropped on Hiroshima in 1945. This remains Britain’s largest nuclear detonation – one of more than 100 conducted by the UK, US and Soviet Union in 1958 alone.
More than six decades later, the health effects on former servicemen based on Kiritimati, as well as at test locations in South and Western Australia, remain unresolved. Greater Manchester’s mayor, Andy Burnham, has called the treatment of UK nuclear test veterans “the longest-standing and, arguably, the worst” of all the British public scandals in recent history.
Over the past year, the life stories of British nuclear test veterans have been collected by researchers, including myself, for an oral history project in partnership with the British Library. Whether from a vantage point of air, land or sea, the veterans all recall witnessing nuclear explosions with startling clarity, as if the moment was seared on to their memories. According to Doug Herne, a ship’s cook with the Royal Navy:
When the flash hit you, you could see the X-rays of your hands through your closed eyes. Then the heat hit you, and it was as if someone my size had caught fire and walked through me. To say it was frightening is an understatement. I think it shocked us into silence.
British servicemen describe their nuclear test experiences. Video: Wester van Gaal/Motherboard.
But what of the experiences of local people on Kiritimati? I have recently interviewed two sisters who are among the few surviving islanders who witnessed the nuclear tests. This is their story.
‘A mushroom cloud igniting the sky’
At the start of Operation Grapple in May 1957, around 250 islanders lived on Kiritimati – the world’s largest coral reef atoll, slap bang in the centre of the Pacific Ocean, around 1,250 miles (2,000km) due south of Hawaii. The island’s name is derived from the English word “Christmas”, the atoll having been “discovered” by the British explorer James Cook on Christmas Eve 1777.
In May 2023, I visited Kiritimati for a research project on “British nuclear imperialism”, which investigated how post-war Britain used its dwindling imperial assets and resources as a springboard for nuclear development. I sought to interview islanders who had remained on the atoll since the tests, including Teeua Tekonau, then aged 68. In 2024, I visited her younger sister, Teraabo Pollard, who lives more than 8,000 miles away in the contrasting surroundings of Burnley, north-west England.
Far from descriptions of fear and terror, both Teeua and Teraabo looked back on the tests with striking enthusiasm. Teraabo recalled witnessing them from the local maneaba (open-air meeting place) or tennis court as a “pleasurable” experience full of “excitement”.
She described having her ears plugged with cotton wool before being covered with a blanket. As if by magic, the blanket was then lifted to reveal a mushroom cloud igniting the night sky – a sight accompanied by sweetened bread handed out by American soldiers. So vivid was the light that Teraabo, then aged four, described “being excited about it being daytime again”.
An Operation Grapple thermonuclear test near Kiritimati, 1957-58. Video: Imperial War Museums.
In view of the violence of the tests, I was struck that Teeua and Teraabo volunteered these positive memories. Their enthusiasm seemed in marked contrast to growing concerns about the radioactive fallout – including those voiced by surviving test veterans and their descendants. As children, the tests seem to have offered the sisters a spectacle of fantasy and escapism – glazed with the saccharine of American treats and Disney films on British evacuation ships.
Yet they have also lived through the premature deaths of family members and, in Teraabo’s case, a malignant tumour dating from the time of the tests. And there have been similar stories from other families who lived in the shadow of these very risky, loosely controlled experiments. Teraabo told me about a friend who had peeked out from her blanket as a young girl – and who suffered from eye and health problems ever since.
‘Only a very slight health hazard’
Kiritimati forms part of the impossibly large Republic of Kiribati – a nation of 33 islands spread over 3.5 million square kilometres; the only one to have territory in all four hemispheres and, until 1995, on either side of the international date line. Before independence from Britain in 1979, Kiribati belonged to the Gilbert and Ellice Island Colony, which in effect made Kiritimati a “nuclear colony” for the purpose of British and American testing.
In 1955, Teeua and Teraabo’s parents, Taraem and Tekonau Tetoa, left their home island of Tabiteuea, a small atoll belonging to the Gilbert group of islands in the western Pacific. They boarded a British merchant vessel bound for Christmas Island nearly 2,000 miles away. Setting sail with new-born Teeua in their arms, the family looked forward to a future cutting copra on Kiritimati’s British coconut plantation.
The scale of this journey, with four young children, was immense. Just how the hundred or so Gilbertese passengers “managed to live [during the voyage] was better not asked”, according to one royal engineer who described a similar voyage a few years later. “There were piles of coconuts everywhere – perhaps they were for both food and drink.”
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Within two years of their arrival, the family faced more upheaval as mother Taraem and her children were packed aboard another ship ahead of the first three sets of British nuclear tests in the Pacific. Known as Grapple 1, 2 and 3, they were to be detonated over Malden Island, an atoll some 240 miles to the south of Kiritimati – but still too close for the comfort of local residents.
According to Teeua, the evacuation was prompted by disillusioned labourers brought to Kiritimati without their families, who went on strike after learning how much the British troops were being paid. But the islanders’ perspectives do not feature much in the colonial records, which give precedence to British disputes about logistical costs and safety calculations.
The Grapple task force resolved that the safe limit set by the International Commission on Radiological Protection should be reduced, to limit the cost of evacuations. A meeting in November 1956 noted that “only a very slight health hazard to people would arise from this reduction – and that only to primitive peoples”.
Shocking as this remark sounds, it is typical of the disregard that nuclear planners appear to have had, both for Indigenous communities and the mostly working-class soldiers. These lives did not seem to matter much in the context of Britain’s quest for nuclear supremacy. William Penney, Britain’s chief nuclear scientist, had bemoaned how critics during tests in Australia were “intent on thwarting the whole future of the British Empire for the sake of a few Aboriginals”.
Tekonau, Teeua’s father, was one of the 30 or so I-Kiribati people to stay behind on Kiritimati during the Malden tests in May and June 1957. As one of the only labourers to speak English, he had gained the trust of the district commissioner, Percy Roberts, who invited Tekonau to accompany him during inspections of villagers’ houses in Port London, then the island’s only village. On one occasion, Teeua said, the islanders did not recognise her father as he had been given a “flat top” haircut like the Fijian soldiers. “This means he had a nice relationship with the soldiers,” she told me. “Thank God for giving me such a good and clever dad.”
Since the initial tests did not produce a thermonuclear explosion, the task force embarked on further trials between November 1957 and September 1958, known as Grapple X, Y and Z. In view of expense and time, these were conducted on Kiritimati rather than Malden Island – and this time, the residents were not evacuated to other islands. Rather, families were brought aboard ships in the island’s harbour and shown films below deck.
After these tests, the islanders returned to find the large X and Y detonations had cracked the walls of their homes and smashed their doors and furniture. One islander found their pet frigate bird, like so many of the wild birds on Kiritimati, had been blinded by the flash of Grapple Y. No compensation was ever paid to the islanders, although the Ministry of Supply did reimburse the colony for deterioration of “plantation assets”, including £4 for every damaged coconut tree (equivalent to £120 today).
A month before Grapple Y, Teraabo was born. Her earliest and most vivid childhood memories are of the US-led Operation Dominic four years later, by which time evacuation procedures had been abandoned altogether.
This series of tests was sanctioned by Britain in exchange for a nuclear-powered submarine and access to the Nevada Proving Grounds in the US – regarded as pivotal to the future of British weapons technology ahead of the signing of the Test Ban Treaty in October 1963, which would prohibit atmospheric testing.
Dominic’s 24 detonations on Kiritimati – which usually took place after sunset around 6pm, between April and November 1962 – were “awesome”, according to Teraabo. Recalling the suspense as the “tannoy announced the countdown”, she described “coming out of cover [and] witnessing the bomb [as] an amazing experience … When the bomb set off, the brilliance of the light was tremendous.”
Each explosion’s slow expiration would re-illuminate the Pacific sky. One, Starfish Prime, became known as a “rainbow bomb” because of the multi-coloured aurora it produced over the Pacific, having been launched into space where it exploded.
So spectacular were these descriptions that I almost felt I had to suspend disbelief as I listened. At one point in my interview with Teraabo, she leaned in to reassure me that she had no interest in exaggerating these events: “I’m a very proud person,” she whispered, “I would never lie.”
‘In our blood’
More than six decades on from the Grapple tests, I was sitting in Teeua’s kitchen in the village of Tabwakea (meaning “turtle”), near the northern tip of Kiritimati. I had driven here in a Subaru Forester, clapped-out from the many potholes on the island’s main road, itself built by royal engineers over 60 years ago.
Teeua Tekonau in her kitchen during the author’s visit to Kiritimati in 2023. Christopher R. Hill., CC BY
Teeua’s home, nestled down a sand track, had a wooden veranda at the front where she would teach children to read and write under shelter from the hot equatorial sun. Handcrafted mats lined the sand and coral floor, fanning out from the veranda to the kitchen at the back.
The house felt full of the sounds of the local community, from the chatter of neighbours to the laughter of children outdoors. No one could feel lonely here, despite the vastness of the ocean that surrounds Kiritimati.
As Teeua cooked rice and prepared coffee, we discussed the main reason for my visit: to understand the impacts of the nuclear tests on the islanders, their descendents, and the sensitive ecosystem in which they live. Teeua is chair of Kiritimati’s Association of Atomic Cancer Patients, and one of only three survivors of the tests still living on Kiritimati. She pulled up a seat and looked at me:
Many, many died of cancer … And many women had babies that died within three months … I remember the coconut trees … when you drank [from the coconuts], you [were] poisoned.
Both Teeua’s parents and four of her eight siblings had died of cancer or unexplained conditions, she said. Her younger brother, Takieta, died of leukaemia at the age of two in November 1963 – less than a year after Operation Dominic ended. Her sister Teraabo, who discovered a tumour in her stomach shortly after the trials, was only able to have her stomach treated once she moved to the UK in 1981, by which time the tumour had turned malignant.
Teeua’s testimony pointed to the gendered impacts of the nuclear tests. She referred to the prevalence of menstrual problems and stillbirths, evidence of which can be inferred from the testimony of another nuclear survivor, Sui Kiritome, a fellow I-Kiribati who had arrived on Kiritimati in 1957 with her teacher husband. Sui has described how their second child, Rakieti, had “blood coming out of all the cavities of her body” at birth.
A rare military hospital record from 1958 – stored in the UK’s National Archives at Kew in London – also refers to the treatment of a civilian woman for ante-partum haemorrhage and stillbirth, though it is unclear whether this was a local woman or one of the soldier’s wives on the passenger ship HMT Dunera, which visited briefly to “boost morale” after Grapple X.
Members of the Kiritimati Association of Atomic Cancer Patients. Courtesy: Teeua Taukaro., CC BY-ND
Having re-established the Association of Atomic Cancer Patients in 2009, Teeua has continued much of the work that Ken McGinley, first chair of the British Nuclear Tests Veterans Association, did after its establishment in 1983. She has documented the names of all I-Kiribati people present during the tests, along with their spouses, children and other relatives. And she has listed the cancers and illnesses from which they have suffered.
In the absence of medical records at the island hospital, these handwritten notes are the closest thing on the atoll to epidemiological data about the tests. But according to Teeua, concerns about the health effects of the tests date back much longer, to 1965 when a labourer named Bwebwe spoke out about poisonous clouds. “Everyone thought he was crazy,” Teeua recalled.
But Bwebwe’s speculations were lent credibility by Sui Kiritome’s testimony, and by the facial scars she bore that were visible for all to see. In an interview with her daughter, Sui explained how she was only 24 when she started to lose her hair, and “burns developed on my face, scalp and parts of my shoulder”.
In a similar manner to claims made by British nuclear test veterans, Sui attributed her health problems to being rained on during Grapple Y – which may have been detonated closer to the atoll’s surface than the task force was prepared to admit.
When I asked Teeua why her campaigning association was only reformed in 2009, she explained it had been prompted by a visit from British nuclear test veterans who “told us that everyone [involved in the tests] has cancer – blood cancer”. They had been told this in the past but, she said, “we did not believe it. But after years … after our children [also] died of cancer, then we remembered what they told us.”
After some visiting researchers explained to Teeua and the community that the effects of the tests were “not good”, she concluded that “our kids died of cancer because of the tests … That’s why we start to combine together … the nuclear survivors, to talk about what they did to our kids”.
I found Teeua’s testimony deeply troubling: not only because of the suffering she and other families have been through, but in the way that veterans had returned to Kiritimati as civilians, raising concerns among locals that may have lain dormant or been forgotten. The suggestion that radiation was “in her blood” must have been deeply disturbing for Teeua and her community.
But I reminded myself that the veterans who came looking for answers in 2009 were also victims. They made the long journey seeking clues about their health problems, or a silver bullet to prove their government’s deception over the nuclear fallout.
As young men, they were unwittingly burdened with a lifetime of uncertainty – compounded by endless legal disputes with the Ministry of Defence or inconclusive health studies that jarred with their personal medical histories. And, like the islanders, some of these servicemen died young after experiencing agonising illnesses.
The scramble for the Pacific
My research on British nuclear imperialism also sheds light on how imperial and settler colonial perceptions of “nature” shaped how these nuclear tests were planned and operationalised.
British sites were selected on the basis of in-depth environmental research. When searching the site for Britain’s first atomic bomb (the Montebello Islands off the west coast of Australia), surveyors discovered 20 new species of insect, six new plants, and a species of legless lizard.
Monitoring of radioactive fallout from nuclear tests fed into the rise of ecosystem ecologies as an academic discipline. In the words of one environmental specialist on the US tests, it seemed that “destruction was the enabling condition for understanding life as interconnected”.
Since H-bombs would exceed the explosive yield deemed acceptable by Australia, Winston Churchill’s government in the mid-1950s had been forced to look for a new test site beyond Western and South Australia. British planners drew on a wealth of imperial knowledge and networks – but their proposal to use the Kermadec Islands, an archipelago 600 miles north-east of Auckland, was rejected by New Zealand on environmental grounds.
So, when Teeua and her family landed on Kiritimati in 1955, their journey was part of “the scramble for the Pacific”: a race between Britain and the US to lay claim to the sovereignty of Pacific atolls in light of their strategic significance for air and naval power.
The British government archives include some notable environmental “what ifs?” Had the US refused the UK’s selection of Kiritimati because of its own sovereignty claim, then it would have been probable, as Lennox-Boyd, Britain’s colonial secretary, admitted, that “the Antarctic region south of Australia might have to be used” for its rapidly expanding nuclear programme.
Instead, this extraordinary period in global history recently took me to a Victorian mansion in the Lancashire town of Burnley, where I interviewed Teeua’s younger sister, Teraabo, about her memories of the Kiritimati tests.
‘No longer angry’
Teraabo’s home felt like the antithesis of Teeua’s island abode 8,300 miles away: ordered instead of haphazard, private instead of communal, spacious instead of crowded. And our interview had a more detached, philosophical tone.
Teraabo Pollard with her father’s nuclear test veteran medal. Christopher R. Hill., CC BY-ND
Like her sister, Teraabo has worked to raise awareness about the legacy of the nuclear tests, including with the Christmas Island Appeal, an offshoot of the British Nuclear Test Veterans Association that sought to publicise the extent of the waste left on Kiritimati from the nuclear test period.
The appeal succeeded in persuading Tony Blair’s UK government to tackle the remaining waste in Kiritimati – most of which was non-radiological, according to a 1998 environmental assessment. The island was “cleaned up” and remediated between 2004 and 2008, at a cost of around £5 million to the Ministry of Defence. Much of the waste was flown or shipped back to the UK, where 388 tonnes of low-grade radioactive material were deposited in a former salt mine at Port Clarence, near Middlesbrough.
Yet Teraabo’s views have evolved. She told me she is “no longer angry” about the tests, a stark contrast to her position 20 years ago, when she told British journalist Alan Rimmer how islanders had “led a simple life with disease virtually unknown. But after the tests, everything changed. I now realise the whole island was poisoned.”
Whereas the Teraabo of 2003 blamed “the British government for all this misery”, she has since become more reflective. In the context of the cold war and the nuclear arms race, she even told me she could understand the British rationale for selecting Kiritimati as a test site. This seemed a remarkable statement from a survivor who had lost so much.
Over the course of the interview, it became clear Teraabo had grown tired of being angry – and that she had felt “trapped” by the tragic figure she was meant to represent in the campaigns of veterans and disarmers. Each time Teraabo rehearsed the doom-laden script of radiation exposure, she admitted she was also suppressing the joy of her childhood memories.
A turning point for Teraabo seems to have come in 2007, when she last visited Kiritimati and met her sister Teeua. By this time, the atoll’s population was 4,000 – quite a leap from the 300 residents she grew up with. “It is no longer the island I remember,” she said.
The Kiritimati of Teraabo’s memory was neat and well-structured. The one she described encountering in 2007 was chaotic and unkempt. She had come to the realisation that the Kiritimati she had been campaigning for – the pristine, untouched atoll of her parents – had long since moved on, so she should move on with it. The sorrow caused by the test operations would not define her.
Radioactive colonialism
Not long after I left Kiritimati in June 2023, the global nuclear disarmament organisation Ican began researching the atoll ahead of a major global summit to discuss the UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons. Descendants of Kiritimati’s nuclear test survivors were asked a series of questions, with those who provided the “right” answers being selected for a sponsored trip to UN headquarters in New York.
The chosen representatives included Teeua’s daughter, Taraem. I wondered if the survivors of Kiritimati are doomed to forever rehearse the stories of their nuclear past – a burden that Teeua and Teraabo have had to carry ever since they stood in awe of atomic and thermonuclear detonations more than 60 years ago.
They have had to deal with “radioactive colonialism” all their adult lives – the outside world demanding to see the imprint of radioactivity on their health and memories. But the sisters’ fondness for British order, despite all they have been through, prevails.
Their positive memories of Britain may in part reflect the elevated role of their father, Tekonau Tetoa – a posthumous recipient of the test veteran medal – within the British colonial system. During my visit, I happened upon an old photo of Tekonau, looking immaculate as he hangs off the side of a plantation truck in a crisp white shirt. Knowing Teeua did not possess a photo of her parents, I took a scan and raced to her house down the road.
“Do you recognise this man?” I asked, holding up my phone.
She flickered with recognition. “Is that my father?”
I nodded, and she shed a tear of joy.
Tekonau Tetoa, father of Teeua and Teraabo, hangs off the door of a coconut plantation truck in Kiritimati. Courtesy: John Bryden., CC BY-ND
Memories of Teeua and Teraabo’s father are preserved in the island landscape of their youth: pristine, regimented by the ostensible tidiness of colonial and military order.
But such order masked contamination: an unknown quantity that would only become evident years later in ill-health and environmental damage. It was not only the nuclear tests: from 1957 to 1964, the atoll was sprayed four times a week with DDT, a carcinogenic insecticide, as part of attempts to reduce insect-borne disease. In the words of one of the pilots: “I had many a wave from the rather fat Gilbo ladies sitting on their loos as I passed overhead, and gave them some spray for good measure!” British tidiness concealed a special brand of poison.
Today, the prospect of a meaningful response from the UK to the concerns raised by the islanders and servicemen alike seems slim. In October 2023, the UK and France followed North Korea and Russia in vetoing a Kiribati and Kazakhstan-proposed UN resolution on victim assistance and environmental remediation for people and places harmed by nuclear weapons use and testing.
Over in Kiritimati, meanwhile, Teeua still tends to a small plot where Prince Philip planted a commemorative tree in April 1959, shortly after the British-led nuclear tests had ended. It is rumoured he did not drink from the atoll’s water while he was there.
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Christopher Hill receives funding from the Office for Veterans’ Affairs, UK Cabinet Office. The research for this article was also supported by funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC), UKRI. The author wishes to thank the following for their support with this article: Fiona Bowler, Ian Brailsford, Joshua Bushen, John Bryden, Jon Hogg, Brian Jones, Rens van Munster, Wesley Perriman, Maere Tekanene, Michael Walsh, Rotee Walsh and Derek Woolf. Sincere thanks to Teeua Tekonau and Teraabo Pollard for sharing their family stories.
Source: The Conversation – UK – By Philip Murphy, Director of History & Policy at the Institute of Historical Research and Professor of British and Commonwealth History, School of Advanced Study, University of London
That the recent visit of King Charles to Australia – his first as the country’s sovereign – attracted protests will have come as a surprise to very few people.
But the message from the most prominent protester was, perhaps, less expected. At the end of a speech by the king at Parliament House in Canberra on October 21, he was heckled by Lidia Thorpe, an independent senator of Aboriginal (Djab Wurrung, Gunnai and Gunditjmara) origin.
She told him: “You committed genocide against our people. Give us our land back. Give us what you stole from us – our bones, our skulls, our babies, our people.”
Earlier in the day, Thorpe had issued a statement outlining her position. In it, she claimed:
As First Peoples, we never ceded our Sovereignty over this land. The crown invaded this country, has not sought treaty with First Peoples, and committed a genocide of our people. King Charles is not the legitimate sovereign of these lands. Any move towards a republic must not continue this injustice. Treaty must play a central role in establishing an independent nation. A republic without a treaty must not happen.
Historic treaties
The recognition of the rights of Aboriginal peoples through a formal treaty has been a demand of Australian indigenous rights campaigners for decades. Indeed, Australia is unusual among British settler colonies in the failure of the crown to forge treaties with Indigenous peoples in the process of imperial occupation. In New Zealand and Canada these treaties continue to be invoked as an historical underpinning of indigenous rights.
The 1840 Treaty of Waitangi between Māori leaders and the crown as well as the rights and principles that followed from it are certainly politically contentious in New Zealand. Yet the Treaty is still widely regarded as the country’s founding document and a key symbolic basis for inclusion and reconciliation.
In Canada, the treaties signed by the crown with First Nations peoples are explicitly referenced in the country’s 1982 constitution and are cited by the Canadian government as “a framework for living together and sharing the land Indigenous peoples traditionally occupied.”
It should not come as much of a surprise that the issue of the the absence of similar treaties in Australia has been raised during the king’s visit. The rather dull itineraries of royal visits provide activists with a perfect opportunity to have their voices heard by journalists desperate for something interesting to write about. There is a history of Aboriginal protesters using them in this way.
In 1972, the Larrakia people, the traditional owners of the Darwin region in the Northern Territory, used a visit by Princess Margaret to draw attention to a petition asking Queen Elizabeth II to assist them in their demand for land rights and political representation.
The palace and the governments of the Realms are keenly aware of these sensitivities and plan royal tours accordingly. During his visit to Canada in 2022, for example, while he was still Prince of Wales, Charles made a point of meeting the survivors of the country’s notorious residential schools where thousands of indigenous children suffered abuse.
Ironically, indigenous treaties with the crown have complicated the republican issue, forcing campaigners for a republic in both New Zealand and Canada to offer assurances that the rights and obligations in those treaties would not be lost if the monarchy was to be abolished.
The question of reparations
Charles has followed his Australia visit by flying to Samoa for the summit of the Commonwealth Heads of Government. Again, the UK press sensed trouble ahead, predicting that as head of the Commonwealth Charles might be caught up in a row between the British government and Caribbean nations over the call for reparations for slavery.
The UK is not the only government in the Commonwealth having to wrestle with colonial legacy issues. But there is no avoiding them.
Britain has a monarchy steeped in imperial history, with a king who is quite separately sovereign of 14 other realms. Its government continues to profess a belief in the value of the Commonwealth, when its members have little else in common except that most of them were colonised by Britain.
A recent report by the UK thinktank Policy Exchange, which imagined the Commonwealth playing a greater role in British diplomatic, defence and trade policy, seemed blithely unaware of the tensions within the organisation and the barriers to collective action.
In a similar vein, UK prime minister Keir Starmer has claimed that he wants to “look forward” and focus on issues such as climate change and boosting prosperity rather than reparations.
But the Commonwealth is simply not a logical framework for the discussion of these matters. On the other hand, it is uniquely qualified to debate the impact of colonialism and the question of reparatory justice. And even if Britain doesn’t want to have that conversation, other Commonwealth countries certainly do.
Philip Murphy has received funding from the AHRC. He belongs to the European Movement UK.
Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments
John Tuckett, Immigration Services Commissioner, has been reappointed for a second 5 year term.
John Tuckett, the Immigration Services Commissioner, has been reappointed for a second term of 5 years with effect from 7 July 2024.
The Commissioner is the head of Office of the Immigration Services Commissioner (OISC) and has statutory regulatory, complaint handling and law enforcement responsibilities in respect of the provision of immigration advice and services in the UK.
Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments
Statement by Lord Richard Hermer, Attorney General for England and Wales and Advocate General for Northern Ireland, at the UN Security Council meeting on women building peace in a changing environment.
Location:
United Nations, New York
Delivered on:
(Transcript of the speech, exactly as it was delivered)
On UN day, I want to start by recalling that last month my Prime Minister gave a clear recommitment to the United Nations, to the rule of law, and to the need to work together for peace, progress and equality.
And empowering women and girls is a vital part of this. Addressing structural gender inequality is a vital part of this, tackling misogyny is a vital part of this, and ending impunity for conflict related sexual violence is a vital part of this.
We are approaching the 25-year anniversary of the Women, Peace and Security agenda and I’m proud of the role the UK has played.
There is much to celebrate. Yet the overall implementation is lagging. Not one of the peace agreements reached in 2023 included a women’s representative or women’s representative group as signatory. The proportion of women killed in conflict has doubled compared to 2022.
Building on her excellency Thomas-Greenfield’s essential three I’s. May I propose three areas for our collective action?
First, conflict prevention.
Conflict is at a post-WWII high. Women and children are disproportionately impacted. And we need to reinvigorate conflict prevention efforts, taking a gender-responsive approach.
Through our ‘Resourcing Change’ project, the UK is supporting women’s participation in formal and informal mechanisms for the prevention and resolution of conflict, including in Nigeria and in South Sudan.
Second, we must stand together to prevent conflict-related sexual violence and end impunity.
The UK remains committed to the Preventing Sexual Violence in Conflict Initiative and our work with the International Alliance to build a stronger international response. PSVI programmes have contributed to vital legislative changes around the world.
We have sanctioned perpetrators for CRSV crimes in seven countries. And I call upon all states to redouble efforts to seek justice and accountability and support the survivors.
Third, I call upon member states to support women’s right’s organisations as the driving force behind the WPS agenda.
I am proud of the UK’s £33 million partnership with the Equality Fund who have supported over 1000 women’s right’s organisations, including in conflict settings, since 2019.
In Sudan, the UK has supported the establishment of the anti-war, pro-democracy coalition, working with 200 women.
In Myanmar, the UK is contributing over $1.3 million over three years in long-term support to grassroots women and LGBTQ+ led organisations to build capacity and support inclusive and strategic cooperation amongst local-level women leaders and community representatives.
Women’s full, equal, meaningful and safe participation is crucial to achieving lasting peace, and we condemn the shocking levels of reprisals against women peacebuilders.
But we must also recognise this, that the long-term solution to gender based violence in conflicts requires all societies to address its root causes. It requires addressing gender inequality systemically, not just in criminal courts or in peace negotiations halls, but in how girls and boys, men and women relate to each other in classrooms, in playgrounds, workplaces, public life and online.
The link between gender inequality and gender-based violence in conflict must be systematically addressed.
So as we approach the 25th anniversary, we must celebrate women’s rights organisations and peacebuilders who have championed this agenda. We welcome the Secretary General’s Common Pledge to prioritise women’s participation in peace processes to address this gap.
But we must go further and faster to build a more inclusive, sustainable, and peaceful future for all.
Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments
A speech from the Deputy Prime Minister
Location:
Harrogate
Delivered on:
(Transcript of the speech, exactly as it was delivered)
Firstly, I want to say a massive thank you to you, some of our most dedicated, brilliant public servants in this room.
For everything that you do, every day, to keep our country going.
You’ve shown remarkable resilience through some tough – and very tough – years.
During the pandemic, you kept vital services running in our communities.
Through this period of economic instability, you’ve made tough choices to protect the most vulnerable.
And following a summer of violent far-right disorder, you stood up for the values of decency and community that define our country.
And time and again, you step forward to support your local communities.
Now, I understand that this conference was originally planned for just before the General Election.
I have to admit that I’m much happier to be stood here as your Deputy Prime Minister!
Last year in Bournemouth, I said that if we were elected, we would deliver a plan for change.
A new way of governing. A government of public service.
And just over 100 days into government and we are getting on with the job.
We’re fixing the foundations to build a country that works for working people.
And local government is at the heart of this vision.
Because as you all know, I am a creature of local government.
I loved my job as a home help for Stockport council.
And I learned the importance of a good local service, and what it meant to really know and trust your community.
Back then, local government wasn’t on its knees.
Don’t get me wrong, things weren’t easy.
But we had the time and resource to provide a good service.
I know that good, functioning local government looks like great working with a good central government working in genuine partnership to deliver better outcomes.
So I know we can’t deliver true change for Britain without the support of every one of you in this room.
We can’t deliver for our missions without you.
Take our plans to deliver 1.5 million homes, including a new generation of secure, social and affordable homes.
The delivery of safer streets, an NHS and social care system that’s back on its feet.
The sustained economic growth we need to raise living standards.
And the strong communities on which good lives are built.
That’s why, in my very first week in the job – as Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government – I put local government back where it belongs.
At the heart of my department’s name and mission.
And I’m lucky I have Jim by my side, the Minister of State for Local Government – who has run a council and knows local government from the inside out – and he’s here with me today and as part of the team.
Louise, your new Chair, also represents the best of local government – a fierce commitment to public service and leadership steeped in years of experience – not too many years, but a few.
And the fact that her predecessor, Shaun, has now joined us in the House of Commons just goes to show we are a government that believes in the power of local government.
We know what’s possible when you give people with skin in the game the power to change lives.
And, after an incredibly difficult few years, it’s time to unleash that power.
Which means resetting our relationship with local government and rebuilding its foundations.
It means ditching the slogans and gimmicks and going back to basics: delivering services that people can rely on.
You don’t need me to tell you how much harder that job has been after fourteen years of neglect.
[Redacted political content]
Councils stuck in a doom loop with money pouring out of a system with too many cracks.
And it isn’t just the scandal of wasted money. It’s the heartache of the wasted lives and potential.
[Redacted political content]
For all the promises about localism and levelling up, there was an assumption that if something needed doing, it should be done from Whitehall.
With central government hoarding power, micromanaging you, intervening in an uncoordinated and unhelpful way.
A begging-bowl system of wasteful competitive pots that led to councils bidding to pay for chess tables in public parks.
No more.
We’re going to turn the page on this failed approach – bringing local government into the heart of government.
As part of a partnership based on honesty and respect.
And it’s in that spirit that we need to face up to the financial crisis facing local government.
We all know that there’s no quick fix.
The dire public finances – the £22 billion black hole – we’ve inherited mean that it’s going to take hard graft on all sides to get us back on the road to recovery.
We knew things were bad, but on entering office, we uncovered a shocking crisis in local government which was far beyond what we had anticipated.
Councils of all political stripes have been left shelling out millions to plaster over the government’s mismanagement.
[Redacted political content]
To make matters worse, we discovered that over the last decade, the last [Redacted political content] government ripped away any financial oversight of council spending, scrapping the Audit Commission and pushing councils to borrow more and more.
This reckless approach has left the government with no transparent system in place to warn the public when a council is struggling.
And more and more authorities are struggling to stay afloat with communities in the most deprived parts of our country disproportionately affected, through cuts to services that they desperately depend on, as people’s [inaudible] go up.
And get it.
And I know we need change urgently.
You’ve all heard me say it – I’m going provide multi-year funding settlements, that will give you the stability and certainty to plan and invest for the long-term.
And that we will end the Dragon’s Den-style bidding wars between councils for competitive funding pots.
Instead, we’ll show you some respect with long-term funding, giving you flexibility to spend it where it is needed.
And through the next Local Government Finance Settlement and beyond, we will provide more detail on how this is going to work.
Let me be clear that we can’t fix the system overnight.
[Redacted political content]
And I have to say, looking at the numbers we inherited, I am shocked by the scale of neglect.
It is going to be a long, hard slog to get local government back on its feet.
And in the short term, we’re doing all that we can to protect severely struggling councils, which is why I can announce that we are scrapping the punitive ‘pay day loan’ premium on borrowing for councils in need of Exceptional Financial Support.
This government will take a collaborative and a constructive approach to councils in financial difficulty.
You know I can’t go into detail about the Spending Review.
So let me talk to you today about things that I can tell you.
Fundamentally, I want to work together, across central and local government to reform high-cost public services and focus on preventing people from needing them in the first place.
Tackling profiteering in broken markets serving vulnerable groups, like we’ve seen in some of the private children’s homes.
When it comes to prevention, there can be few bigger priorities for us than preventing homelessness – one of the biggest pressures that you face.
By getting Britain building again. Speeding up the planning system and reintroducing mandatory housing targets.
I know that this will mean asking more from local councils.
Which is why we’re boosting the number of planners.
As part of our plans, to strengthen local planning departments and reinforce planning obligations to deliver more affordable homes on new developments – we will support you to hold developers to account.
And it’s why we’re also reviewing Right to Buy, to stem the loss of precious council homes.
But we’ll also tackle homelessness directly, by learning lessons from the past and working with local leaders to take action on all forms of homelessness.
We will develop a cross-government strategy to get us back on track to end homelessness.
We will also reform the broken local audit system in England that we inherited.
This should be the bedrock of local accountability and transparency, of trust and confidence in local democracy.
Instead, last year, just one percent of local bodies were able to publish audited accounts by the deadline.
This cannot go on.
We have already taken decisive action to introduce backstop dates to clear the backlog in unaudited accounts.
Local audit will and must provide value for money for the taxpayers and be fit for the future.
And similarly, when the way councils are run has gone wrong, central government hasn’t always responded constructively.
Instead kicking councils when they’re down for political reasons.
This Labour government are going to do things differently.
We will work with every council that needs it to put in place clear, deliverable plans to address problems and protect local taxpayers, rather than treating them as political footballs.
That’s the approach we’re taking in Birmingham.
Significant challenges continue to face the city council, but we’re going to work with the councillors and the community to solve them in partnership.
Birmingham has huge potential – and we’re going to work closely with the partners across the West Midlands to unlock that potential, including with the Mayor Parker of the West Midlands Combined Authority.
And that’s the change that we represent.
Not punishment, but collaboration.
Getting places into a stable financial footing by, yes, making difficult decisions, but with the interests of residents at the heart.
Our aim is to support councils to perform at their very best.
Councillor conduct / standards framework
Standards in local government matter – both the delivery of services and personal conduct.
Every decision you make has an impact on the daily lives of those you serve.
And most councillors meet the highest standards of public office and I am so proud to be representing you in government.
But sadly we all know there are rare occasions where bad behaviour occurs.
I’ve been made aware of cases of persistent bullying and harassment by councillors, even, in some cases, leading to victims’ resignations.
We don’t have a system that protects victims or empowers councils to deal with unacceptable behaviour.
And this cannot go on and we will give councils the powers to address poor conduct.
We will consult on reforms to the local government standards framework, including a proposal to allow for the suspension of members who violate codes of conduct.
But we also recognise that too often, councillors become victims themselves.
Too often I speak to dedicated councillors who are facing death threats and intimidation.
And I take this very seriously and recognise the impact this has on the lives of dedicated public servants and their families.
That’s why we are taking decisive action to prevent councillors from being subjected to intimidation and harassment by removing the requirement for members’ home addresses to be published.
[And I want you to know] this is a government that respects and appreciates the huge contribution made by councillors who work tirelessly for residents – and we will always have your back.
We are also taking a more collaborative approach to pressing issues like the widespread workforce challenges you are experiencing.
Ninety-four per cent of councils say they’re having difficulties with recruitment and retention.
This isn’t just your problem – it’s all our problem because council staff are on the frontline serving local communities.
So, we’re ready to work hand in hand with you to find creative solutions to staffing issues.
We’ll launch a Workforce Development Group in partnership with the sector to gain a shared understanding of the most immediate priorities and focus our efforts on where we can add the most value to your work.
And when we say we’ll work in partnership with the sector, every step of the way, we mean it.
I have formally launched our new Leaders’ Council at this very conference – which will give local government a voice at the heart of government – this a mark of just how seriously we take this.
The Council will bring together local government leaders and ministers to tackle shared problems and deliver for the communities they all ultimately serve.
We will use it to learn from the exciting innovations that councils are pioneering.
And we hugely respect your knowledge and expertise.
But it’s more than that.
The Leaders’ Council will be critical for co-designing policy at the highest levels.
And I look forward to working closely with the Council over the coming years.
Gone are the day of diktats from above.
It is time for those with skin in the game to be put in the driving seat.
That is what our devolution agenda is all about.
We will make it easier for you to come together and form combined authorities and devolve more powers to existing ones – meaning access to new powers over skills, transport and employment support.
Our landmark English Devolution Bill will deliver our manifesto commitment to transfer power out of Whitehall, making devolution the default setting.
And look, I know the coming years won’t always be easy, but I’m confident that, working in partnership, we can fix the basics so that you can focus on the things that really matter to our and your communities.
My starting point is that we should be clear about what we ask of you and then give you the autonomy and the support you need to deliver.
So, where we don’t need to get involved, we won’t.
It’s not our place, for example, to decide whether councillors should attend your meetings remotely or use proxy votes when they need to.
So, I can announce today that we’re putting forward proposals to let councils make the decision for themselves.
Which means making it possible for people from all walks of life to have a stake in local democracy, whether they have caring responsibilities or aren’t able to make it to the town hall in person because of illness or disability.
It’s right that we make it easier for more people to get involved in making their community a great place to live.
It’s also right that we expect the highest standards of local government – with central government playing its part as a responsible steward.
And for me this is personal.
I’m passionate about backing you with the long-term funding and certainty that you need.
The powers you need.
And the new relationship that we all need.
So local government can once again be a strong, functioning arm of the state, providing public services that people can rely on.
And I want to thank you, once again, for everything that you do for our communities.
This is a government of service that is on your side.
And the road ahead won’t always be a smooth path, but we will walk it together and build a better Britain.
Stoke-on-Trent City Council is committing further help to support people through the ‘Cost of Living Crisis’ this winter.
As the clocks go back later this week, the city council is renewing its pledge to help residents across Stoke-on-Trent meet their fuel and food bills.
The measures include ensuring everyone who is entitled to Pension Credit is supported to claim it and providing six-figure funding to Citizens Advice, through the Government’s UK Shared Prosperity Fund, to offer financial MOTs to residents.
At today’s city council meeting (October 24), Council Leader, Councillor Jane Ashworth, outlined the proactive approach the authority is taking to help eligible residents claim for Pension Credit.
Among the measures are a letter which has been sent to all residents who the council has identified as potentially being eligible for Pension Credit, to encourage them to claim for the support.
Pension Credit take-up has also been encouraged and promoted through social media and other council media channels and newsletters. Meanwhile, city council housing and revenue, benefits and financial assessment officers are helping to signpost people they come into contact with towards support, where appropriate.
Flyers are also being printed to be distributed around the city in a targeted approach.
In addition, The Department of Work and Pensions is undertaking its own advertising campaigns by joining forces with charities, broadcasters and a range of partners to encourage people to claim.
Official statistics from February 2024 show that 6,233 people are claiming Pension Credit in the city, and a total of 42,661 residents are in receipt of state pension.
According to the latest figures from the National Audit Office, it is estimated that three quarters of those eligible for Pension Credit are claiming it. This means that an estimated 2,000 people need to be identified in Stoke-on-Trent who are eligible but have not claimed.
Cllr. Ashworth said: “We have sent letters to all residents who are potentially eligible for Pension Credit, based on the current council tax support and housing benefit data we hold, and we will continue to work with internal and external agencies to ensure all our residents are receiving the support they are entitled to.
“Our officers are also regularly signposting households to support services, where appropriate.
“Additionally, through our Help is at Hand campaign, which was launched to help support families through the ‘Cost of Living Crisis’, we have supported over 5,500 households in the city with advice and assistance to help alleviate fuel poverty, this includes referrals for grant support, fuel vouchers, debt advice and water tariff assistance.
“This is all part of our commitment to make Stoke-on-Trent a healthier, wealthier and safer place to live.”
The council is also providing funding to Citizens Advice, through the Government’s UK Shared Prosperity Fund, so they can offer financial MOTs to residents. The funding for 2024/25 is £105,000 and that is on top of £70,000 provided in 2023/24.
The measures come on the back of a whole raft of support the council has introduced over the last few months to help people through the ‘Cost of Living’ crisis.
This includes:
The Household Support Fund – a £2.7 million fund received from Government, which the city council is using to help families with eligible children during the Christmas holidays along with support to residents with fuel costs and buying white goods, beds and hygiene supplies.
The #Help Is at Hand campaign – launched to help support families through the ‘Cost of Living’ crisis. So far, more than 5,500 households in the city have been supported with advice and assistance to help alleviate fuel, food and financial poverty. This includes referrals for grant support, fuel vouchers, debt advice and water tariff assistance.
A Benefits Calculator – which is available online (entitledto.co.uk). Residents can complete the form with their household details to discover if they would be entitled to any support.
Regular Money Matters events – Benefits Assessors have attended Money Matters events to enable residents to seek advice and support directly from a Benefits Officer.
Community Lounges – The council has 18 community lounges. These offer welcoming spaces to connect with experts and receive helpful information and guidance on a wide range of topics, including financial stability, maximising benefits and overcoming fuel poverty.
Council tax support and Council tax hardship relief fund – set up to help residents pay their bill if they are unemployed on low income or in severe financial difficulties (subject to eligibility criteria).
Sustainable Food Network – a cross-sector partnership led by YMCA North Staffordshire and VAST which supports the health, wellbeing and prosperity of communities by prioritising food availability, food affordability and food sustainability.
Councillor Sarah Jane Colclough, cabinet member for education and anti-poverty, said: “There is a vast amount of co-ordinated advice around the city, from budgeting and energy efficiency advice to food support and sustainable healthy eating.
“I would encourage anyone who is experiencing concerns to reach out and access support as early as possible to prepare for any financial or other difficulties over the winter months”
For more details, visit the dedicated Cost of Living section on Stoke-on-Trent City Council’s website – stoke.gov.uk/help is at hand
Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments 3
Statement by Lord Richard Simon Hermer, Attorney General for England and Wales and Advocate General for Northern Ireland, in the UN General Assembly Plenary Debate on the International Court of Justice.
Location:
United Nations, New York
Delivered on:
(Transcript of the speech, exactly as it was delivered)
May I start by thanking President Salam for his leadership during what has been an exceptionally busy period for the Court. As today’s report highlights, the past year has seen a significant increase in the number of States involved in both contentious and advisory proceedings.
And I would like on behalf of the United Kingdom to express my gratitude to all Members of the Court and the Registry for their continued commitment to the sound administration of justice and the peaceful resolution of international disputes. Our thanks goes for their independence, for the quality of their judgement and for the central and vital role they play in our international rules-based order.
The United Nations Charter has served as a font of inspiration for generations. Its clarion call on behalf of the peoples of the United Nations for a determination that we should establish conditions under which respect for international law should be maintained has never been more important. And through Chapter XIV of the Charter we sought to give real and practical effect to the aspiration of the creation of the International Court of Justice (ICJ).
We came from a myriad of distinct legal cultures and traditions to recognise that the security and prosperity of us all can be met by the compliance with law and peaceful resolution of disputes through international judicial means.
We recognized that the world for future generations will be better when we settle disputes in courtrooms not on battlefields.
And as the globe currently faces critical challenges, there has never been a more important moment for us all to reaffirm our commitment to that ideal, to the international rule of law and thus to the important world of the ICJ.
The United Kingdom has demonstrated its support for the Court in part by accepting compulsory jurisdiction. And I reiterate the call made by the General Assembly for States that have not yet done so to consider accepting the jurisdiction of the ICJ in accordance with its Statute.
And our commitment to the future of the Court and our commitment to the very highest standards in international law is such that I am delighted that the UK National Group has decided to nominate Professor Dapo Akande for election to the Court for the 2027-2036 term.
The United Kingdom would once again wish to thank the President of the Court for the report and at this critical moment to reaffirm our unwavering support for its vital work.
First, let me begin by wishing everyone a happy UN Day.
Every year, in this Chamber, the global community reaffirms its commitment to ensuring women’s full, equal, and meaningful participation in conflict prevention, resolution, and recovery, and to upholding their rights during times of war.
Yet, progress remains dishearteningly slow.
Peace and security decision-making is overwhelmingly dominated by men.
And ending impunity for atrocities against women and girls is still but a distant goal.
And the past year has been especially difficult.
In Gaza, tens of thousands of Palestinian women and girls have been killed and injured amidst continued war and a terrible humanitarian crisis.
Meanwhile, the plight of Israeli women still held hostage demands urgent action to ensure their safety and immediate release.
In Lebanon, an escalation of destruction and displacement threatens women and girls’ safety and livelihood.
In Sudan, women are enduring extreme suffering, facing not only the loss of loved ones but also the dire lack of access to essential services and medical care.
I reiterate the Secretary-General’s calls:
Civilians must be protected, civilian infrastructure must not be targeted, and international law must be upheld.
The United Nations remains steadfast.
We will not look away or lose hope.
The women, peace and security agenda will always guide our work and show a path forward.
Despite attacks on our offices, and the detention and killings of our staff in unprecedented numbers, allow me to honor the work of my colleagues and share examples of what they do.
In peacekeeping missions, the women, peace and security agenda is a key political and strategic imperative.
Our teams work tirelessly to help protect and assist women – from relocating human rights defenders to aiding women after their release from abduction by armed groups, from ensuring women’s representation in local dialogues to helping bring justice to women in places where sexual violence has long been met with impunity.
In the Democratic Republic of Congo, for example, 57 percent of cases supported by the mission’s Prosecution Support Cells in 2023 involved conflict-related sexual violence, contributing to the conviction of dozens of members of armed groups and state security forces.
In Abyei, earlier this year, one-third of participants in a post-migration conference were women – this was a first.
In the Central African Republic, the mission is helping mobilize women for local elections that have not been held in 38 years.
Deploying more diverse teams to peacekeeping operations has helped us deliver better on our mandates.
The representation of women in most categories of uniformed personnel has doubled in the last five years, and initiatives have been put in place to foster gender-responsive work environments for all peacekeepers.
Yet, much more remains to be done to improve the gender balance of our deployments and reap the benefits of inclusion and diversity.
Success in peacekeeping hinges on the political support from Member States, especially those with the great honor of sitting in this Chamber to protect international peace and security.
I commend the efforts of the United Arab Emirates to empower Women in Peace and Security. This initiative has provided training and capacity building opportunities for over 600 women from the Middle East, Africa and Asia in military and peacekeeping. The UN is a proud partner in these efforts that advance the Women, Peace and Security Agenda.
Throughout the world, the UN reaches millions of displaced women and girls and survivors of violence with food, medical support, legal aid, shelter, access to safe spaces, psychosocial support, education, and jobs and livelihood opportunities.
Yesterday, survivors of conflict-related sexual violence from many war-torn corners of the globe gathered for a Survivor’s Hearing to mark the 15th anniversary of resolution 1888.
Effective protection from sexual violence is fundamental to women’s effective participation in peacebuilding, conflict recovery, and sustainable development that leaves no one behind.
None of this would happen without women’s organizations in the frontlines of crises, and we are trying to find ways of channeling more resources to them.
The Women’s Peace and Humanitarian Fund has supported over 1,300 local women’s civil society organizations since 2016, nearly half of them accessing UN funds for the first time, and 582 women human rights defenders and their families.
Last year, the Secretary-General invited all partners to contribute to the goal of raising 300 million dollars for women’s organizations in conflict-affected countries.
We still have a long way to go to get there.
40 percent of all funding of the 25-million-dollar GBV-focused grant by the Central Emergency Response Fund to UN Women and UNFPA was sub-granted to local women’s organizations and delivered remarkable results, a powerful demonstration that localization is both feasible and effective.
The Peacebuilding Fund has now exceeded its internal target allocation of 30 percent to gender equality for seven years in a row.
We know that the inclusion of women and gender-related provisions in peace processes not only advances gender equality, but also results in more durable peace agreements. From Guatemala to Northern Ireland, from Colombia to Liberia, research has shown how women in formal processes worked with diverse women’s groups to not only reach an agreement but also to strengthen the substance of peace agreements and opportunities for implementation.
Yet, women remain starkly under-represented from peace negotiations and conflict resolution efforts – including in some of the most intractable conflicts over the last year.
Historical data underscores this challenge: between 1992 and 2019, women constituted only 13 per cent of negotiators and six per cent of mediators in major peace processes.
More recent data from UN Women for 2023 shows that women on average made up less than ten per cent of peace negotiators and 13.5 per cent of mediators.
The processes in Libya and Yemen, where conflict parties have not included women, highlight a continued resistance to progress.
In Afghanistan, the regression of women’s rights highlights the severe impact of excluding women from governance – and society altogether.
It is imperative that we reinforce our resolve to support women in Afghanistan and elsewhere, advocating for their rights, agency and inclusion at every opportunity.
Collective action and solidarity are crucial.
In today’s broader global mediation landscape, the United Nations is not always present.
In fact, a diverse set of regional, state and other mediation actors initiates and leads mediation processes.
Many contexts feature joint or overlapping peace initiatives.
This means that no single mediator can affect global and meaningful change on women’s participation.
It is why, today, on behalf of the Secretary-General, I am pleased to launch the “Common Pledge on Women’s Participation in Peace Processes”, an initiative that brings together a broad array of mediation actors.
By endorsing this Common Pledge, Member States, regional organizations and other mediation actors commit to join the United Nations in taking concrete steps on women’s participation in all peace processes they are involved in.
These commitments include:
Appointing women as lead mediators and ensuring women are an integral part of mediation teams;
Ensuring mediators advocate with conflict parties for concrete targets and measures that promote women’s direct and meaningful participation in peace processes, including as members of their delegations;
Consulting with a broad range of women leaders and women-led civil society organizations in all stages of peace processes; and
Embedding gender expertise in their mediation teams to foster gender-responsive peace processes and agreements.
This Pledge targets mediating entities and is intended as an operational initiative, and not another general statement of principle.
It focuses on measures and decisions that are under the control of mediators and their organizations.
The Secretary-General invites Member States, regional organizations and other actors who are actively engaged in mediation to join this initiative and report on their progress at next year’s 25th Anniversary Security Council Open Debate on women, peace and security.
Madam President,
We have no illusions about the challenges posed by today’s geopolitical landscape and the complexity of achieving diplomatic outcomes.
As long as gendered power inequalities, patriarchal social structures, systematic biases, violence and discrimination continues to hold back half our societies, peace will remain elusive.
Yet, our collective experience has shown that progress is possible.
Together, we can have an impact that is greater than the sum of our individual efforts.
By leveraging our respective political capital and roles, let us dismantle the patriarchal power structures and advance gender equality, ensuring women’s full, equal and meaningful participation in political and public life.
Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments
Statement by Ambassador Barbara Woodward, UK Permanent Representative to the UN, at the UN Security Council meeting on Syria.
Location:
United Nations, New York
Delivered on:
(Transcript of the speech, exactly as it was delivered)
The conflict in Lebanon has had a devastating impact on civilians including Syrians who had sought refuge from the Assad regime in Lebanon. Hundreds of thousands of Syrian, Lebanese and Palestinian people are now fleeing into Syria where, tragically, they will face further conflict.
However, let me be clear that this movement of people does not mean that Assad has met the conditions to facilitate the safe return of Syrians, something we and the international community have long called for. Syria remains unsafe for voluntary, safe and dignified returns. Sadly, those fleeing are motivated by desperation and not the promise of a safe home.
We urge Syrian authorities to protect the rights and safety of these displaced civilians. Whilst UNHCR’s increased monitoring capacity on the border is welcome, it is essential that the UN has full access to continue this monitoring across the country.
Second, as we have heard from our briefers, the humanitarian situation in Syria, with a record 16.7 million people in need, threatens to deteriorate even further with dwindling resources.
We cannot allow essential services to collapse. A coordinated response across Syria, building on existing humanitarian structures, is urgently needed to respond to these needs.
For our part, the UK has mobilised programming and funding in response to the displacement crisis in Syria, committing over $3.8 million.
As needs continue to grow, it is essential that humanitarian organisations can deliver lifesaving assistance free from interference or restriction.
Third, we are concerned by the increased violence and civilian casualties across Syria in recent weeks. This includes in north west Syria, where attacks by the Assad regime and its Russian backer have displaced thousands of Syrians and resulted in civilian casualties.
Airstrikes have been conducted near displacement camps, have halted schools and health services, and have impacted water distribution facilities. All of this in a region where humanitarian need is already staggering.
The escalation across the region is a sobering reminder of the devastating price civilians pay for ongoing conflict and violence. The solution in Syria is clear and I reiterate our call for the Assad regime and all parties to Syria’s conflict to engage meaningfully in the political process in line with Resolution 2254.
Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments
Statement by Alex Berelowitz, Second Secretary Human Rights at the General Debate of the UN Third Committee.
Location:
United Nations, New York
Delivered on:
(Transcript of the speech, exactly as it was delivered)
Almost eighty years ago, the UN Charter established the three founding pillars of the UN system: peace and security, development and human rights.
As our Prime Minister said before the General Assembly, one of these – human rights – speaks to the very essence of what it is to be human.
We have made many advances in the years since the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
But we cannot ignore the challenges we now face.
Widespread conflict and violence, misuse of new technologies, entrenched inequality, rollback of women and girls’ rights, climate vulnerability, and – all too often – downright impunity where power is abused.
In seeking solutions we must have human rights and the rule of law front and centre. As all member states agreed in the Pact for the Future, human rights are key to meeting the needs of everyone – especially the most vulnerable.
This includes women and children in the Occupied Palestinian Territories and Lebanon.
The humanitarian implications of the conflict are devastating and compounding an existing crisis in Lebanon.
We remain deeply concerned at the escalation of violence, the number of deaths and injuries, the displacement of families from their homes, and unacceptable attacks on UN Peacekeepers.
We call for an immediate ceasefire, and the release of all hostages in Gaza and the rapid provision of humanitarian aid into Gaza and Lebanon.
Diplomacy, not violence, is the way to achieve peace, stability and security across the region.
In Ukraine, Russia continues to disregard the UN Charter through its illegal invasion.
Many Russian atrocities amount to war crimes. Russia’s attacks on energy infrastructure, as well as the widespread and systematic use of torture against Ukrainian POWs are beyond reprehensible. We must hold perpetrators to account.
With conflict driving most of the world’s humanitarian needs, the UN’s role in independently monitoring and documenting human rights abuses and violations is more critical than ever.
We welcome the Human Rights Council’s recent renewal of the Fact-Finding Mission in Sudan. While international attention is on the Middle East and Ukraine, a brutal war has displaced over 10 million people, with atrocities carried out by both warring parties.
But in non conflict situations too, human rights are under threat.
Two years after the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Right’s Assessment on Xinjiang, China continues to persecute and arbitrarily detain Uyghurs and Tibetans, restricting civil society and independent media, and targeting human rights defenders and lawyers.
We again call upon China to implement its OHCHRs recommendations
The use of the death penalty in Iran has also reached a critical level – we cannot ignore politically motivated executions of protesters, dissidents, and juvenile offenders.
With so many global challenges we must recommit to collective action underpinned by responsible global leadership.
In 2025 the United Kingdom will stand for election to the Human Rights Council. We will do all we can to advert greater conflict, instability and injustice.
Realising human rights goes hand-in-hand with sustainable development. But that too is throttled in places like Afghanistan, where we have seen a wholesale regression of the rights of women and girls. Banned from education and employment, with numerous restrictions on their presence in public spaces.
And in Syria we have seen the targeting of girls, subjected to forced marriage, and forced to take on increased care-giving responsibilities.
We will not progress on sustainable development if women and girls are denied their human rights.
Let us recommit, together, to the UN Charter and Universal Declaration and continue to strive for a world where nobody is left behind.
WORCESTER, Mass. — Enforcement and Removal Operations Boston apprehended a Colombian fugitive wanted for money laundering crimes in her native country. Officers with ERO Boston arrested the 38-year-old Colombian fugitive Oct. 17 in Worcester.
“This Colombian fugitive attempted to flee the law in her native country by seeking refuge in our Massachusetts neighborhoods,” said ERO Boston acting Field Office Director Patricia H. Hyde. “Now she will be forced to face the justice she sought to subvert. ERO Boston will not allow our New England communities to become safe havens for the world’s criminal elements. We will continue to prioritize the safety of our public by arresting and removing egregious noncitizen offenders.”
The Colombian national lawfully entered the United States in January 2015. However, she violated the terms of her lawful admission.
Colombian authorities issued an arrest warrant for the Colombian national Nov. 3, 2023, for the crime of money laundering.
Upon learning the Colombian fugitive might be residing in Massachusetts, officers with ERO Boston arrested her Oct. 17 in Worcester and served her with a notice to appear before a Department of Justice immigration judge. The Colombian fugitive remains in ERO custody.
ERO conducts removals of individuals without a lawful basis to remain in the United States, including at the order of immigration judges with the Justice Department’s Executive Office for Immigration Review. The Executive Office for Immigration Review is a separate entity from the Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Immigration judges in these courts make decisions based on the merits of each individual case, determining if a noncitizen is subject to a final order of removal or eligible for certain forms of relief from removal.
As one of ICE’s three operational directorates, ERO is the principal federal law enforcement authority in charge of domestic immigration enforcement. ERO’s mission is to protect the homeland through the arrest and removal of those who undermine the safety of U.S. communities and the integrity of U.S. immigration laws, and its primary areas of focus are interior enforcement operations, management of the agency’s detained and non-detained populations, and repatriation of noncitizens who have received final orders of removal. ERO’s workforce consists of more than 7,700 law enforcement and non-law enforcement support personnel across 25 domestic field offices and 208 locations nationwide, 30 overseas postings, and multiple temporary duty travel assignments along the border.
Members of the public can report crimes and suspicious activity by dialing 866-DHS-2-ICE (866-347-2423) or completing the online tip form.
Learn more about ICE’s mission to increase public safety in our New England communities on X, formerly known as Twitter, at @EROBoston.
Lake Macquarie and Lake Munmorah communities are encouraged to take part in a new advisory committee set up to help inform the NSW Government’s remediation of sites containing coal ash repositories.
The government is establishing the committee to support its response to the ‘NSW Parliamentary Inquiry into costs for remediation of sites containing coal ash repositories’ available here.
In response to the Inquiry’s recommendations, NSW Health has commissioned a review of environmental data to determine whether people living close to power stations and coal ash dams are exposed to potentially harmful chemicals through air, water, soil or local fish and seafood.
The committee will allow open discussions between NSW Health and representatives of the local community, stakeholder groups and local councils on the potential health impacts of coal ash.
NSW Health is seeking applications from community members and those from local civic, professional, and environmental groups to apply to join the committee.
Committee members will contribute to committee discussions, attend around four meetings a year, and help communicate information about the coal ash study to the broader community
Those interested can obtain a nomination form by contacting independent Chair of the Community Advisory Committee: David Ross, at David.Ross@phoenixstrategic.com.au. Nominations close on 6 December 2024.
Minister for the Central Coast David Harris said:
“This new committee will allow us to gain a deeper understanding of the impacts of coal ash deposits on communities in Lake Macquarie and Lake Munmorah.
“I encourage interested residents in those areas to take this opportunity to donate their time and expertise to find a way forward to clean up these sites for the lasting benefit of their communities.”
Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments
New Bill to unlock the secure and effective use of data for the public interest has been introduced into Parliament.
New government Bill will unlock the power of data to grow the economy and improve people’s lives
Measures will free up 1.5 million hours of police time and 140,000 NHS staff hours every year, potentially saving lives
The legislation will also support the creation of a national map of the UK’s underground infrastructure, reducing excavation accidents causing traffic jams and safety hazards on our streets
A new Bill which will harness the enormous power of data to boost the UK economy by £10 billion, and free up millions of police and NHS staff hours has been introduced to Parliament today (Wednesday 23rd October).
The Data Use and Access Bill will unlock the secure and effective use of data for the public interest, without adding pressures to the country’s finances. The measures will be central to delivering three of the five Missions to rebuild Britain, set out by the Prime Minister:
kickstarting economic growth
taking back our streets
and building an NHS fit for the future
Some of its key measures include cutting down on bureaucracy for our police officers, so that they can focus on tackling crime rather than being bogged down by admin, freeing up 1.5 million hours of their time a year. It will also make patients’ data easily transferable across the NHS so that frontline staff can make better informed decisions for patients more quickly, freeing up 140,000 hours of NHS staff time every year, speeding up care and improving patients’ health outcomes.
The better use of data under measures in the Bill will also simplify important tasks such as renting a flat and starting work with trusted ways to verify your identity online, or enabling electronic registration of births and deaths, so that people and businesses can get on with their lives without unnecessary admin.
Vital safeguards will remain in place to track and monitor how personal data is used, giving peace of mind to patients and victims of crime. IT systems in the NHS operate to the highest standards of security and all organisations have governance arrangements in place to ensure the safe, legal storage and use of data.
Technology Secretary Peter Kyle said:
Data is the DNA of modern life and quietly drives every aspect of our society and economy without us even noticing – from our NHS treatments and social interactions to our business and banking transactions.
It has the enormous potential to make our lives better, boosting our National Health Service, cutting costs when we shop, and saving us valuable time.
With laws that help us to use data securely and effectively, this Bill will help us boost the UK’s economy, free up vital time for our front-line workers, and relieve people from unnecessary admin so that they can get on with their lives.
The Bill, delivered by the Department for Science, Innovation, and Technology, has three core objectives: growing the economy, improving UK public services, and making people’s lives easier. The measures will be underpinned by a revamped Information Commissioner’s Office, the UK’s independent authority responsible for regulating data protection and privacy laws, with a new structure and powers of enforcement – ensuring people’s personal data will be protected to high standards.
Improving public services
The Bill will unlock the power of data to relieve front-line workers in the NHS and police forces across the country from bureaucracy and enable them to better serve the public.
Police officers across the country will benefit from measures that will remove unnecessary manual logging requirements whenever accessing personal data to work on a case, for example every time an officer needs to look up a suspect or person of interest on the police database, freeing up to 1.5 million hours of valuable police time for our officers, so that they can be on the streets fighting crime rather than being bogged down by admin. This will help save around £42.8 million in taxpayers’ money every year.
The legislation will also ensure that healthcare information – like a patient’s pre-existing conditions, appointments and tests – can easily be accessed in real time across all NHS trusts, GP surgeries and ambulance services, no matter what IT system they are using. It will require IT suppliers for the health and care sector to ensure their systems meet common standards to enable data sharing across platforms. The measure will free up 140,000 hours in NHS staff time every year, providing quicker care for patients and potentially saving lives.
Health and Social Care Secretary Wes Streeting said:
The NHS is broken, but imagine its enormous potential if each part of the system communicated properly with each other.
That starts with sharing vital medical records between healthcare providers, because it shouldn’t be the patient’s responsibility to join the dots for their doctor.
How can a GP diagnose a problem without knowing about someone’s recent hospital surgery?
This Bill and our Ten Year Health Plan will ensure important data flows safely and securely through the NHS, freeing up staff time and speeding up patient care.
I know people worry about Big Brother, which is why data will only be shared to the most relevant staff and anybody using data must comply with strict security protocols.
Minister for Crime, Policing and Fire, Dame Diana Johnson said:
It is vital police officers are able to dedicate their time to protecting the public on the beat, not in the office.
Freeing up this valuable resource will see more officers out on our streets, making a real difference in fighting and solving crime.
As part of our mission to make streets safer, this government will bring back neighbourhood policing, ensuring thousands of additional police and community officers are out patrolling our towns and communities.
Vin Diwakar, National Director of Transformation at NHS England, said:
This Bill is a significant step in creating a more responsive and efficient healthcare system. As an NHS doctor myself, I know it is vital that NHS staff have quicker access to more accurate and comprehensive data, giving them more face-to-face time with patients who need it most.
These changes will lay the foundations for patient information to flow safely, securely and seamlessly, which will improve clinical outcomes, make decision-making more informed and speed up the delivery of care. By simply using data more efficiently, we can save time and money, and create a modern, digital NHS that continues to improve care for patients.
Growing the economy
The Bill is expected to generate approximately £10 billion towards the UK economy across ten years by legislating on data sharing to generate a host of benefits for both consumers and businesses.
Delivering on a key government manifesto commitment, the Bill will create the right conditions to support the future of open banking and the growth of new smart data schemes, models which allow consumers and businesses who want to safely share information about them with regulated and authorised third parties, to generate personalised market comparisons and financial advice to cut costs.
This will pave the way for the model to expand in sectors such as energy, which could give customers the ability to compare utility prices, find better deals, and reduce their energy use, as well as foster tech innovation and boost competition, which will ultimately grow the UK economy. This potential has already been demonstrated in open banking, where 82 firms alone have raised over £2 billion of private funding and created over 4,800 skilled jobs in the financial year 2022-2023.
The Bill will also help reduce the risk of accidents on underground water and energy pipes and broadband cables, which currently amount to 60,000 every year and cause prolonged disruption of roadworks and access to key amenities like energy and broadband to homes.
The National Underground Asset Register (NUAR) will be put on a statutory footing, mandating that owners of underground infrastructure, such as water companies or telecoms operators, register their assets on the NUAR, which is a complete map of underground pipes and cables.
The use of the Register will mean that companies will know exactly where any underground asset is placed, reducing the risk of accidents on pipes and cables, making construction safer for workers and reducing the disruption – and hazards – caused by holes being dug up in the streets. This will generate approximately £400 million a year, boost construction and tackle accidental damage currently costing the economy £2.4 billion a year.
Davey Stobbart, Water Networks Regional Manager, Northumbrian Water:
Our field crews have found the way information is presented in NUAR to be more useful than anything they have seen or used before. It has reduced the time taken for crews to understand what lies below the ground where they are about to dig.
In the field, we frequently find the precise point of excavation needs to be made not-quite where our office-based planners predicted and previously in this case the job would have been delayed whilst a new plan pack was prepared. Now with NUAR, our crews are simply able to pan and zoom to that point instantly, seeing everything they would have seen on all those individual plans without the back-office cottage industry and without these delays. In fact, they will be seeing more because we’re now able to easily access information from local authorities through NUAR too, such as street lighting, highways gulleys and tree preservation orders all in one place.
We have found NUAR to be a great additional tool in the toolbox to help us reduce the likelihood of high potential utility strikes.
Making people’s lives easier
The rules proposed in the Bill will make Britons’ day-to-day lives easier, by simplifying important tasks such as renting a flat, starting work, or registering births and deaths, so that people and businesses can get on with their lives rather than being bogged down by admin.
The Bill will legislate on digital verification services, meaning companies who provide tools for verifying identities will be able to get certified against the government’s stringent trust framework of standards, and receive a ‘trust mark’ to use as a result. As well as increasing trust in the market, these efficiency gains will boost the UK economy by £4.3 billion over the next decade.
The trust mark will be a new logo to show digital verification services are approved by the new Office for Digital Identities and Attributes (OfDIA) within Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT).
The Bill will help make sure digital verification services are inclusive, secure and privacy-preserving, and will make it easier for people to know which services they can trust.
The Data Bill will pave the way towards modernising the registration of deaths in England and Wales from a paper-based system to an electronic birth and death register – in turn supporting people at one of the most challenging times in life. The new law will enable registrations, which are required by local authorities, to be carried out over the phone, removing the need for face-to-face registration while retaining that choice.
Access to data for research into online safety
The Bill will also boost the UK’s approach to tackling online harms through a power to create a researcher data access regime.
This will support researchers in accessing data held by online platforms so they can conduct robust and independent research into online safety trends. The move will boost transparency and evidence on the scale of online harms and the measures which are effective in tackling them.
Further details on the specific measures can be found below:
Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments
The Commonwealth has a once in a generation chance to be a driving force for opportunity and growth in an increasingly contested world, the Prime Minister is set to say on a landmark visit to the Pacific this week.
Prime Minister to make the case that the Commonwealth has a once in a generation chance to be a driving force for opportunity and growth during visit to Samoa
New UK Trade Centre of Expertise set to bolster economic ties across the grouping and unlock markets for UK businesses
Keir Starmer makes history as first ever sitting UK Prime Minister to visit a Pacific Island country
The Commonwealth has a once in a generation chance to be a driving force for opportunity and growth in an increasingly contested world, the Prime Minister is set to say on a landmark visit to the Pacific this week.
It comes as the government uses its foreign policy agenda to deliver for people at home, working with partners across the globe on issues such as climate change, growth and energy security.
Keir Starmer will arrive in Samoa for the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting today [Thursday 24 October], joining 55 other Commonwealth delegations to discuss the shared challenges and opportunities faced by its members.
In doing so, he will make history as the first UK Prime Minister to ever visit a Pacific Island country.
The Prime Minister will use the trip to make the case that Commonwealth countries, no matter where they are in the world, need resilient and thriving economies to face the global challenges of the day.
And he will tell delegates that he believes the Commonwealth offers a unique opportunity to be able to build those economies, combining major traditional markets with rapidly growing economies and resilient, innovative communities.
By 2027, the Commonwealth is expected be home to six of the world’s ten fastest-growing economies – Guyana, Rwanda, Bangladesh, Uganda, India and Mozambique – and have a combined GDP exceeding $19.5 trillion, while more than 60% of the grouping’s 2.5 billion population will be under 30.
The Commonwealth, which includes some of the UK’s biggest trading partners such as India, Canada, Australia, Singapore and South Africa, already accounts for 9% of total UK trade, worth £164 billion in 2023. And its members benefit from a 21% average reduction in bilateral trade costs, as well as higher investment flows between Commonwealth members.
As part of the visit, the Prime Minister will announce a new UK Trade Centre of Expertise, operating out of the Foreign Office, to drive export-led growth across the grouping. Trade specialists will provide technical and practical assistance to developing countries to help them access and compete in global markets.
In turn, the partnership is expected to help UK businesses tap into some of the fastest growing economies in the world, such as Uganda and Bangladesh through strengthened economic ties. Over the long term, the project will also aim to lift economies out of poverty, reducing pressure on UK Aid and British taxpayers.
The Prime Minister is also expected to meet business leaders during CHOGM, as part of his personal campaign to drive investment into every corner of the United Kingdom.
The meeting, which will include business leaders such as Brian Moynihan, chairman and CEO of Bank of America, and John Neal, CEO of Lloyd’s of London, comes just 10 days after the UK hosted the International Investment Summit, which drove £63 billion of private investment and 38,000 jobs into the UK.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer said:
We have a once-in-a-generation opportunity to fix the foundations and change our country’s story to turn around the lives of everyday people in the UK, but we can’t do that with a protectionist approach.
Under this government’s pragmatic and sensible approach, we must harness the opportunities to work with genuine partners – like our Commonwealth family – across the world to build resilient economies that offer real opportunity for our people, whether that is accessing untapped markets, or collaborating on grassroots innovations.
The combined GDP of the Commonwealth is expected to exceed $19.5 trillion in the next three years, we cannot let that economic heft go to waste.
Alongside the Commonwealth Secretary General, the Foreign Secretary is expected to convene Commonwealth foreign ministers to launch a new Commonwealth Investment Plan of Action to mobilise investment across the membership.
The plan will focus on small and vulnerable economies, easing barriers to trade and investment. The Foreign Secretary will also launch two new trade hubs to help female entrepreneurs in India and Sri Lanka access global markets.
Foreign Secretary David Lammy said:
The Commonwealth is a unique forum encompassing 56 countries and a third of the world’s population brought together through shared history and friendship.
Representing some of the world’s fastest growing economies, forging stronger ties with these markets is crucial for delivering jobs and economic growth.
This government is reconnecting Britain in the world and building partnerships that will unlock greater prosperity for all.
During the three-day CHOGM summit, leaders will discuss some of the pressing issues facing Commonwealth nations, including climate change, education and democracy.
On Friday, the Prime Minister is expected to attend a lunch, hosted by the King for new heads of government, before attending two Commonwealth executive sessions, and the heads of government dinner.
Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments
A new safety campaign to raise awareness about the dangers of buying faulty and unsafe e-bikes, e-scooters and components such as batteries has been launched
Campaign image for DBT’s Buy Safe, Be Safe campaign
New campaign urges public to buy safe e-bikes and e-scooters and avoid rogue online sellers
E-bike and e-scooter causing fires every two days according to London Fire Brigade
New Product Regulation Bill beginning work to tackle dangerous goods sold online
A new safety campaign to raise awareness about the dangers of buying faulty and unsafe e-bikes, e-scooters and components such as batteries has been launched today (Thursday 24 October).
The Department for Business & Trade’s new “Buy Safe, Be Safe” campaign has been designed to urge the public to buy safe e-bikes and e-scooters and avoid rogue online sellers.
E-bikes can be a cheap, healthy and modern method of travel throughout our towns and cities. However, unsafe e-bikes have resulted in hundreds of deadly fires and injured dozens of people across the UK. In 2023, the London Fire Brigade a fire every two days as a result of e-bike and e-scooter-related fires.
Many of these fires are caused by parts incompatible with e-bikes and scooters, as well as the purchase of defective or poorly manufactured parts sold by rogue online sellers.
The campaign focuses on three key areas encouraging consumers to only buy safe products from reputable sellers, only replace items with products recommended by the manufacturer and finally to seek professional help when converting or repairing e-bikes and e-scooters.
The Department is partnering with retailers, manufacturers as well as online marketplaces, trade associations, consumer groups and businesses to promote the campaign. Find out more about the campaign here.
Product Safety Minister Justin Madders said:
E-bikes can be a great way to travel around the city, but we’ve all seen the tragic stories of unsafe e-bikes and e-scooters causing dangerous fires and taking lives.
That’s why we’re urging everyone to check what you’re buying, check where you’re buying it from and ensure it’s safe to use.
Local Transport Minister Simon Lightwood said:
E-bikes have transformed our urban areas by giving people an accessible and healthy way to travel, but this is being ruined by a handful of untrustworthy online retailers.
These rogue sellers not only risk bringing defective and dangerous batteries into people’s homes, but undermine confidence in active travel as a whole.
That’s why I’m delighted that we are launching this campaign to make sure that people have peace of mind buying e-bikes and e-scooters from reliable sources.
Under current laws, e-scooters are banned on public land from use except in Government rental trial areas, while e-bikes are legal to use across the country but must not exceed an output of 250 watts or travel faster than 15.5 mph.
The public can expect to see an ongoing social media campaign including how-to video guides, as well as information materials being made available for retailers to use in stores and online to support consumers.
The campaign comes off the back of wider efforts to tackle dangerous goods being sold in online marketplaces. In September, the Government unveiled the new Product Regulation and Metrology Bill aimed at allowing the UK to take charge of its product regulations, boosting consumer safety and helping to further grow the economy.
The Bill will also address the sharp rise in safety concerns around e-bikes and lithium-ion batteries and how they are sold via online marketplaces. The Bill will enable Government to better protect consumers who have for too long been at the mercy of unscrupulous suppliers, holding sellers and the online marketplaces to account if they fail to meet their responsibilities.
And it will ensure products sold online or placed on the UK market are safe, while enabling market enforcement officials to clamp down on the sale of the product or the sellers where they are not.
London Fire Brigade’s Assistant Commissioner for Prevention and Protection, Craig Carter, said:
E-bikes and e-scooters are a green and sustainable way to travel around our city. However, e-bikes and e-scooters can pose a significant fire risk and particularly the batteries used to power them have become one of London’s fastest-growing fire risks. They have destroyed homes and families have sadly lost loved ones in these fires.
From our investigations, we know many of the fires we’ve attended have involved second-hand vehicles or the bike has been modified using parts bought online.
At this time, there is not the same level of regulation of products for e-bikes and e-scooters sold via online marketplaces or auction sites when compared to high street shops, so we cannot be confident that products meet the correct safety standard. We understand that people are trying to save money, but if you spot a deal that looks too be good to be true, it probably is.
Halfords Head of Quality, Chris Hall, said:
E-bikes offer numerous benefits for a healthier, greener commute. When e-bikes are purchased from reputable retailers, they’re properly certified and safe to use. Our priority is to ensure that everyone can enjoy the benefits of e-bikes without compromising on safety. The fire safety issues we’ve seen are linked to poorly manufactured, uncertified products typically bought online, as well as the use of incompatible components.
Lesley Rudd, chief executive of consumer safety charity, Electrical Safety First said:
E-bikes, e-scooters and their batteries are generally safe when purchased from reputable manufacturers and used correctly. However, poor-quality products – often sold via online marketplaces – improper charging, or misuse can cause ferocious fires and pose a serious risk to the buyer. Safety starts with where you shop. Sticking to reputable sellers will provide confidence that your e-bike is safe and manufactured to a high standard.
It’s equally as important to ensure you use a charger that is designed to be compatible with your battery to avoid the risk of overcharging which may destabilise the battery and lead to a fire. We also urge consumers considering converting their push bike into e-bike to source a high-quality kit and that it is installed by a competent professional.”
Inga Becker-Hansen, Product Safety Advisor at the BRC, said:
The popularity of e-bikes and e-scooters has greatly increased the number on our streets and in our homes. These products provide a convenient method of transport for many of us. However, consumers should ensure they purchase from reputable and responsible retailers, who will ensure that appropriate batteries are used and all necessary safety standards are met. We urge the public to follow government guidance and take appropriate storage and maintenance measures to ensure the safety and longevity of their purchases.
For our information on buying safely, how to store your product safely and best practice for charging, you can also find more information from the London Fire Brigade’s #ChargeSafe campaign.
Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments
The best of Northern Ireland’s research and development (R&D) sector will be on display in Lisburn today (Thursday 24 October) as part of a push to support bids for Horizon funding.
Top innovators arrive in Lisburn to share their experience in applying for and receiving Horizon Europe funding in the hope of encouraging more successful bids
Researchers, scientists and businesses based in Northern Ireland get the opportunity to network with potential collaboration partners and receive advice for their Horizon Europe applications.
UK Government pushes more innovators from Northern Ireland to apply for Horizon Europe funding and realise their research ambitions – from new treatments to improved digital infrastructure.
The best of Northern Ireland’s R&D sector will be on display in Lisburn today (Thursday 24 October), as top researchers, scientists and businesses gather under one roof to exchange ideas and network with potential partners for the next successful bids for Horizon Europe funding.
Horizon Europe is the largest research collaboration programme in the world, worth over £80 billion. Through the UK’s association, researchers, innovators and businesses from up and down Northern Ireland can apply for funding grants that will help researchers fund projects across all sectors from health, to clean energy, to digital infrastructure.
Getting backing for their ideas could put the UK at the forefront of the next generation of technologies, which will be the foundations of the jobs and businesses of the future. Over £81 million was awarded to projects in Northern Ireland through its predecessor, Horizon 2020, so we know the opportunities are there.
The roadshow gives researchers and innovative businesses at all stages of their career from Northern Ireland the chance to speak to those who have been through the process of bidding for Horizon funding, gain support for their applications, and connect with likeminded innovators. This will highlight the opportunities available to both public and private sectors wanting to realise their research ambitions.
UK Science Minister, Lord Vallance said:
The discoveries and innovations on display in Lisburn today demonstrate the potential that researchers in Northern Ireland have to make the most of the UK’s association to Horizon. Their ideas are already attracting investment, driving partnerships between some of the brightest minds from Europe, New Zealand, Canada and more.
With more successful bids for Horizon funding, researchers from the public and private sector in Northern Ireland could come up with the solutions we need to kickstart economic growth and improve living standards.
Department for Science, Innovation and Technology Chief Scientific Advisor, Professor Chris Johnson said:
Having made Northern Ireland my home and working at one of its great universities, I know what the brilliant minds here are capable of, and I am pleased to be here today to hear of the ambitious projects that have already been brought to life thanks to funding from Horizon. This roadshow is a great opportunity for researchers, scientists and businesses in the region to hear from innovators who have been through the application process and succeeded.
We want more researchers based in Northern Ireland to seize the benefits of Horizon Europe, to accelerate the discoveries that will boost our economy, and deliver new technologies that will improve all our lives.
A litany of Northern Irish R&D projects received backing through Horizon’s predecessor, Horizon 2020. One example is the EYE-RISK project, a collaborative effort between a group of researchers based at Queen’s University Belfast (QUB) and several leading research centres around Europe to find a cure for Age-Related Macular Degeneration (AMD). AMD is a progressive and currently incurable disease leading to declining sight that progresses to the irreversible loss of vision.
The EYE-RISK team published many milestone papers and reviews, and the project is still considered as a flagship programme in Ophthalmology which focuses on the diagnosis and treatment of eye disorders. The researchers developed a computational model of potential risks, physiological activities, hazards, and the impact of aging on patients with AMD which can serve as the basis for future research initiatives.
Imre Lengyel and Tunde Peto, project leaders for EYE-RISK:
The EYE-RISK project embedded the QUB ophthalmology cluster amongst the leading teams in Europe and gave us a leading edge worldwide. The academics and the early career scientists involved in this project have been given an excellent opportunity to be involved in breakthrough research and develop professional and personal friendships.
An array of speakers from across government, including the Chief Scientific Advisors from both the UK Department of Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) and from the Northern Ireland Executive, are attending the roadshow. The roadshow which has been brought together in a collaboration between DSIT, Innovate UK, the Northern Ireland Government and Enterprise Northern Ireland.
Northern Ireland is already playing a big role in tackling the challenges facing the UK today, from driving cybersecurity through to seizing the opportunities of our push towards net zero. Queen’s University Belfast’s Centre for Advanced Sustainable Energy is looking at ways we can build the UK as a net zero superpower, supported by £4.5 million from the Northern Ireland Executive. Grants awarded through the Horizon Europe programme could allow researchers to discover more in this area and ultimately help us protect our planet.
Innovative companies are increasingly making Northern Ireland their home. Recently, ASOS set up a £14 million tech hub that will create over 180 jobs in the coming years.
The roadshow in Northern Ireland is the latest event in a series of roadshows, following 2 previous sessions in Birmingham and Glasgow, building on a range of campaign efforts to get more businesses, researchers and academics to make the most of the benefits we can grasp from our association to the world-leading programme.
Backing the science and technology sectors is a central if we are to achieve the missions of this new government. The discoveries and solutions that researchers bidding for Horizon funding can produce will help us improve the daily lives of people across the UK – from transforming our NHS and transport systems so that they are fit for the future to securing more funding that will help us rebuild our economy.
We know from recent history that the UK can be a leader in this area. We have 4 of the top 10 universities in the world, and the second-highest number of Nobel prize winners. A quarter of projects in which the UK participated, funded through Horizon’s predecessor, were UK led.
Further information, including practical support on how to apply, is available on Innovate UK’s website and UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) also host regular events that help guide businesses and researchers through the opportunities on offer and the application process.
Potential applicants can find Horizon Europe calls (funding opportunities) open to UK-based applicants using the European Commission’s funding and tender opportunities portal. They can apply for Horizon Europe funding through the European Commission’s funding and tenders portal, where the original funding call is found. More information on how to submit applications are available on the European Commission’s website.
NOTES TO EDITORS
The EYE-RISK project aimed to pinpoint who is at risk of developing the condition, and why loss of vision progresses in patients with the disease. This understanding is an important first step towards better diagnosis and treatment of the condition.
Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments
In a report published today (Thursday 24 October 2024), the Charity Commission concludes that over several years, trans youth charity Mermaids was not governed to the standards it expects.
The regulator cites the charity’s failure to ensure its governance, culture and practices kept pace with its growing size, demand for services and public profile, as a major factor that contributed to wider governance failings.
Mermaids’ objects are to relieve the mental and emotional stress of children and young people affected by gender identity issues and their families, and to advance public education about the same.
In September 2022, the Commission opened a regulatory compliance case into the charity after complaints were made by the public, and highlighted in the media. Concerns were raised around chest-binding services and online support offered to young people, and alleged ties between the charity’s now former CEO and the Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust. As charity regulator, the Commission looked at matters that fell within its remit, in relation to the trustees’ compliance with their duties and charity law.
The regulator escalated its engagement to a statutory inquiry in November 2022 after the findings of an Equity, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) review commissioned by Mermaids highlighted multiple issues of concern relating to the charity’s culture, operational management and processes. Today’s report noted that the charity has addressed these with an action plan and has provided evidence of this to the Commission alongside additional steps that were recommended in a separate and wider external review of the charity’s governance.
The inquiry examined the administration, governance and management of the charity, including its leadership and culture. It also sought to determine if trustees have fulfilled their duties under charity law, in line with the charity’s purpose. This included assessing if there is sufficient oversight of the charity’s activities and compliance with internal policies and procedures.
As part of its investigations, the inquiry met with charity representatives on multiple occasions to inspect records and obtain further information and documents. The charity’s trustees, senior staff members and former CEO were all interviewed, and the inquiry reviewed the charity’s complaints log and sampled calls, emails and online forum/web chat with users that took place between 2020 and 2023.
The inquiry report makes a number of findings of mismanagement, including around trustees failing to:
address internal issues around culture and inclusivity at the charity
carry out sufficient due diligence checks when recruiting trustees, which resulted in the recruitment of someone the charity said should “never have been appointed”
properly adhere to their own internal HR policies when it came to the supervision of the former CEO and / or make clear to the former CEO and staff that the role did not fall into the charity’s normal HR management policy
The inquiry also found the purpose of the information about puberty blockers published on the charity’s website was unclear. Charities are by law required to ensure that information provided on an education basis is accurate, evidence-based and balanced. The inquiry provided statutory advice on this matter, which the trustees have since acted on.
The inquiry found that the charity had a detailed policy relating to its chest binder service and demonstrated compliance with this policy, though in a small number of cases could have been more transparent with service users when declining requests. Mermaids terminated the service in October 2023. However, the Commission has issued statutory advice to the charity requiring that, should it ever resume this service, its future policy and controls should reflect the recent Cass Review, or any future NHS guidelines on parental involvement.
The Commission did not uphold all concerns raised about the charity. The inquiry found no evidence that the charity:
provided medical advice, which would have been outside its charitable purposes
made medical referrals for young people without the approval of a parent or carer
held inappropriate influence or ties to GIDS at the Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust or to private medical practices
failed to have appropriate safeguarding policies in place.
Orlando Fraser, KC, Chair of the Charity Commission said:
“The provision of services to children affected by gender identity issues is a highly challenging area that requires great care and sensitivity. This is especially so for charities, given the authority that registered status will likely carry with children and their families.
“We have carefully scrutinised Mermaids’ activities through a statutory inquiry and have found mismanagement in a number of areas. Mermaids cooperated with our investigation and has been actively addressing the various concerns raised.
“Additionally, following the Cass Review, we have required Mermaids to present a more accurate picture on its website as to the risks involved in the use of puberty blockers, and to follow Cass Review findings on the involvement of parents in social transitioning as regards any future provision of chest binders to children.”
He added:
“As the report indicates, there are lessons for other charities working in these areas, including that they need to have regard to the findings, conclusions and recommendations of the Cass Review.”
The full inquiry report, detailing all findings, is available on GOV.UK.
Notes to editors:
The Charity Commission is the independent, non-ministerial government department that registers and regulates charities in England and Wales. Its ambition is to be an expert regulator that is fair, balanced, and independent so that charity can thrive. This ambition will help to create and sustain an environment where charities further build public trust and ultimately fulfil their essential role in enhancing lives and strengthening society.
Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments
Scientists comment on a report by the House of Lords Food Diet and Obesity Committee.
Dr Nerys Astbury, Associate Professor – Diet & Obesity, Nuffield Department of Primary Health Care Sciences, University of Oxford, said:
“The House of Lords report concludes that obesity and diet-related disease are a public health emergency. Whilst it’s great to have this acknowledged publicly by such a high-profile report, many, including those of us who work on diet and obesity research believe that this is already well established. However, what is needed are immediate, specific, and measurable actions which have the potential to reduce obesity and diet related disease rates which contribute to ill health and have significant impact on the wider economy.
“The report highlights that between 1992 and 2020, almost 700 policies were proposed by successive governments to tackle obesity in England. Yet the prevalence of obesity continues to rise, as do the rates of many diseases associated with obesity including type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and certain obesity-related cancers.
“Whilst the report goes some way to suggest several key actions which have the potential to help reduce obesity rates and prevent other diet related diseases, time and political will are needed to envisage these changes. Some of these policies suggested may be unpopular, and there will likely be resistance to making some of these changes, particularly from the food industry who try to resist policies which could impact their profit margins.”
Prof Alex Johnstone, Theme Lead for Nutrition, Obesity and Disease at the Rowett Institute, University of Aberdeen, said:
“I welcome this report from the House Of Lords and the ethos to support preventative strategies as part of healthy weight management in the UK. Our own research on Transforming the UK Food System (TUKFS), funded by UKRI, on food insecurity and obesity, with focus on the retail food sector, supports the priority actions identified, which include strengthening policy and mandatory reporting. As an academic, I particularly welcome opportunity for future funding for more mechanistic research on ultra processed foods impact on health. The food system is complex and encompasses farm to fork, and we should not miss the lived experience of those with obesity. These measures are only the first step to move towards access to healthy and sustainable food for all to reduce the dietary health inequalities in the UK.
“The consultation was wide ranging and actively sought evidence from a wide range of food system stakeholders. I submitted written evidence, both as an individual academic https://committees.parliament.uk/writtenevidence/130634/pdf/as and as part of a UKRI Transforming UK Food Systems research team https://committees.parliament.uk/writtenevidence/130616/pdf/. This process was extensive; the report is transparent, with transcripts of oral evidence also provided. The report does appear to be evidence based, with a balance of actions which also identify knowledge gaps, for example, more funding for more research on UPF, where the evidence is less clear. The actions prioritise changing our food system, or food environment, which is welcome. I would have liked to see more mention of the lived experience from people living with obesity being cited as evidence, and more direct actions on reducing food insecurity for people living with obesity. I would have also liked to see some evidence on how we communicate about overweight and obesity, there is evidence on changing the narrative from body weight to a healthy weight (https://publichealthscotland.scot/news/2023/march/improving-how-we-communicate-about-health-and-obesity-in-scotland/).”
Dr Katie Dalrymple, Lecturer in Nutritional Sciences, King’s College London, said:
“The obesity epidemic presents a major challenge for public health across all stages of the life course. Without effective and evidence-based interventions we will not see a reduction in obesity rates in our lifetime. Those at particular risk of developing obesity are children and young people. The report has highlighted the importance of preconception health of the mother as well as crucial role of the infant and early childhood diet and how they influence food choices. Early years settings and primary schools also offer an opportunity to support children in accessing health food choices. I hope the outcomes of this report result in tangible and effective interventions across this important stage of the lifecourse.”
‘House of Lords Food, Diet and Obesity Committee Report of Session 2024-25, Recipe for health: a plan to fix our broken food system’ was published at 00:01 UK time on Thursday 24 October 2024.
Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments
The Government will take its first step to address the significant issues facing the financial sustainability of elite men’s football in England with the introduction of a strengthened Football Governance Bill in the House of Lords.
New powers in the Bill deliver manifesto commitments and include consulting fans on ticket pricing, home stadium relocations, and fan representation at clubs
Parachute payments included in Regulator’s remit so it will have full oversight to tackle financial sustainability across the football pyramid
Requirement to consider government foreign policy dropped to cement regulator’s full independence
The Government will take its first step to address the significant issues facing the financial sustainability of elite men’s football in England today [Thursday 24 October], with the introduction of a strengthened Football Governance Bill in the House of Lords.
The Bill comes at a critical juncture for English football, following the attempted breakaway European Super League, and a series of high profile cases of clubs being financially mismanaged. In recent years we’ve seen the devastating impact of the collapse of clubs like Bury and Macclesfield. These cases came about as a result of fundamental governance problems in the game that have led to excessive and reckless risk-taking, with many clubs living way beyond their means.
The Bill, which delivers on the Government’s manifesto commitments, will establish an Independent Football Regulator and a new set of rules to protect clubs, empower fans and keep clubs at the heart of their communities.
The Regulator will tackle rogue owners and directors, implement a club licensing regime to help ensure a more consistent approach in how clubs are run, monitor club finances and improve fan engagement throughout the football pyramid – from the Premier League to the National League. It will also have a backstop measure to mediate a fair financial distribution down the Leagues should the Premier League and EFL (English Football League) not be able to come to an agreement.
In major changes to the previous draft of the Football Governance Bill:
The Regulator will now explicitly require clubs to provide ‘effective engagement’ with their supporters on changes to ticket prices, and any proposals to relocate their home ground.
The singular carve out of parachute payments in the previous draft of the Bill has been dropped. The Regulator will now be given the remit to include parachute payments, through the backstop mechanism, when assessing finances across the game. Excluding these payments, would have significantly reduced the ability of the Regulator to take a full view of financial stability and resilience across the football pyramid.
The Regulator will no longer be required to consider government foreign and trade policy when approving club takeovers. The move ensures the Regulator will be fully independent of government and industry.
The Regulator will now have the power to compel clubs to democratically select the fan representatives the club must engage with, rather than clubs making a unilateral decision. This will ensure meaningful engagement with as many supporters of a club as possible.
There is now a clear commitment to do more to improve Equality, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) within the game. Clubs will now be required to be transparent and publish what action they are taking on EDI as part of reporting against a new Football Club corporate governance code that the regulator will introduce, improving decision making at clubs.
The Government has made it a priority to strengthen the Bill since taking office, ensuring English football remains one of the country’s greatest exports, and places fans back at the heart of the game, so that local clubs in towns and cities continue to thrive for generations.
Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy said:
English football is one of our greatest exports and a source of national pride which this Government wants to see thrive for generations to come.
But for too long, financial instability has meant loyal fans and whole communities have risked losing their cherished clubs as a result of mismanagement and reckless spending.
This Bill seeks to properly redress the balance, putting fans back at the heart of the game, taking on rogue owners and crucially helping to put clubs up and down the country on a sound financial footing.”
Sports Minister Stephanie Peacock said:
Football would be nothing without its fans, and this strengthened Bill will deliver an Independent Regulator that puts them firmly back at the centre of the game.
From protecting club heritage such as shirt colours and badges that mean so much to so many of us, to requiring clubs to consult fans on changes to ticket prices, the Regulator will help make the game the best it can be.
Working side by side with the football authorities, the Regulator will protect clubs and make sure they’re kept at the heart of their communities, where they belong.
Kevin Miles, Chief Executive of the Football Supporters Association said:
Earlier this year 200+ supporters’ groups signed an FSA open letter calling on all parties to get behind a new Football Governance Bill – we’re very pleased the Government has listened and look forward to working with Parliamentarians to ensure the Bill delivers upon its promise.
The FSA was at the heart of 2021’s Fan-Led Review of Football Governance which made a range of recommendations to strengthen the game’s governance – most notably the commitment to introduce an independent regulator.
The regulator has the potential to protect our historic community clubs and stop the being run into-the-ground by bad owners, rebalance the game’s finances, protect the heritage of all clubs, give supporters a bigger say in the running of the game and block any domestic clubs from joining a breakaway European Super League. The FSA wholeheartedly backs its creation.
Dame Tracey Crouch, author Fan Led Review of Football said:
For far too long fans have been at the back of the queue when it comes to their beloved football club. Football means so much to millions of people and I’m grateful the Government is taking action to protect football from the threats of rogue owners and breakaway competitions.
The protections in the new Bill reflect the Fan Led Review’s recommendations that supporters should be placed back at the heart of the game and will have a genuine say on things like ticketing and club heritage.
The Independent Football Regulator will crucially help put clubs on a sustainable financial footing and help secure our national game’s long term future.
Former Manchester United and England player, football pundit and co-owner of Salford City FC Gary Neville said:
Football is undoubtedly one of our country’s greatest assets, but now more than ever we need an independent regulator to act as a guardian for our game, to make sure that clubs and their fans are protected for the long term.
I’ve had the honour of experiencing football as a fan, player, pundit and now as a club co-owner, but I know my role is to act as a temporary custodian of an institution that belongs to its fans and community which will last forever.
Football is too important in this country to be left solely in the hands of individual owners to design its future. We’ve seen inequality across the game grow but now independent regulation can act as a catalyst to create a thriving and sustainable game for future generations.
The new legislation echoes the sentiment from fans on the need for systemic change in football, as set out in Dame Tracey Crouch’s Fan Led Review of Football. While retaining many of the key findings, the Government believes the new Bill builds on these and delivers a stronger independent regulator for men’s elite football in England.
Notes to editors:
The Fan Led Review of Football Governance can be found here.
Parachute payments will be assessed only if the Regulator considers them to be of systemic risk to financial sustainability. The Football Governance Bill will require clubs to continue to be protected from the risks that come with relegation.
Source: United Kingdom – Prime Minister’s Office 10 Downing Street
The Commonwealth has a once in a generation chance to be a driving force for opportunity and growth in an increasingly contested world, the Prime Minister is set to say on a landmark visit to the Pacific this week.
Prime Minister to make the case that the Commonwealth has a once in a generation chance to be a driving force for opportunity and growth during visit to Samoa
New UK Trade Centre of Expertise set to bolster economic ties across the grouping and unlock markets for UK businesses
Keir Starmer makes history as first ever sitting UK Prime Minister to visit a Pacific Island country
The Commonwealth has a once in a generation chance to be a driving force for opportunity and growth in an increasingly contested world, the Prime Minister is set to say on a landmark visit to the Pacific this week.
It comes as the government uses its foreign policy agenda to deliver for people at home, working with partners across the globe on issues such as climate change, growth and energy security.
Keir Starmer will arrive in Samoa for the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting today [Thursday 24 October], joining 55 other Commonwealth delegations to discuss the shared challenges and opportunities faced by its members.
In doing so, he will make history as the first UK Prime Minister to ever visit a Pacific Island country.
The Prime Minister will use the trip to make the case that Commonwealth countries, no matter where they are in the world, need resilient and thriving economies to face the global challenges of the day.
And he will tell delegates that he believes the Commonwealth offers a unique opportunity to be able to build those economies, combining major traditional markets with rapidly growing economies and resilient, innovative communities.
By 2027, the Commonwealth is expected be home to six of the world’s ten fastest-growing economies – Guyana, Rwanda, Bangladesh, Uganda, India and Mozambique – and have a combined GDP exceeding $19.5 trillion, while more than 60% of the grouping’s 2.5 billion population will be under 30.
The Commonwealth, which includes some of the UK’s biggest trading partners such as India, Canada, Australia, Singapore and South Africa, already accounts for 9% of total UK trade, worth £164 billion in 2023. And its members benefit from a 21% average reduction in bilateral trade costs, as well as higher investment flows between Commonwealth members.
As part of the visit, the Prime Minister will announce a new UK Trade Centre of Expertise, operating out of the Foreign Office, to drive export-led growth across the grouping. Trade specialists will provide technical and practical assistance to developing countries to help them access and compete in global markets.
In turn, the partnership is expected to help UK businesses tap into some of the fastest growing economies in the world, such as Uganda and Bangladesh through strengthened economic ties. Over the long term, the project will also aim to lift economies out of poverty, reducing pressure on UK Aid and British taxpayers.
The Prime Minister is also expected to meet business leaders during CHOGM, as part of his personal campaign to drive investment into every corner of the United Kingdom.
The meeting, which will include business leaders such as Brian Moynihan, chairman and CEO of Bank of America, and John Neal, CEO of Lloyd’s of London, comes just 10 days after the UK hosted the International Investment Summit, which drove £63 billion of private investment and 38,000 jobs into the UK.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer said:
We have a once-in-a-generation opportunity to fix the foundations and change our country’s story to turn around the lives of everyday people in the UK, but we can’t do that with a protectionist approach.
Under this government’s pragmatic and sensible approach, we must harness the opportunities to work with genuine partners – like our Commonwealth family – across the world to build resilient economies that offer real opportunity for our people, whether that is accessing untapped markets, or collaborating on grassroots innovations.
The combined GDP of the Commonwealth is expected to exceed $19.5 trillion in the next three years, we cannot let that economic heft go to waste.
Alongside the Commonwealth Secretary General, the Foreign Secretary is expected to convene Commonwealth foreign ministers to launch a new Commonwealth Investment Plan of Action to mobilise investment across the membership.
The plan will focus on small and vulnerable economies, easing barriers to trade and investment. The Foreign Secretary will also launch two new trade hubs to help female entrepreneurs in India and Sri Lanka access global markets.
Foreign Secretary David Lammy said:
The Commonwealth is a unique forum encompassing 56 countries and a third of the world’s population brought together through shared history and friendship.
Representing some of the world’s fastest growing economies, forging stronger ties with these markets is crucial for delivering jobs and economic growth.
This government is reconnecting Britain in the world and building partnerships that will unlock greater prosperity for all.
During the three-day CHOGM summit, leaders will discuss some of the pressing issues facing Commonwealth nations, including climate change, education and democracy.
On Friday, the Prime Minister is expected to attend a lunch, hosted by the King for new heads of government, before attending two Commonwealth executive sessions, and the heads of government dinner.
Headline: Bill to strengthen puppy and dog welfare across New South Wales
Published: 24 October 2024
Released by: Minister for Agriculture, Minister for Local Government
The Minns Labor Government will today introduce a Bill to Parliament to strengthen puppy and dog welfare across the state by establishing clear guardrails and standards for dog breeders.
Committed to during the election this legislation has been developed through close consultation with experts, industry and animal welfare advocates, to ensure community expectations are reflected in New South Wales laws.
The Bill targets key risks to animal health and welfare associated with dog breeding practices that have been of concern for some time. Changes under this Bill include:
Mandating that breeders must, for the first time, obtain a Breeder Identification Number through the NSW pet registry, enabling transparency of the sector and assisting people acquiring a puppy.
Setting a lifetime litter limit for fertile female adult dogs (those over 6 months old) to five natural litters or up to three caesarean litters, whichever occurs first.
Establishing a care standard of one staff carer for every 20 adult dogs ensuring sufficient care, food and water are provided.
Establishing a maximum cap of 20 fertile female dogs (over the age of six months) at any breeding premise.
A maximum penalty for individuals of $110,000, two years imprisonment or both and $550,000 for organisations will apply for breaches of this cap.
This bill seeks to stop puppy farming by providing a robust and modernised regulatory system for all breeders to deliver good animal welfare without imposing undue regulatory burden on legitimate breeders.
The Government is therefore enabling within the Bill that breeders with more than 20 fertile dogs will be able to apply for a limited exemption from this cap. This exemption will apply for ten years, giving breeders significant time to appropriately scale down their operations.
Currently in New South Wales there has been no compulsory registration scheme for breeders and no restrictions on the number of breeding female dogs that a person or business can have, or the number of litters a female dog can produce in their lifetimes.
Without these safeguards animal welfare has been jeopardised with unethical breeders in some instances establishing facilities of dozens or hundreds of dogs without providing essential care.
The majority of the changes will come into effect from December 2025, allowing time for the Government to rollout an education campaign for breeders, dog owners and those considering acquiring a puppy.
NSW Minister for Agriculture Tara Moriarty said:
“With half of all households having a dog at home there is significant community concern about the welfare of these dogs as puppies, and about the practice of puppy farms.
“Most breeders do the right thing, but there is a clear message from the community that large-scale, unregulated breeding practices are not acceptable, and breeders should be registered.
“We came to Government with a commitment to clean up the sector and to enhance animal welfare because it means a lot to everyone in our community and for our dogs.
“Our Bill ensures transparency, accountability, and appropriate animal welfare standards in all breeding operations across NSW.
“This Bill is about stopping the bad apples of this industry while supporting good and professional people who prioritise the health and welfare of their animals.
“These changes will be easy to understand for industry and will allow people to distinguish ethical breeders who promote responsible breeding practices from dodgy puppy farmers.
Minister for Local Government Ron Hoenig said:
“People expect that any dog purchased from a breeder has been treated well and has not been exploited by dishonest puppy farmers to turn a profit.
“This Bill applies a strict regulatory framework to provide the government with greater oversight to ensure all breeders are complying with animal welfare standards and community expectations.
“All industry and animal welfare stakeholders agree that there is a need to clean out the bad actors and for better animal and customer protection against those few unethical breeders. That is what this Bill delivers.”
Animal Welfare League NSW CEO Stephen Albin said:
“The Animal Welfare League NSW strongly supports the Bill as it will crack down on breeders who are doing the wrong thing and improve animal welfare.
“It also sets a new regulatory framework that will deliver higher standards in the breeding industry and give established breeders time to meet those standards.
“We have seen a huge spike in breeding since COVID-19, with a big increase in dogs coming into the shelter, blowing out our waiting lists and making it extremely challenging to find new, loving homes for dogs, who are often just puppies.
“Sadly, too many dogs are not finding a new home.
“This Bill will help ease the pressure on our shelters and allow us to rehome dogs that have been surrendered or abandoned.”
Headline: Strengthening enforcement to tackle illegal tobacco
Published: 24 October 2024
Released by: Minister for Health
The NSW Government will roll out reforms to better protect the community from the harms of illegal tobacco, including tougher penalties, more enforcement officers, and a new tobacco licensing scheme for retailers.
A new licensing scheme
Recent enforcement activities have observed a rise in illicit tobacco retailing including amongst rural communities in NSW, which adversely affects businesses that operate within the law. Illicit retailers undercut legitimate small businesses by selling illicit tobacco at lower prices and some have been found to be located in close proximity to schools.
A new tobacco licensing scheme will also be introduced, to better protect those businesses doing the right thing and ensure greater oversight of the tobacco retail industry in NSW.
Under these changes, retailers and wholesalers of tobacco and non-tobacco smoking products will be required to hold a tobacco licence and pay an annual fee.
A licence will be able to be refused, or revoked, if the applicant has been convicted of a tobacco or vaping product related offence.
The scheme will support comprehensive and targeted enforcement to identify and penalise those retailers and wholesalers doing the wrong thing.
The proposed legislation includes penalties of up to $220,000 for corporations and $44,000 for individuals for selling tobacco without a licence under the new scheme.
To ensure that applying for a tobacco licence is not burdensome for small businesses, a technical support phoneline will be available to everyone submitting an application.
A tobacco licensing scheme will complement the NSW Government’s broader approach to tobacco compliance and enforcement.
Tougher penalties
The government will double maximum penalties for a range of tobacco retailing offences, including:
Individuals selling tobacco products to minors will be fined up to $22,000 for a first offence and $110,000 for a subsequent offence, with corporations liable for up to $110,000 for a first offence and $220,000 for subsequent offences;
Individuals selling tobacco products not in the required packaging or with the mandatory health warnings will be fined up to $22,000, and corporations up to $110,000; and
People impersonating or obstructing an inspector can be fined up to $1,100, up from $550.
Enforcement & seizures
NSW Health will also recruit an additional 14 enforcement officers to strengthen compliance efforts across the state. This doubles the number of authorised inspectors employed by the Ministry of Health. Ahead of these reforms, NSW Health boosted regional enforcement capacity by supporting the employment of four additional enforcement officers. This compliance workforce complements authorised staff who undertake inspections across local health districts
From 1 July 2024 to 30 September 2024, NSW Health inspectors conducted 565 targeted retail inspections, seizing more than 3.2 million cigarettes and over 600kg of other illicit tobacco products, with an estimated value of over $3.7 million.
NSW Health collaborates with NSW Police and other state and national regulatory agencies on enforcement related to illicit tobacco sales, including sharing intelligence, working on joint targets and joint operations.
Quotes attributable to Minister for Health, Ryan Park MP:
“I am very concerned by the prevalence of illegal tobacco and e-cigarettes in our community, and their proximity to our schools and children.
“These new laws are the most significant tobacco retailing reforms in NSW in the last decade and will help us combat the scourge of illicit tobacco sales across the state.
“We are introducing tougher penalties for retailers doing the wrong thing, and boosting our team of enforcement officers to strengthen our compliance efforts.
“The increased tobacco penalties reflect the seriousness of these offences. Retailers should be put on notice that if they are caught breaking tobacco retailing laws they will be penalised.”
“A tobacco licensing scheme in NSW will also further enhance our state’s strong approach to enforcement of tobacco retailing laws. It will allow us to have better oversight over the tobacco industry and will support our comprehensive approach to help reduce the use, impact and associated costs of tobacco in NSW.”
Quotes attributable to Member for Wagga Wagga Joe McGirr MP:
“After being made aware of the escalating problem of illegal tobacco in my electorate and across the state, I prepared a Private Members’ Bill to require the licensing of tobacco retailers and increased penalties for offences.
“This Bill was prepared with widespread consultation with industry and the community, with strong support for my proposals to tackle this growing criminal activity which is undermining health messaging and taking an expensive toll on legitimate retailers.
“So, I am delighted that the government has met this challenge by proposing its own Bill, reflecting the content of my Bill, and I look forward to supporting the government in this endeavour when parliament resumes.
“Licensing on its own will not eliminate the black market trade in tobacco but it will provide a valuable structure that will help to reduce the damaging effects of this rapidly-growing problem.
“I congratulate the government for taking this strong proactive stance and I look forward to working together on further steps to tackle the illegal tobacco trade.”
Quotes attributable to NSW Health Chief Health Officer Dr Kerry Chant:
“NSW Health supports a holistic approach to tobacco control, recognising reducing supply and access to illicit products is one component.
“Operating a tobacco licensing scheme will ensure NSW Health has accurate, up-to-date information on tobacco retailing and wholesaling activities in NSW, facilitating more efficient and effective enforcement activity.
“If you think a tobacco or e-cigarette retailing law has been broken by a retailer in NSW, you can report this via the NSW Health website.”
The Government of Jersey has awarded a new 10-year contract to LibertyBus, part of Tower Transit Group, following a comprehensive two-stage tender process. The contract reflects the Government’s commitment to providing sustainable, high-quality public transport for Islanders and visitors.
LibertyBus, the current operator of bus services in Jersey, was selected for offering best value for money and a range of service improvements that align with the Island’s environmental goals.
The Government would also like to acknowledge the high quality of the three shortlisted bids and the strong interest shown in this contract, reflecting the importance of Jersey’s public transport system.
Highlights of the contract are:
The introduction of 22 ultra-low emission, high-capacity buses, which will replace older vehicles within the first 12 months of the agreement. The remaining fleet will undergo refurbishment in the early stages of the contract, ensuring improved comfort and reliability.
Over the life of the contract, LibertyBus has committed to a complete fleet renewal in alignment with the Government of Jersey’s carbon-neutral strategy.
To further enhance services, LibertyBus will exceed the number of routes and service frequencies required by the tender, providing a record high number of services to the island’s residents.
To improve customer experience, new self-service ticketing machines will be installed at Liberation Station, while faster ticketing systems will be rolled out across the bus fleet, ensuring quicker and more efficient boarding for passengers.
Constable Andy Jehan, Minister for Infrastructure, said: “This new contract reflects the Government’s commitment to improving public transport while supporting our carbon-neutral ambitions. We are pleased to continue our partnership with LibertyBus and look forward to seeing the positive impact of the new buses and service for Islanders.”
Samuel Ribeiro, Managing Director of Tower Transit, commented: “We are delighted to have renewed the partnership with the Government of Jersey to continue to provide exceptional bus services for the next 10 years. This agreement will see continued investment in fleet replacement, including zero-emission vehicles. Our aim is to build on the network of services and support the GoJ’s plans to deliver increased modal shift over the next decade.”
Clint Feuerherdt, CEO & Managing Director of Kelsian Group added: “The UK sees Jersey as a model case for successful bus franchising”, and we are proud to have contributed to its ongoing success. We will continue to utilise our leading experience in zeroemission solutions to deliver a world class transport experience, tailored to the Jersey community.”
This contract cements LibertyBus’ role in supporting the Island’s transport needs while contributing to Jersey’s environmental goals
Headline: Building resilience against flooding in Tenterfield
Published: 24 October 2024
Released by: Minister for Planning and Public Spaces, Minister for Regional Transport and Roads
Residents and motorists will soon see activity around the Molesworth Street Bridge in Tenterfield, as early work to improve flood resilience commences.
Tenterfield Shire Council received just over $9.9 million in funding from to build a new concrete bridge over Tenterfield Creek and relocate adjacent infrastructure.
Funding will be provided by the Albanese and Minns Governments’ Regional Roads Transport Recovery Package, through the joint Disaster Recovery Funding Arrangements.
Geotechnical work to help inform the design of the bridge redevelopment started in July, with construction scheduled to start mid-2025.
The project will also include the relocation of a sewer line that runs adjacent to the bridge, which was damaged in early 2022 when severe weather events affected northern NSW.
Quotes attributable to Federal Minister for Emergency Management Jenny McAllister:
“The current bridge is vulnerable to natural disasters, leading to regular disruptions to the local community.
“It’s why we’re building this bridge to a better standard, helping the community stay connected in the event of any future disasters.
“We want to work with state and local government to make sure communities like Tenterfield are better prepared for natural disasters.”
Quotes attributable to NSW Minister for Planning Paul Scully:
“The funding for this improvement to the bridge will allow councils and other road authorities to ‘build back better’ so infrastructure is more resilient.
“Revitalising the bridge will allow the community, State Government agencies, Tenterfield Shire Council, and industry to withstand and respond to bushfires, severe weather and flooding events effectively.”
Quotes attributable to NSW Minister for Regional Transport and Roads Jenny Aitchison:
“I was delighted to visit Tenterfield recently to thank Janelle Saffin and Tenterfield council for their advocacy efforts to ensure this vital bridge is rebuilt.
“This project is a great example of all three levels of government working together to keep communities better connected during future natural disasters.”
Quotes attributable to NSW Parliamentary Secretary for Disaster Recovery and Member for Lismore Janelle Saffin:
“This bridge is a critical piece of infrastructure for the residents of Tenterfield.
“In a major flood it goes under water, isolating the town’s important medical services, including the 18-bed acute hospital with a 24-hour emergency department.
“There is also no helipad, which reinforces the need for access to the hospital to be maintained.
“In times of natural disaster, access to medical services can be a matter of life and death, so the community benefits of this project are obvious.”
Quotes attributable to Tenterfield Mayor Bronwyn Petrie:
“Tenterfield Shire Council is grateful for the full funding of the replacement and betterment of the timber Molesworth Street Bridge and adjacent sewer line by the Australian and NSW Governments under the Regional Roads and Transport Recovery Package totaling $9,988,775.80.
“Council is pleased to announce we have entered into a Memorandum of Understanding with Transport for NSW to deliver the bridge component of the project, fostering collaborative relationships and enhancing Council’s in-house skills, leveraging the professional and comprehensive expertise of Transport in design and construction.
“Following geotechnical, planning and design work, construction work on the bridge will commence with detours via Duncan, High and Scott streets.”
The Education Minister is travelling to Australia today to attend the 23rd edition of public policy conference,Consilium.
“New Zealand and Australia share common challenges and aspirations for education. New South Wales has recently introduced a new curriculum that is explicit, sequenced and knowledge based while Victoria is requiring structured approaches to teaching reading from 2025,” Erica Stanford says.
“I look forward to hearing more about their experiences and ideas, as well as sharing our Government’s plan to lift achievement and close the equity gap in New Zealand.”
Minister Stanford will speak to ‘Can Education in Australia be reformed?’ where she will share her plan to deliver a world-leading education system.
While in Australia she will meet with Rt Hon Nick Gibb, former UK Schools Minister, Hon Sarah Henderson, Senator for Victoria and federal Shadow Minister for Education, and other education policy experts and officials.
Minister Stanford will travel to Australia on 24 October and returns to New Zealand on 27 October.