Previous Section Index Home Page


Road Accidents

Mr. Sheerman: To ask the Secretary of State for the Environment, Transport and the Regions how many deaths and serious injuries there were in road accidents in each constituency in Great Britain in 1999. [161021]

Mr. Hill: The information is not available in the form requested. Data for metropolitan areas and unitary authorities and counties are given in the table.

Numbers of killed and seriously injured casualties in 1999

Metropolitan areas/ Unitary Authority (UA)/CountyKilledSeriously injured
Greater London2645,697
Greater Manchester891,035
Merseyside55633
South Yorkshire50683
Tyne and Wear37479
West Midlands891,664
West Yorkshire1111,189
Bath and North East Somerset UA793
City of Bristol UA8180
North Somerset UA1486
South Gloucestershire UA12136
Bedfordshire(1)46263
Luton UA383
Bracknell Forest UA362
West Berkshire UA16162
Reading UA464
Slough UA556
Windsor and Maidenhead UA1376
Wokingham UA763
Buckinghamshire(1)37407
Milton Keynes UA8152
Cambridgeshire(1)63473
Peterborough UA13102
Cheshire(1)53532
Halton UA797
Warrington UA15127
Hartlepool UA140
Middlesbrough UA563
Redcar and Cleveland UA1058
Stockton on Tees UA675
Cornwall30272
Cumbria62495
Derbyshire(1)56566
City of Derby UA4124
Devon(1)38370
Plymouth UA996
Torbay UA154
Dorset(1)24311
Bournemouth UA6101
Poole UA557
Durham(1) 28192
Darlington UA540
East Sussex(1)33417
Brighton and Hove UA15148
Essex(1)94983
Southend on Sea UA1175
Thurrock UA7117
Gloucestershire47306
Hampshire(1)78865
Portsmouth UA5114
Southampton UA12119
Herefordshire UA*13166
Hertfordshire52884
East Riding of Yorkshire UA42258
Kingston upon Hull UA11145
North East Lincolnshire UA9116
North Lincolnshire UA14109
Isle of Wight UA590
Kent(1)89927
Medway Town UA11102
Lancashire(1)65919
Blackburn with Darwen UA774
Blackpool UA7133
Leicestershire(1)65332
City of Leicester UA16105
Rutland UA527
Lincolnshire104662
Norfolk71698
Northamptonshire76662
Northumberland34202
North Yorkshire(1)59876
City of York UA9122
Nottinghamshire(1)48629
City of Nottingham UA16242
Oxfordshire57522
Shropshire(1)35282
Telford and Wrekin UA10106
Somerset34283
Staffordshire(1)47303
Stoke on Trent UA882
Suffolk48432
Surrey73717
Warwickshire50558
West Sussex45507
Wiltshire(1)42320
Swindon UA7102
Worcestershire*17364
England2,92233,710
Wales1911,678
Scotland3103,734
Great Britain3,42339,122

(1) Excludes UA


11 May 2001 : Column: 385W

Medium-density Fibreboard

Mr. Mackinlay: To ask the Secretary of State for the Environment, Transport and the Regions what research has been carried out by the Health and Safety Executive into the long-term health effects and hazards presented by medium-density fibreboard; and if he will make a statement. [161051]

Mr. Meacher: In 1997 the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) undertook a review of all available scientific evidence about the possible ill-health effects arising from exposure to medium-density fibreboard (MDF) dust.

HSE's review and research concluded that the health hazards associated with exposures arising from working with MDF are similar to those associated with working with natural wood (e.g. softwood and hardwood).

Under the Control of Substances Hazardous to Health (COSHH) Regulations 1999, there are duties on employers to control exposures to substances which may be hazardous to health. Under these regulations formaldehyde, hardwood dusts and softwood dusts (the usual constituent parts of MDF) are subject to maximum exposure limits (MELs). These are limits on the airborne concentrations of substances in the workplace, measured over specific reference time periods. There is a duty to control exposure to substances with a MEL to a level as low as is reasonably practicable, and in any case below the value of the MEL. This duty does not stop once the MEL level has been achieved but continues until all that is reasonably practicable has been done.

Mr. Mackinlay: To ask the Secretary of State for the Environment, Transport and the Regions what information the Health and Safety Executive has collated from (a) European Union countries and (b) North America on (i) the rules governing the use of medium-density fibreboard and (ii) research undertaken into respiratory and other hazards presented by its use; and if he will make a statement. [161052]

Mr. Meacher: In many European Union (EU) countries and the USA, the rules applying to use of medium-density fibreboard (MDF) at work are similar in principle to those applied in Great Britain. Adequate control of exposure through inhalation of dust or fume is assessed by compliance with occupational exposure limits for wood dust and formaldehyde. There is some variation in the scope of the limits (i.e. which types of wood are covered), the numerical values, and the detailed nature of the duties on employers associated with inhalation control.

11 May 2001 : Column: 386W

The Health and Safety Executive is not aware of any research in EU or North American countries into the health hazards presented by use of MDF.

Local Government Ombudsman

Mr. Stinchcombe: To ask the Secretary of State for the Environment, Transport and the Regions what plans he has to improve (a) the response time of and (b) the public's access to the local government ombudsman. [161026]

Ms Beverley Hughes: I refer my hon. Friend to the answer I gave on 6 March 2001, Official Report, column 153W.

Planning Controls

Mr. Brooke: To ask the Secretary of State for the Environment, Transport and the Regions to what extent his Department has been able to make progress with its proposals to remove Crown exemption from statutory planning controls, currently contained in DETR circular 18/84, as envisaged in a letter from his Department to the Chairman of the Westminster Society of 4 May 2000, which envisaged action as soon as a suitable legislative opportunity arose. [161107]

Mr. Raynsford: The Government remain committed to the removal of Crown exemption from planning controls as soon as a suitable opportunity arises to amend the Town and Country Planning Act 1990. In the meantime the non-statutory procedures for the consideration of objections to development proposed by the Crown, set out in DOE Circular 18-84, continue to apply.

Sellafield

Mr. Llew Smith: To ask the Secretary of State for the Environment, Transport and the Regions (1) if he will extend the consultation period for the reassessment of the BNFL economic case for the Sellafield MOX plant beyond 7 June; [161118]

Mr. Meacher: I will write to my hon. Friend.

Mr. Llew Smith: To ask the Secretary of State for the Environment, Transport and the Regions on how many occasions external radioactivity has been measured as above permissible limits on flasks and rail transporter wagons carrying spent nuclear fuel to Sellafield since April 1998; and what measures are in place to minimise the sweating of radioactivity from nuclear transport flasks. [161121]

Mr. Hill: I will write to my hon. Friend.

Motorway Verges

Mr. Norman: To ask the Secretary of State for the Environment, Transport and the Regions how much has

11 May 2001 : Column: 387W

been spent by his Department on landscaping, horticulture and tree planting on motorway verges in each of the last four years. [159201]

Mr. Prescott: I have asked the Chief Executive of the Highways Agency, Tim Matthews, to write to the hon. Member.

Letter from Richard Thorndike to Mr. Archie Norman, dated 11 May 2001:





£ million

YearSpend
1997-987.4
1998-9935.5
1999-200029.3
2000-0121.4


Next Section Index Home Page