Previous Section | Index | Home Page |
Mr. Bercow: To ask the Solicitor-General if she will list the statutory instruments issued by her Department in the last 12 months, indicating (a) the purpose of each and (b) the cost of each to (i) public funds, (ii) businesses and (iii) individuals. [36220]
The Solicitor-General [holding answer 25 February 2002]: The Attorney-General has not made or laid any statutory instruments before Parliament in the last 12 months.
In the Departments for which the Attorney-General is responsible details are as follows:
No statutory instruments have been issued by the Crown Prosecution Service in the last 12 months.
Treasury Solicitor's Department
No statutory instruments have been issued by the Treasury Solicitor's Department in the last 12 months. Members of the Department have however assisted in the preparation of statutory instruments issued by the Departments they advise.
No statutory instruments have been issued by the Serious Fraud Office in the last 12 months.
Mr. Bercow: To ask the Solicitor-General if she will list the publications issued by her Department in each of the last four years; and what the (a) circulation, (b) cost and (c) purpose of each was. [34201]
The Solicitor-General [holding answer 11 February 2002]: The Attorney-General each year lays before Parliament the Law Officers' Departments Departmental Report setting out the Government's Expenditure Plans and Main Estimates for the Departments for the coming years. The costs of production are not borne by the Legal Secretariat to the Law Officers and the circulation figures are not known.
In August 2000 the Attorney-General published a Report by His Honour Gerald Butler QC on the future and role of Treasury Counsel at the Central Criminal Court and published a Government Response to that report in November 2000. Both reports were copied and bound within LSLO. The cost was met within the budgets held for photocopying and stationery and is not separately available. About 100 copies of each were produced.
The publications issued by the Crown Prosecution Service in each of the last four years were as follows:
12 Mar 2002 : Column 878W
For the purposes of this answer, publications have been taken to mean those significant documents that are issued by the service as a whole to serve both an internal and external audience.
Publication of the "Departmental Report" is mandatory. It is one of the key mechanisms through which Departments demonstrate their accountability to Parliament and the public. The CPS distributes copies to senior management within headquarters, libraries, business managers and to the Chief Crown Prosecutors in the 42 areas across England and Wales. Copies are also sent to the Attorney-General and Solicitor-General and to the Parliamentary Clerk for laying in both Houses, for the benefit of Members.
The purpose of the "Business Plan" is to set out clearly the vision, aim and objectives, and priorities of the CPS, what it wants to achieve with the resources it has been given and the actions it needs to take in order to deliver the plan. They are the blueprint for all other plans in the CPS so that staff know how their day to day tasks fit in with the bigger picture. And, to inform counterparts in other criminal justice departments and their agencies and service, and those with an interest in criminal justice about the direction and priorities of the CPS.
The Crown Prosecution Service's one year "Business Plan"; and the "Director of Public Prosecutions' Annual Report to the Attorney-General" are circulated to all middle and senior managers in the CPS with a summary going to all staff; they are circulated to criminal justice departments and their agencies/services both nationally and locally; to some members of the judiciary; and to those with an interest in criminal justice.
12 Mar 2002 : Column 879W
The Director of Public prosecutions is required by statute to produce an "annual report to the Attorney-General" on the performance of the CPS. The report is laid before Parliament.
Because of uncertainties associated with the election of 1997 and the Gildewell Review of the CPS, which did not report until June 1998, no Business Plans were published for 199798 and 199899.
Treasury Solicitor's Department
The publications issued by the Treasury Solicitor's Department in each of the last four years were as follows:
12 Mar 2002 : Column 880W
This list includes only professionally produced publications for external use. Publications produced in- house have not been included.
12 Mar 2002 : Column 881W
Serious Fraud Office
The Serious Fraud Office has three major publications which are the Annual Report, the Departmental Report and the Resource Accounts. The total cost of publications over the last four years is as follows:
£28,219.34 in 199899
£22,440.36 in 19992000
£49,498.62 in 200001
£64,072.64 in 200102.
Next Section | Index | Home Page |