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Written Ministerial Statements

Thursday 28 October 2004

TREASURY

Citizen Information Project

The Chief Secretary to the Treasury (Mr. Paul Boateng): On January 6 2004, Official Report, column 7WS, I announced that the Registrar General for England and Wales would lead on the next stage of development work for a UK population register. This work is being conducted by a project team based within the Office for National Statistics (ONS) and is known as the citizen information project (CIP). It is concerned with whether or not the use of a population register would improve the quality of basic data held by Government, generate efficiency savings across Government and support improved public services. I am now able to update the House on progress and on the programme of work over the rest of this stage of development.

The work has confirmed the feasibility study findings that a UK population register has the potential to generate efficiency benefits and service improvements across Government. The CIP team has investigated the costs and benefits of a range of potential options for delivering a population register. It has recommended that proposals for a national identity register (NIR), as part of the Government's proposals for ID cards, mean that if ID cards were to become compulsory then it may be more cost effective to deliver these benefits through the NIR, rather than develop a separate register. The Government have accepted this recommendation.

ONS is now in the second stage of project definition and will report to Ministers by June 2005. This includes examining in more detail how the NIR could function as a population register and exploring opportunities for adding value to existing database developments that could be cost effective ahead of the NIR reaching maturity. ONS is also exploring how efficiency and analytical requirements that cover the whole population, rather than just adults, can be met.

CONSTITUTIONAL AFFAIRS

Judicial Appointments Annual Report to Parliament

The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Constitutional Affairs (Mr. David Lammy): The judicial appointments annual report, covering the period 1 April 2003 to 31 March 2004, is published tomorrow, 29 October. This year the report focuses on developments and achievements within the judicial appointments process and the work undertaken ahead of the new judicial appointments commission. We have taken the opportunity to avoid duplication of data
 
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by placing the statistical tables and their supporting narrative on the Departmental website,www.dca.gov.uk. The report also shows that:

Copies of the report will be placed in the Libraries of both Houses. The report is also available on the internet.

FOREIGN AND COMMONWEALTH AFFAIRS

Gibraltar

The Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs (Mr. Jack Straw): I visited Madrid for bilateral talks with my Spanish counterpart, Miguel Angel Moratinos, on 27 October. The following joint statement was agreed at this meeting:

Annex


 
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I was in contact with the Chief Minister of Gibraltar, Peter Caruana, throughout these discussions. The Chief Minister authorised me to say that he was entirely content with the terms of the joint press release.

WORK AND PENSIONS

New Child Support Scheme: Progress Report

The Secretary of State for Work and Pensions (Alan Johnson): The new arrangements for child support came into operation for new cases and some linked old scheme cases from 3 March 2003. Ongoing problems remain with the new computer and telephony systems and this has meant that progress has been slower than anticipated. The Department continues to withhold substantial payments from EDS. The payment each year is determined by the contract and is linked to service levels and to the degree of functionality delivered. Between 3 March 2003 and 19 September 2004, the agency retained £12.1 million of payments due to EDS because of performance problems.

The Child Support Agency is working to improve compliance and increase its clearance rates. The number of cases cleared this quarter was over 40,000, taking the total number of clearances, calculations and closures, to over 238,000 for the scheme to date.

The agency now has the information required to make reasonable assessments of compliance, thus improving their ability to start properly to manage performance in this area. Figures for this quarter show an average monthly performance estimated at just over
 
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50 per cent. for both cash and case compliance. This is too low, but with reliable information now available the agency can better plan to improve this. The agency has recently appointed a new director of enforcement to lead the work on this.

The poorest families are benefiting from the new scheme with a further 8,000 families receiving child maintenance premium during this last quarter. This brings the total number of beneficiaries to over 33,000.

Achievement of the agency's accuracy target is determined at the end of March 2005 by means of a special exercise. However, the current level of accuracy, to the nearest penny, is estimated at 83 per cent. against a target of 90 per cent.

The agency recognises that performance this quarter has fallen back in some areas, partly reflecting time invested in extra training following their decision further to prioritise activity on compliance. This should permit a more balanced approach to managing cases from first application to first payment and the agency's executive managers assure me that they anticipate that this will lead to progressive improvements in performance levels over the next year, as the new arrangements become more established and better information becomes available to enable performance improvements to be targeted more effectively.

Summary of Agency Performance to September 2004 Table 1—Average Weekly Payments
1 Qualifying child2 Qualifying children3 Qualifying children
Average Weekly Payment 1 £33.72£46.76£55.67






Table 2—Agency Quarterly Performance
Quarter 1Mar-Jun 2003Quarter 2Jul-Sept2003Quarter 3Oct-Dec 2003Quarter 4Jan-Mar 2004QuarterJun 2004Quarter 2Jul-Sept 2004Scheme toSept 2004
Applications received73,58278,98285,30683,65283,09473,534478,150
Applications cleared 2 of which:12,64838,58349,45351,87645,09740,465 2 238,122
Maintenance Calculations 6,67123,85729,67231,22925,65723,526 2 140,612
Closures 3 5,97714,72619,78120,64719,44016,939 97,510
First payments made through the Agency 461 5,16411,47314,01714,97415,098 61,187
First Child Maintenance Premium payments made 4 77 3,314 6,173 7,484 8,070 8,055 33,173






Table 3—Agency Monthly Performance
July2004August2004Sept2004Quarter 2Jul-Sept 2004
Applications received22,86027,30023,37473,534
Applications cleared 2 13,30813,86213,25740,465 2
Of which:7,6548,2787,44923,526 2
Maintenance Calculations Closures 3 5,6545,5845,80816,939 2
First payments made through the Agency5,0715,5284,49915,098
First Child Maintenance Premium payments made 4 2,5412,8572,6578,055

Notes:

1. Average weekly child support maintenance payments to parents with care are shown in the table. Figures are for September 2004 only and are calculated as the total amount received and allocated divided by the number of cases.

2. Figures from Quarter 4 2003–04 onwards and scheme to date figures include clerical cases, new scheme cases unable to be progressed on the new system. Quarter 2 figures also incorporate some adjustments to take account of a reconciliation of clerical cases. The clerical case position is as follows:
Scheme to June 2004Scheme to September 2004
Applications cleared1,3452,130
Maintenance calculations1,1341,937
Closures211193

3. Applications close for a variety of reasons. The main reasons are that the parent with care withdraws the application, perhaps due to reconciliation, or having agreed private arrangements with the non-resident parent.
 
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4. Figures for child maintenance premium payments include an estimate of the number of parents who receive the premium by way of a disregard to their income support/income-based jobseekers allowance.

5. A proportion of cases that have a maintenance calculation in place may already be receiving payment directly, but will not be reflected in the figures shown above.

Cold Weather Payments Scheme

The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Work and Pensions (Mr. Chris Pond): I am pleased to announce that, following advice from the Meteorological Office, the annual review of the cold weather payments scheme has now been completed. Amending regulations were laid on 11 October and will come into force on 1 November, in time for the beginning of the winter period.
 
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One of the weather stations used in the scheme last winter, Ringway, is closing and one new weather station is being introduced at Woodford to provide data for the scheme. In addition to changing 12 weather station linkages to more representative links, 12 postcode to weather station linkages have been changed on the advice of the Meteorological Office following representations made by hon. Members. An error from last year's scheme affecting one postcode has been corrected.

I have written to each of the hon. Members affected by these changes.

In order to maintain the policy intention of making cold weather payments to vulnerable groups, people in receipt of income support or income based jobseekers allowance who are also receiving the disability element of child tax credit have been added to the list of eligible customers.

Cold weather payments are separate from, and in addition to, winter fuel payments that are paid to eligible people from age 60.