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Remploy

Mr. Byers: To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions when approval was given for the Chief Operating Officer of Remploy to take on additional or external commitments as (a) a member of the Competition Commission’s Reporting Panel, (b) a member of the Foster Review of further education and (c) a company secretary of Hill Executive Action Ltd.; and who has responsibility for approving such commitments. [80392]

Mrs. McGuire: During 2005 approval was given by Remploy for the Chief Operating Officer to be a member of the Competition Commission’s Reporting Panel and a member of the Foster Review of further education. The Chief Operating Officer’s commitments as Company Secretary of Hill Executive do not have any impact on her role as Chief Operating Officer and, as such, do not require approval by Remploy.

Approval for additional or external commitments must be given by either the Chairman or the Chief Executive of Remploy.


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Shrewsbury Senior Citizens Forum

Daniel Kawczynski: To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions if he will give a Government grant to help Shrewsbury Senior Citizens Forum run their association. [74332]

James Purnell: Senior citizens’ forums are independent of Government and responsible for financing themselves as such we have no plans to offer a Government grant to Shrewsbury Senior Citizens’ Forum.

Sure Start Maternity Grant

Jeff Ennis: To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions how many women in (a) Barnsley and (b) Doncaster have received the Sure Start maternity grant since 2001. [88383]

Mr. Plaskitt: The information is not available in the format requested. Such information as is available is in the following tables.

Sure Start Maternity Grants for South East Yorkshire Social Fund District
Number of awards

2001-02

2,360

2002-03

2,690

2003-04 to 30 April

180


Sure Start Maternity Grants for area covered by Barnsley and Rotherham Jobcentre Plus District
Number of awards

2003-04 from 1 May

2,220

2004-05

2,320

2005-06

2,250


Sure Start Maternity Grants for area covered by Barnsley and Rotherham Jobcentre Plus District and Sheffield Jobcentre Plus District
Number of awards

2004-05

4,930

2005-06

4,780

2006-07 to 30 June

1,200


Sure Start Maternity Grants for area covered by the interim Doncaster District
Number of awards

2003-04 1 to 31 May

130



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Sure Start Maternity Grants for area covered by Doncaster Jobcentre Plus District
Number of awards

2003-04 from 1 June

1,550

2004-05

1,760

2005-06

1,770

2006-07 to 30 June

450

Notes:
1. Data are only available by Jobcentre Plus District, and, before Jobcentre Plus Districts were used for the administration of the social fund, by social fund district.
2. Barnsley and Doncaster both used to be part of South East Yorkshire Social Fund District. In May 2003, Barnsley became part of the new Barnsley and Rotherham Jobcentre Plus District and Doncaster became part of the interim Doncaster District. In June 2003, the Doncaster Jobcentre Plus District was formed by removing the Isle of Axholme from the interim Doncaster District. Although Barnsley and Rotherham Jobcentre Plus District and Doncaster Jobcentre Plus District merged on 1 April 2005, they continued as separate districts for Social Fund purposes.
3. In April 2006, Barnsley and Rotherham Jobcentre Plus District was merged with Sheffield Jobcentre Plus District to form Yorkshire and Humberside Social Fund, S. Yorkshire District. The third table allows comparison between data for 2006-07 and earlier years.
4. Different tables thus refer to different areas and so data in one table are not comparable with data in another.
5. Figures are for all awards, irrespective of whether the award was made to the mother or her partner.
6. Some women will have received more than one Sure Start Maternity Grant since 2001-02.
7. Figures have been rounded to the nearest 10.
Source:
DWP Social Fund Policy, Budget and Management Information System

Unemployment

Mr. Kemp: To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions how many and what percentage of people in the (a) Houghton and Washington East constituency and (b) Sunderland city council area were unemployed in each year since 1997; and what estimate he has made of change in the total amount paid in benefits due to the change in employment levels over the period. [87370]

Mr. Plaskitt: The information is not available in the format requested. Information on the number of people in receipt of jobseeker’s allowance in the Houghton and Washington East constituency and Sunderland city council area is in the table, together with the proportion of the working-age population for the local authority; no proportion of population is available for constituencies.

JSA claimants in Houghton and Washington East parliamentary constituency and Sunderland local authority area: June 1997 to June 2006
As at June each year Houghton and Washington East PC Sunderland LA claimants Sunderland LA percentage population

1997

2,603

10,777

6.1

1998

2,254

9,488

5.4

1999

2,475

9,532

5.5

2000

2,180

8,695

5.0

2001

2,056

7,611

4.4

2002

1,823

6,891

4.0

2003

1,667

6,250

3.5

2004

1,300

5,128

2.9

2005

1,256

5,278

3.0

2006

1,474

6,048

3.4

Notes:
1. Jobseeker’s Allowance figures are un-rounded and percentages rounded to one decimal place.
2. Jobseeker’s Allowance figures are not seasonally adjusted.
Source:
Count of unemployment-related benefits, Jobcentre Plus computer systems (including clerically held cases). ONS Mid-year population estimates.

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The change in expenditure for jobseeker’s allowance in Great Britain between 1996-97 and 2005-06 is in the following table.

Jobseeker’s allowance expenditure in Great Britain (real terms 2006-07 prices )
£ million
1996-97 (out-turn) 2005-06 (estimated outturn)

Jobseeker’s Allowance (contributory)

421

500

Jobseeker’s Allowance (income based)

2,320

1,844


Veterans (Incapacity Benefit)

Mr. Harper: To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions what assessment he has made of the number of veterans on incapacity benefit due to (a) mental health conditions and (b) physical conditions. [86996]

Mrs. McGuire: The information is not available. No record is kept on the incapacity benefit system of a claimant's employer or former employer.

Volunteers

John Hemming: To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions if the Government will change the benefits rules to allow volunteers on benefits to be paid the cost of lunch. [85432]

Mr. Plaskitt: When considering entitlement to means-tested benefits all income should be taken into account. To not do so would set an inappropriate precedent and represent unequal treatment within the income rules. If an organisation provides a lunch to a volunteer, benefit entitlement is not affected. However, we are aware of and listening to the concerns that have been raised. The Department is looking at this issue as part of a wider examination of the way the benefit system works.

Warm Front

Mr. Laws: To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions what discussions he has had with the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs in respect of the warm front scheme; and whether the Department passes information to the warm front team regarding individuals' benefit entitlements. [89048]

James Purnell: The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) is committed to working with others to reduce fuel poverty, particularly among vulnerable groups such as pensioners. This includes working with other Government Departments, for example Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) and with the Warm Front scheme manager.

Since June 2005, The Pension Service has been co-operating with the Eaga partnership, the largest administrator of energy efficiency schemes in the UK and the provider of the Warm Front Scheme, on behalf of DEFRA.


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Pensioners who contact Eaga for help under the Warm Front Scheme but who are not receiving a benefit that would enable them to qualify for help, for example pension credit, are offered a comprehensive benefit entitlement check.

Where Eaga identifies potential entitlement to pension credit, the pensioner's details are passed, with the pensioner's consent, to The Pension Service. The pensioner is then contacted by The Pension Service and where entitlement to pension credit is confirmed, benefit is put into payment. The Pension Service informs Eaga of this and Eaga are able to implement the help available under the Warm Front Scheme.

As well as contributing in a practical way to the attack on fuel poverty in pensioner households and simplifying matters for pensioners, the partnership between The Pension Service and Eaga supports the development of options for delivering more integrated, flexible and efficient services to pensioners.

The initiative is well in accord with DWP's Link-Age programme which exists to improve access for older people to information about the services available and the help provided.

Way Forward Programme

Anne Main: To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions what the timetable is for the roll out of the Way Forward programme in delivery of benefits to cancer patients. [86716]

Mrs. McGuire: The Government believe that good benefit advice should be available to everyone whatever their disability to enable them to make informed decisions about possible entitlement to benefit. The Department goes to great lengths to ensure that people are aware of the benefits that are available and how to claim them. While we have no plans to roll out a programme of benefit delivery specifically for cancer patients, we and the Department of Health are working closely with organisations such as Macmillan Cancer Support to improve the way benefit advice is delivered to all patients.

Welfare Reform Bill

Mrs. Spelman: To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions what new obligations the Welfare Reform Bill will place on local authorities; and whether they will be compensated under the Department for Communities and Local Government's New Burdens principle. [86842]

Mr. Plaskitt: The overall reform strategy for housing benefit continues to focus on streamlining policy rules and working with local authorities to improve local authority administration of housing and council tax benefit. We do not believe that the measures included in the Welfare Reform Bill present any significant additional obligations or burdens on local authorities.


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Winter Fuel Allowance

Mr. Kemp: To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions how many and what percentage of people in the (a) Houghton and Washington East constituency and (b) Sunderland City Council area have received the winter allowance for pensioners in each year since it was introduced. [87368]

James Purnell: Information that is available in is the following tables. Information relating to the 1997-99 winters is not available.

It is not possible to provide the percentage of pensioners in the Houghton and Washington East constituency who have received the Winter Fuel Payment because the information is not available by parliamentary constituency.

Houghton and Washington East constituency
Number of payments made

1999-2000

14,270

2000-01

16,130

2001-02

16,230

2002-03

16,430

2003-04

16,640

2004-05

16,310

2005-06

16,310


Sunderland local authority
Number of payments made Percentage of people 60 years or over

1999-2000

49,000

83.9

2000-01

54,580

91.8

2001-02

54,500

93.7

2002-03

54,600

94.2

2003-04

54,810

93.2

2004-05

53,340

90.2

2005-06

53,330

90.2

Notes:
1. Figures are rounded to the nearest 10.
2. Population figures are mid year estimates of people aged 60 plus and are not available by Parliamentary Constituency.
3. Figures for 2005-2006 refer only the main payment run so they do not include the late payment run figures. The final figures will be available shortly and placed in the Library.

Sarah Teather: To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions how many pensioners claimed winter fuel allowance in each London borough in the last 12 months. [87502]

James Purnell: The number of people aged 60 or over who received a winter fuel payment in each London borough for winter 2005-06 is provided as follows:


25 July 2006 : Column 1594W
London GOR Number of individuals receiving a winter fuel payment in winter 2005-06

Inner London—West

Camden

25,610

City of London

1,110

Hammersmith and Fulham

19,560

Kensington and Chelsea

19,130

Wandsworth

33,760

Westminster

25,910

Inner London—East

Hackney

21,260

Haringey

26,820

Islington

21,910

Lambeth

29,190

Lewisham

32,590

Newham

25,140

Southwark

27,850

Tower Hamlets

20,590

Outer London—East and North East

Barking and Dagenham

24,840

Bexley

43,890

Enfield

45,650

Greenwich

31,750

Havering

49,030

Redbridge

39,590

Waltham Forest

31,120

Outer London—South

Bromley

62,170

Croydon

53,180

Kingston upon Thames

23,720

Merton

27,790

Sutton

32,520

Outer London—West and North West

Barnet

53,450

Brent

36,900

Ealing

42,120

Harrow

37,680

Hillingdon

41,690

Hounslow

31,200

Richmond upon Thames

29,420

Notes:
1. Figures are rounded to the nearest 10.
2. Local Authorities are assigned by matching postcodes against the relevant ONS postcode directory.
3. These figures refer only to the main payment run so they do not include the late payment run figures. Final figures will be available shortly and placed in the Library.
Source:
Information Directorate, 100 per cent. Sample.

Mr. Waterson: To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions if he will estimate the cost of extending the Winter Fuel Payment Scheme to disabled people under 60 years. [87678]

James Purnell: The estimated annual cost of extending the winter fuel payment to disabled people aged below 60 years who are in receipt of either the middle or higher rate care component or the higher rate mobility component of disability living allowance is £280 million for 2005-06.


25 July 2006 : Column 1595W

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