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Lord Hunt of Kings Heath: My Lords, I am glad that the noble Lord has recognised the need for some
central action in the health service. A central purchasing agency making decisions at central government level provides the option for the NHS to enter individual contracts. Part of the role of the NHS Purchasing and Supply Agency is to ensure that alternatives to latex products are made available.
Baroness Pitkeathley: My Lords, will my noble friend ensure that when the alternatives are available they will be offered also to patients' visitors? In cases where people are being barrier nursed, visitors have to put on gloves and aprons.
Lord Hunt of Kings Heath: My Lords, that is a very useful suggestion. It is one of the considerations that local employers should take into account when implementing the guidance that we issue to the NHS and in developing a risk assessment strategy.
Baroness Trumpington: My Lords, can the Minister say what kinds of products contain latex? I always thought it existed in corsets.
Lord Hunt of Kings Heath: My Lords, the noble Baroness will know more about that than I do. Such products include surgical gloves, urological sheaths, and various instruments and products used within the health service.
Baroness Miller of Hendon asked Her Majesty's Government:
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department of Trade and Industry (Lord Sainsbury of Turville): My Lords, Post Office Limited is undertaking a programme of cash machine installation with a view to installing 3,000 machines at post offices by the end of 2002. These machines are being provided as an additional service available at some post offices to enable customers to withdraw money from their bank accounts. Wherever possible, the Post Office seeks to arrange for cash machine transactions at post offices to be free of charge. However, in some locations it would not be financially viable to install a machine without a charge being made.
This programme is separate from arrangements for universal banking services, which will enable all those who wish to do so to continue to be able to collect their benefits in cash at post offices. Decisions relating to cash machines at post offices are a commercial matter for Post Office Limited.
Baroness Miller of Hendon: My Lords, could the consideration of making charges for the use of cash
machines in some post offices have been part of a transaction to sell off a major part of the Post Officea transaction which has recently fallen through? Can the Minister tell the House whether or not there have been recent negotiations to sell off a major part of the Post Office to an overseas buyer? A "yes" or "no" answer will suffice.
Lord Sainsbury of Turville: My Lords, the supplementary question is rather different from the Question on the Order Paper. I have heard of no such suggestion. If one looks at the financing of the rural postal network, not many people would be in the business of buying it.
Baroness Greengross: My Lords, does the Minister agree that some of our poorest citizens live in rural areas and that many of our rural post offices and sub-post offices are disappearing? If you are able to draw out only £10 or £20 at a time, £1.25 in charges is a substantial amount. Elderly and disabled people cannot always get to the nearest supermarket in order to benefit from cash-back schemes.
Lord Sainsbury of Turville: My Lords, I had hoped that I had made the point that this is an additional service. As is common across the whole of the commercial world, where there is a large through-put of people the service is provided free. But where it cannot be justified on that basis, charges are made. In such circumstances, part of the charge will go to the postmaster or postmistress. It is an additional service which can only add to customer facilities. In that sense, it is a commercial decision for the Post Office to take.
Lord Razzall: My Lords, notwithstanding the announcement that he made last year, to a fanfare of musical trumpets, of the subsidy proposals to help rural post offices, does the Minister accept that the deterioration in the rural post office network has continued rapidly since that announcement? Does he further accept that unless the Government's proposals are accelerated there will hardly be a rural postal network left?
Lord Sainsbury of Turville: My Lords, the situation is not as the noble Lord suggests. There has been a slowing down of the closure of rural post offices, but we should not be too optimistic about that because special factors are involved. As to the question of subsidies, which arose from the PRU report, it was always made clear that they were to deal with the transitional arrangements until 2003 when ACT is due to come in.
Earl Ferrers: My Lords, does not the Minister think it slightly unfair that post offices which have a relatively large through-put will not need to charge anything, and yet post offices in the rural areas, which are more necessary but have fewer people to look after, will nevertheless charge? One would have thought that it is those people who should not be charged.
Lord Sainsbury of Turville: My Lords, it is an unfortunate fact of life that in many commercial
transactions where there is a small through-put the charges are higher. This is a commercial facility provided by the Post Office. It is common across the country that where there is a small through-put for cash machines which are provided on, essentially, a convenience basis, charges have to be made. Otherwise, there would be no service at all.
Lord Clarke of Hampstead: My Lords
Lord Livsey of Talgarth: My Lords
The Lord Privy Seal (Lord Williams of Mostyn): My Lords, it is the turn of the government Benches.
Lord Clarke of Hampstead: My Lords, before I ask my question, I should like to place on record my delight that my noble friend has given an unequivocal answer to the suggestion that a part of the Post Office was going to be sold off to a foreign competitor. It was a rumour that was going around last weekend and I am delighted that he has been able to say that no such negotiations were known to him. I am also pleased that we have not yet heard the dreaded word "Consignia".
In view of the repeated assurances from the Government that people will be able to get their benefits paid in cash through the sub-post offices, especially in rural areasit has been repeated many timescan my noble friend assure the House that in no way will people be advised when they go into their rural post offices that these machines are the means of getting their cash?
Lord Sainsbury of Turville: My Lords, I can give that assurance. We remain fully committed to meeting the Prime Minister's clear pledge that those who wish to do so will be able to continue to get their benefits in cash at post offices, in full and without charge.
Lord Swinfen: My Lords, the Post Office operates universal postal charges throughout the whole country. Why can it not do the same with cash machines?
Lord Sainsbury of Turville: My Lords, there is a long tradition of the universal postal service which is written into the latest Post Office Act. That states that a service will be provided across the country under a one-payment system. The provision of cash machines is an additional service which does not have to be provided under the universal postal obligation. It is a commercial transaction which will be operated on a commercial basis.
Lord Livsey of Talgarth: My Lords, is not the imposition of a charge of £1.25 for the use of cash machines a breach of the principle of providing a universal service to all users of the Post Office? This is
bringing market forces to bear and breaking the fundamental principle of the service that the Post Office should provide to rural people.
Lord Sainsbury of Turville: My Lords, the Post Office has a universal service obligation in relation essentially to the mail service. That obligation does not extend to all services. I do not believe that it should. If extra services are provided, they are provided on a commercial basis. That is entirely in keeping with what has gone before.
Baroness Blatch: My Lords, the Minister said that the supplementary question of my noble friend on the Front Bench was irrelevant to her Question. But the viability of the Post Office in the future is very relevant, and that is the point made by my noble friend. Can the Minister confirm unequivocally to the House that on which he has been congratulated by the noble Lord, Lord Clarkethat is, that there have been no negotiations whatever with a foreign companyfor example, a Dutch companyin recent times that have failed?
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