In Today's Papers

Wednesday 18 February 2004

Posted: 18 February 2004 | Subscribe Online


By Amy Taylor, Natasha Salari, Clare Jerrom and Alex Dobson

Blair bid to avoid immigrant rush

Measures to tighten up eligibility for welfare benefits and control the possible influx of workers from Eastern Europe when 10 new member states join the EU in May were being hastily put together by ministers last night.

Ministers were called to No 10 midway through the Commons half-term recess to finalise the measures. Downing Street refused to discuss the details of the plans.

Source:- The Daily Telegraph Wednesday 18 February page 2

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Soham case leads to police data review

New guidelines on the storage and use of information on suspects for the police is due to be launched in the wake of the Soham case.

Ian Huntley, who murdered schoolgirls Jessica Chapman and Holly Wells, got a job as a school caretaker after police failed to pass on details of sexual allegations against him.

The new measures are likely to include a national database of allegations and intelligence on reported crimes.

Source:- The Daily Telegraph Wednesday 18 February page 11

Poor see objective move out of reach

Deprived areas that currently qualify for lucrative EU funding will no longer do so after the accession of 10 new member states to the European Union.

The Objective One funding is given to areas with gross domestic product per head below 75 per cent of the EU's average.

West Wales and Merseyside currently receive the funding but neither has seen a vast improvement in their economies. Provisional figures published today indicate that both areas would still qualify for the next round of grants for 2007-13 if it wasn't for the new states joining.

Source:- Financial Times Wednesday 18 February page 5

Conservatives pay mothers to stay at home with children

Mothers who choose to stay at home to look after their children would be paid by the state to do so under plans being drafted by the Conservative party.

The Tories are determined to provide parents with a choice over how to combine work and family life. Under the plans, a “child home care allowance” would be paid to all parents of children under the age of three who decide not to place them with a nursery or childminder.

Source:- The Independent Wednesday 18 February page 1

Full steam ahead

He has been labelled a ‘shameless authoritarian’, but David Blunkett tells Society Guardian why he is determined not to let liberal critics stand in his way of tackling the threat of terrorism.

Source:- Society Guardian Wednesday 18 February page 2 

Model set for makeover

Education secretary Charles Clarke and children’s minister Margaret Hodge are expected to bring a children’s bill before parliament in the first week of March.

The bill will probably start in the House of Lords.

Source:- Society Guardian Wednesday 18 February page 4

Hungry for change

At the BBC, Niall Dickson reported for many years on health policy in the making. But now, he says it’s time to make some himself at the King’s Fund

Source:- Society Guardian Wednesday 18 February page 6

Trading Places

An apprenticeship scheme with a social landlord is offering residents a chance to gain marketable skills.

Source:- Society Guardian Wednesday 18 February page 7

Peace process

Manchester has just opened the doors to England’s first unit for housing ‘neighbours from hell’.

Source:- Society Guardian Wednesday 18 February page 8

Broken promises?

The government is to slash funding to thousands of schemes across the country that benefit young people. Society Guardian investigates whether the move undermines Labour’s commitment to children.

Source:- Society Guardian Wednesday 18 February page 10

Knight Moves

In a world of foundation hospitals and public-private partnerships, can we still assume a clear ethical and managerial distinction between the public and private sectors?

Source:- Society Guardian Wednesday 18 February page 14
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Scottish newspapers

Revealed: plight of children abused by children

Vulnerable children placed in care for their own protection are being abused by their peers, according to an investigation by The Herald.

Young children are being bullied and abused by teenagers they should not be living with because a shortage of foster families and pressure on residential units has forced staff to place “abused” alongside “abusers” in the same home.

Experts say that despite warnings in a government commissioned report in 1997 which revealed that abuse between youngsters is more prevalent than abuse by staff, too little has been done to protect children.

Source:- The Herald Wednesday 18 February

Cash call to fund care for elderly

Ministers have been urged to provide special funding to pay for the care of older people in Edinburgh by the city’s council chiefs.
Council leader Donald Anderson and Brian Cavanagh, chairperson of  Lothian NHS, have called on health minister Malcolm Chisholm to agree higher payment rates for Edinburgh because the number of care homes is shrinking.

They warn that the capital’s special economic circumstances will cause a backlog of patients waiting to be discharged from hospital unless more money is provided.

Source:- The Scotsman Wednesday 18 February

Nursery nurse strike continues

Councils have branded a key union demand in the pay negotiations for nursery nurses as non-negotiable, raising the prospect of further strikes.

Public sector union Unison want a nationally agreed wage settlement to put all nursery nurses on the same pay scale. But Cosla, the umbrella group for councils, wants authorities to make local agreements.

Source:- The Scotsman Wednesday 18 February

Welsh newspapers

Charged

A man appeared in court yesterday charged with trying to abduct a two-year-old girl in Cardiff’s city centre.

The man is alleged to have attempted to abduct the child when her mother lost sight of her daughter during a shopping trip. The child resisted and her mother intervened and prevented the alleged abduction.

A second man from the Cardiff area, who was also questioned by police over the incident, has been released without charge.

Source:- South Wales Echo Tuesday 17 February pages 1-2

We’re at breaking point’

Wales’ largest accident and emergency unit is at breaking point, with patients forced to wait on trolleys in makeshift treatment areas, according to a senior nurse.

Margaret Abouharb, the Royal College of Nursing lead steward at Cardiff and Vale NHS Trust, said that pressure on beds at the University Hospital of Wales was now at critical levels.

The underlying problem is the lack of care available in the community, which prevents patients being discharged when they are ready to leave hospital, she added.

Source:- Western Mail Wednesday 18 February page 1

Disabled badgered for £2

Proposals to charge £2 for disabled parking badges have been branded "mean and wasteful".

Liberal democrat MP for Montgomeryshire Lembit Opik said that plans from Powys Council to charge 8,000 holders of disabled Blue Badges defied logic. He said that the proposal would cost more to administer than could be recouped.

Powys Council claimed the move was not intended to make money, but was a measure prompted by Welsh assembly guidelines to ensure social services charging was based on ability to pay.

Source:- Western Mail Wednesday 18 February page 1

 

 



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