Showing posts with label Robert Halfon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robert Halfon. Show all posts

Friday, August 3, 2012

10 Concrete Examples: How a Conservative-led Government is investing in Harlow


When I am out and about in Harlow, lots of people ask me the question: What has a Conservative-led Government done for us? 

This is a very fair question. 

Of course there are some national policies - such as keeping fuel prices down, and lower taxes for lower earners. But I wanted to look specifically at Harlow, to see how our town has benefited from Government initiatives. The truth is that despite the difficult economic climate, Harlow is becoming a magnet for Public investment. 

Since 2010, the Conservative-led Government has now announced more than £49 million extra of spending on Harlow’s skills, infrastructure, scientific excellence, business support, and our town's local NHS. No wonder David Cameron has even cited Harlow in Parliament, saying that "the only way is Essex!”

My full report follows below.

Key Facts:
      £49 million of extra taxpayer investment into Harlow, since 2010.
      £500 million investment from the private sector for the MedTech campus.
      Minimum of 5,000 extra jobs expected from the Enterprise Zone.
      Minimum of 4,000 extra jobs from the MedTech campus.
      78% rise in Harlow apprenticeships.
      600 opportunities for Harlow young people to gain high-tech medical vocational skills.

Prime Minister David Cameron has said: “I congratulate Harlow on the fantastic achievement that they have. That’s why we are backing it. The Government wants to play its part, not least by the Enterprise Zone in West Essex, thats covering Harlow, and we hope it will create 5,000 new jobs.”


SKILLS
1) A new University Technical College.
Investment: upto £10 million pounds.
            Timescale: opening September 2014.
           
A new academy for 14 to 19-year-olds in Harlow. 600 local children will have the opportunity to study high-tech vocational qualifications in medicine and biotech, as well as Maths and English A-levels. The scheme was first spearheaded by me. It is also backed by Harlow College and Anglia Ruskin University, as well as top industry sponsors including Pearson UK, Raytheon, GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), and global engineering giant, Johnson Controls.[1]

Principal of Harlow College, Colin Hindmarch, said: “I'm delighted that a University Technical College will now open in Harlow. It was thanks especially to two years of solid hard work from Robert Halfon MP, who has campaigned publicly and behind the scenes. From the beginning, Rob has worked tirelessly to make this happen. He is passionate about apprenticeships - and even employs a Harlow College apprentice in his office.”


2) 78% rise in Harlow Apprenticeships.
Investment: £Unknown.
Timescale: 2010 - 2012.

New figures show that Harlow saw a 78% increase in the number of people starting an apprenticeship last year - up from 450 to 800. This is because funding for new apprenticeships is rocketing, with record-breaking numbers of new apprentices across the country. On top of this, the Government has announced that from 2012:

      Businesses and training providers from Harlow can bid for a share of £6 million from the Higher Apprenticeship Fund. This will support the development of thousands of new Higher Apprenticeships in sectors including aerospace, energy and renewable technologies.

      Small and medium-sized businesses from Harlow without any young apprentices, who hire one, are eligible for a £1,500 bonus, with up to 40,000 payments available.

      Harlow businesses can bid for a share of a £250 million fund to boost skills in their workplace, giving employers rather than training providers direct access to funding for training.

     I also employ a Harlow College apprentice in his office.[2]

Apprentice Minister John Hayes MP said: “Robert Halfon is a great champion of apprenticeships. He has even taken on an apprentice himself - one of the first MPs ever to do so.”


3) Pupil Premium for Harlow schools.
Investment: £1 million.
Timescale: 2010 - 2012.

The Conservative Education Secretary - Michael Gove - has brought in a new kind of funding to help the poorest pupils, worth an extra £1 million to Harlow schools this year. Local schools such as Burnt Mill have used the cash to help invest in literacy and numeracy - boosting their GCSE results to some of the highest they have yet achieved.[3] These payments are excellent news with the money going to help the most vulnerable children in Harlow.


INFRASTRUCTURE
4) £3.5 million to upgrade Edinburgh Way.
Investment: £3.5 million.
Timescale: 2013.

Harlow’s congested road network has been awarded a £3.5 million grant from the Government, following the town’s bid to become one of the UK’s flagship Enterprise Zones. The Conservative-led Government has granted Harlow the money to upgrade the A414 along Edinburgh Way and provide new access routes to the two Enterprise Zone sites in London Road and Templefields. [4]


5) £500,000 study into new M11 junction.
Investment: £500,000.
Timescale: 2011 - 2012.

Essex County Council have awarded Harlow £500,000 to plan a new M11 junction (7a). Having campaigned for an extra M11 junction for over six years, since the election I have worked with Essex Council to secure a major investment into planning this. A detailed schematic of the junction will soon be worked up, so that we can bid to the Department for Transport for the cash to build it. Essex Council have also said that a new junction on the M11 is now their "number one priority in Essex", following my campaign.

Finally, I have successfully pushed for a Commons debate on the M11 junction in order to get this higher up the Government’s agenda. While Harlow won't get a new junction for many years, the project will soon be “shovel-ready” and we can start bidding to the Government for money.[5]

Transport Minister Norman Baker MP said: “I congratulate Robert Halfon on securing the debate on traffic and the road network in Harlow, and on the strong presentation of his case. Although only recently elected to the House, he has already asked questions about traffic and road issues in Harlow, and I was pleased to respond to his first debate on a subject that is clearly of great importance to him and his constituents.”


BUSINESS AND JOBS
6) Enterprise Zone in medical technology.
Investment: will create a minimum of 5,000 jobs. Super-fast broadband. Tax-breaks.
Timescale: opening April 2013.

West Essex has been named as a new “Enterprise Zone” by the Government, after a two-year campaign from me to make this happen. In two large industrial estate in Harlow, employers could benefit from a 100% business rate discount, worth up to £275,000 over a five year period, as well as superfast broadband and simpler planning rules. All business rates growth within the zone, for at least 25 years, will be retained by the local authorities to support their economic priorities.[6]


SCIENTIFIC INNOVATION
7) New science park at the Olympic Laboratory.
Investment: £10 million.
Timescale: opening September 2012.

In the last week, the Conservative-led Government have just announced a £10 million investment in Harlow: a brand new scientific centre focusing on phenome/biotech. This is fantastic news. The site will be at the GSK plant and will replace the laboratories there currently working on drugs testing for the 2012 Olympics. This is a huge boost for scientific research in our town, and will cement our place as a scientific corridor in the East of England.[7]


8) Med-Tech Campus for Harlow.
Investment: £500 million, plus Government planning support.
Timescale: 2012 onwards.

A new medical technology campus with a centre in Harlow is expected to create 12,500 jobs in Essex, and generate £1.2 billion for Britain. Backed strongly by the Government, the Anglia Ruskin MedTech Campus will provide one of the world's largest health innovation spaces for companies of all sizes. 120 acres of land has already been identified to accommodate the 1.7 million square feet of floor space, across the county. 

This fits perfectly with the Enterprise Zone, the new University Technical College, the extra investment in Harlow’s local NHS, and with the new science park on the site of the Olympic Laboratories.[8]


NHS AND HEALTH



9) £24 million extra for Harlow’s local NHS.
Investment: £24 million.
Timescale: 2010 - 2012.

The Government's NHS reforms and extra investment have brought in an extra £24 million so far into our local health service. This cash has helped Princess Alexandra Hospital to protect their A&E department. In fact, PAH have spent an extra £850,000 hiring new staff this year, including in A&E and emergency care. They have hired three extra consultants, and two more are on the way. PAH have also hired more nurses this year; and vacancies are being filled all the time.

Ultimately, this has helped Princess Alexandra to reduce waiting times. More than 93 per cent of Harlow patients are now seen faster than four hours, this year. Nationally, there are now 100,000 more patients treated every month. Britain now has 4,000 extra doctors and 4,000 fewer managers; more clinical staff; and the number of people in mixed-sex wards is down by 94 per cent. The number of people on long-term waiting lists has also hit record lows. 

In addition, there is also a new Cancer Drugs Fund of £200 million a year to help Harlow cancer patients get greater access to cancer drugs that their doctors recommend for them.[9]


10) New NHS renal unit for Harlow.
Investment: Confidential. Procurement still ongoing.
Timescale: opening January 2013.

Rob with PAH Volunteer
On top of the extra £24 million already allocated for protecting our local NHS, Harlow patients who use dialysis will benefit from a new renal unit. This has been announced by the Midlands and East Specialised Commissioning Group (SCG) following a formal tendering process. The two new units should be available for use by Harlow patients from January 2013. This is excellent news for people who have to travel three times a week for their dialysis and who can spend many hours travelling and waiting for hospital transport. To have services on their doorstep will be of great benefit to the patients and their families.[10]





by Robert Halfon MP - Working Hard for Harlow.

Friday, July 13, 2012

Motion in Parliament: Supporting the Brethren Church


Yesterday, after being contacted by parishoners of the Brethren church from Harlow, I spoke up for them in Parliament. (VIDEO HERE.)

Today, I have also tabled a supportive Parliamentary motion, which other MPs can sign. This will be presented formally to the Charities Commission and the Government.

The motion reads:

"That this House notes the decision of the Charity Commission to revoke the charitable status of a trust that is part of the Brethren Christian Church, which does a lot of good work for charity and community groups; believes that this is an extremely important test case because it has widespread implications for all Christian charitable trusts; and therefore calls on the Government and all parliamentarians to express their belief to the Charities Commission that Christian groups who are serving the community have the right to charitable status and should not be subject to politically correct bias."

by Robert Halfon MP - Working Hard for Harlow.

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

MOTOR TRANSPORT magazine is backing my push for cheaper fuel


Regular readers will know that I have been campaigning - with PetrolPromise.com, and the FairFuelUK group - for cheaper petrol and diesel. 

We've had success in persuading the Government not to increase fuel duty - TWICE in 2011, and again  in 2012. 

The next step is urging the Office of Fair Trading to do something about pockets of uncompetitiveness in the UK oil market. Harlow is a classic example of this problem. For example, why are petrol and diesel around 5p more expensive in Harlow, compared with other nearby towns? There is simply no excuse for it. 

Please sign the PetrolPromise.com petition - which is calling for an O.F.T. enquiry into this very issue. As we've shown time and time again, the Government *does* listen to people if we keep the energy and the pressure up.
by Robert Halfon MP - Working Hard for Harlow.

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Victory on 3p Fuel Rise in August


Today the Government announced a freeze in Fuel Duty for the rest of this year.

You can read my question below, or watch it with the video above.

Robert Halfon (Harlow): Does my Rt Hon. Friend agree that motorists across the country will welcome the cut in fuel tax announced for August and that it will greatly improve the performance of the economy? Does this not show that the Government is on the side of hard pressed working people? 

Chief Secretary to the Treasury (Danny Alexander): Well I agree entirely with my Hon. friend. I met with representatives of the FairFuelUK campaign yesterday. We have a great deal of sympathy with their argument, as well as the arguments made by families across this country including in remote and rural areas. I think it's worth saying, thanks to the decisions of this Coalition Government has made, not only is Fuel Tax 10p a litre lower then Labour's plans, Council Tax is lower, Income Tax is lower. In the Budget in March we saw the largest ever increase in the Income Tax personal allowance. All of which puts money back in the pockets of hard pressed families.

Please read my previous blog post on this issue here.

by Robert Halfon MP - Working Hard for Harlow.

Thursday, June 21, 2012

VIDEO: the EU should stop encouraging animal torture



Today I asked a question in Parliament (see the video above) urging the UK Government to stand up to the bureaucrats in Brussels, and keep long-standing British protections for stray cats and dogs.

As outrageous as it may seem, an obscure EU directive is actually encouraging animal torture, by trying to scrap these protections - even though a stray cat or dog could just be a lost family pet, who has gone missing. The scandal was brought to my attention by Harlow constituent Louise Jackson, on twitter - during the recent England football match.

I have already contacted Ministers about this formally, on her behalf, but was pleased to receive assurances today in the House of Commons from Cabinet Minister Sir George Young that Britain won't stand for any of this EU nonsense. This kind of thing has no place in a civilised society.

by Robert Halfon MP - Working Hard for Harlow.

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

One million children are denied access to their grandparents. We need change.

Yesterday, I was honoured to speak to the Annual General Meeting of the Grandparents Association - a national charity based in Harlow.

You can see my speech below:

Good morning. I’d like to thank Lynn and Belinda for inviting me, and also to thank Louise in the Harlow Office who works incredibly hard behind the scenes, with the Grandparents Association staff, to make these events happen.

Last December I joined you outside Number 10 Downing Street, to hand in a petition with over 7,000 names, calling for children to have a right to “letterbox” access, with their grandparents.

This was a very small, but symbolic thing - especially in the run-up to Christmas - for the more than 14 million grandparents in the UK.

Sadly, across Britain today, up to ONE MILLION children are denied access to their grandparents.

I have only two brief points to make:

First, as you will have guessed, I am on your side and have been working to support the Grandparents Association in Parliament.

Second, the work of the Association is incredibly important, because it is helping to creating a society that strengthens and protects the family. I've tried to make a song and dance about your campaigns, especially the “letterbox” campaign at Christmas. I’ve done this with speeches in Parliament about the Grandparents Association last year, as well as raising the matter in Parliamentary motions, and questions to Ministers. As a backbench MP, you can't force the Government to do something. But you can campaign and try to get problems like this on the Government's radar.


I was delighted to discover that the Grandparents Association was based in Harlow - especially because it is an active charity, paid for by its members and grassroots fundraising.

And it is starting to get results. Government Ministers are now looking at these issues - for example in last year’s Family Justice Review, there was some movement towards more equal access rights for both parents. This is a step forward. Because the logic of that policy suggests that those family rights should be extended to grandparents as well.

So why does this matter?

I’ve tried to be active, not just because the Grandparents Association has its headquarters in Harlow, but also because it is about strengthening the family.

When you look at the reports from the Centre for Social Justice, which was founded by Iain Duncan-Smith who is now the Welfare and Pensions Secretary, all the evidence says that families are the most powerful defence that we have against poverty, and social breakdown.

Grandparents are essential to that - and we forget them too often.

This is important, because every time a family falls apart the costs are immense.

The Families Matter Institute has published academic research, that puts the direct cost to the taxpayer of social breakdown at around £288 million pounds a week.

That is £11 every week, for every single UK taxpayer in the country. More than we spend on our Police service, and our courts and justice system combined.

Sadly, the picture is actually much worse than that. In addition to direct measurable costs, there also are the hidden costs of family breakdown, including Legal Aid, the running costs of the Child Support Agency and child psychology services. That’s before we even consider the long-term emotional impact on the children involved - costs that cannot easily be measured.

So anything - ANYTHING - that Grandparents can do to reduce some of that harm - is good, not just for their grandchildren but also for the country and the taxpayer.

A survey by the Mothers At Work charity found that six out of ten families use grandparents as child carers regularly through the year. The Grandparents Association estimate the value of this informal service at around £4 billion pounds a year. This is why access matters. Twenty percent of the grandparents in the same survey said there had been a marriage breakdown in their family, and as a result they were refused access to their grandchildren.

The evidence says that grandparents are not just a force for good - they are essential to family life. That is why the Government's policies to strengthen the family must include the older generations as well.

We can make all the rational arguments. But ultimately - and as the Government are now starting to recognise in the Family Justice Review - this is about the rights of children: to know who their family are, and to be able to spend time with them, or at the very least to get a card from them at Christmas.

It is a simple request.

I am proud to say, that the group which shouts the loudest for these children, is the Grandparents Association in Harlow. I will continue to do everything that I can to support you.



by Robert Halfon MP - Working Hard for Harlow.

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Weekly newsletter - Fighting for Rachel's Law

HIGHLIGHTS THIS WEEK

Robert Halfon enters into the spirit
of the St Clare Hospice Midnight Walk
Campaigning for Rachel's Law: 
This week I spoke in the House of Commons on the need for Rachel’s Law – I was also able to speak about the issue on BBC Essex. The case has arisen following the cirvcumstances of Harlow mother Annette Courtney who has met with myself and Nick Herbert MP.

She is struggling with a difficult situation and is now in the process of having to sell her home to enable her daughter, Rachel, to live independently after a fruitless two-and-a-half year search for rented accommodation where Rachel could live, Rachel is 20 and has cerebral palsy and high functioning autism. For more on the issue click here

We need free school meals at Further Education colleges: This week I urged the Government to extend free school meals to FE colleagues – a loophole in the system that has been damaging the life-chances of young people at Harlow College and elsewhere for too long. To read more on this issue click here


Harlow Business Exhibition: I attended the Harlow Business Exhiition and met with local entrepreneurs and business people. Special thanks should go to exhibition co-director Brenda Bailey of Harlow-based Bailey Book-keeping Services and to all the sponsors ‘ exhibitors and visitors. The event organisers, Sowerby Group, really put on a great show. For more click here

St Clare Hospice Midnight Walk: On Saturday evening I went along to the St Clare Hospice Midnight Walk which set off from the Water Gardens, Harlow. Some 1,000 people took part, raising over £70,000 at least for the charity. The walk raises enough money to pay for 18 days of hospice care. It is an incredible event – a great tribute to both St Clare and local residents.

Harlow College arts awards:I was invited by Harlow College to present awards to some very talented art students. There was some fantastic art, fashion, photography and graphics on display.

Google Street View and the privatised surveillance society: The announcement by the Information Commissioner for an investigation into the alleged hovering up of Wi-Fi and email addresses by Google Street View is to be welcomed. The fact is that the Information Commissioner has been asleep at the wheel. It has taken 18 months for proper action to be taken, and even now it's only thanks to recent revelations as reported in newspapers that the ICO has finally woken up and decided to act.

Harlow Open Art Exhibition: I had a great evening at the Gibberd Gallery for the Open Art exhibition showcasing local Harlow artists. There were paintingsof all kinds - and of all shapes and sizes.
The exhibition began seven years ago in The Gibberd. This year saw a record number of participating artists – 65 - same age as the Harlow new town.

On display were 96 works selected from 140, chosen by judges, including David Mitchinson from the Henry Moore Foundation. I was asked to make a short speech and announce the artists whose work had been commended by the judges - as well as the winning painter.


ROBERT'S DIARY - WORKING HARD FOR HARLOW

– Welcomed party from St Albans School for tour at House Commons

- Attended the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Skills and Apprenticeships

– Attended Jack Petchey Foundation awards presentation evening at The Playhouse, Harlow

- Attended Harlow Business Exhibition

-Spoke in parliamentary debate urging Government to extend free school meals to Harlow College

- Met with Greater Anglia Rail. I asked them for the Stansted Express fast train to stop FOUR times an hour at Harlow town station, rather than the current two times an hour.

- Attended Harlow Alternative Education graduation night

- Met with Harlow Neighbourhood Watch to discuss the Government's new crime-fighting measures such as the Police.uk crime-map and new powers for neighbourhoods to tackle anti-social behaviour.

- Met with Elizabeth Palfreman, director of fundraising at St Clare Hospice

- Visited Harlow Occupational Health Service, Templefields, Harlow

- Visited Harlow Cinema

- Met with staff at Edinburgh Way branch of McDonalds

- Attended St Clare Hospice Midnight Walk at Water Gardens, Harlow


Robert Halfon's latest media releases

Nazeing residents enjoy tour of Houses of Parliament: A party from the Nazeing Association for the Elderly and Handicapped were given a tour of Westminster when they were hosted by their MP Robert Halfon… Read more

Victims of anti-social behaviour should not be forced to suffer in silence:Harlow MP Robert Halfon has welcomed new powers to tackle anti-social behaviour which have been announced by Home Secretary Theresa May just weeks after she saw first-hand the aftermath of such incidents on Harlow’s Berecroft estate…
Read more

Harlow MP Robert Halfon congratulates residents and community groups who held events to mark the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee: Harlow MP Robert Halfon has congratulated the town’s residents and community groups who celebrated the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee…
Read more

Harlow MP Robert Halfon urges residents to "fight back" against crime on Police.uk website:After worrying incidents of anti-social behaviour in Great Pumtree, a local coach, and Harlow town centre - all reported in last week's Harlow Star - Harlow MP Robert Halfon MP has urged residents to fight back by coming forward to speak with the police if they are witnesses, and also to hold Essex Police to account online through the new website Police.uk…
Read more

Harlow MP Robert Halfon welcomes Essex County Council’s potholes pledge:Harlow MP Robert Halfon has welcomed today’s announcement from Essex County Council that the authority is to invest an additional £11m to repair the county’s roads...Read more

Halfon vindicated about Google Street View and the privatised surveillance society: Harlow MP, Robert Halfon welcomes today’s announcement by the Information Commissioner for an investigation into the alleged hovering up of Wi-Fi and email addresses by Google StreetView.. Read more



Robert Halfon's latest media coverage
EVERYTHING EPPING FOREST WEBSITE - Nazeing residents enjoy Parliament visit: A party from the Nazeing Association for the Elderly and Handicapped were given a tour of Westminster when they were hosted by their MP Robert Halfon… Read more

EVERYTHING HARLOW WEBSITE - Nazeing residents enjoy Parliament visit: A party from the Nazeing Association for the Elderly and Handicapped were given a tour of Westminster when they were hosted by their MP Robert Halfon…
Read more

BBC NEWS WEBSITE - Plans for new university technical colleges welcomed:There has been a warm welcome to the news the government will create three university technical colleges (UTCs) in eastern England…
Read more


MAIL ONLINE WEBSITE - Privacy watchdog 'too soft' on Google over claims it took information from home computers:The privacy watchdog was last night accused of being ‘caught napping’ over claims that Google deliberately harvested information from home computers… Read more:

HARLOW STAR (31-5-12 edition, p1) - Go-ahead for tech college: Plans to open a high-tech University Technical College in Harlow have been approve by the Government…

HARLOW STAR (31-5-12 edition, p5) - MP opens charity’s recycling superstore: Disposing of unwanted items just got easier with the official opening of a new ‘reusable goods’ superstore in Harlow…

EVERYTHING HARLOW WEBSITE - MP praises community’s jubilee events: Harlow MP Robert Halfon has congratulated the town’s residents and community groups who celebrated the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee…
Read more


METRO WEBSITE - Virgin Media in U-turn over Wi-Fi tube snooping plans: Virgin Media has backtracked over 'Big Brother' snooping plans to monitor London Underground Wi-Fi users' e-mails on tube platforms… Read more

MAIL ONLINE WEBSITE - How Google lied over street spies: Watchdog relaunches inquiry into search engine's data trawl: Google has been accused of misleading Britain’s privacy watchdog over the scandal of personal data stolen from millions of home computers… Read more

EXPRESS AND STAR WEBSITE – Free meals bid for college students: Ministers will discuss offering free meals to the poorest teenagers at sixth-form colleges, Education Minister Nick Gibb has said after coming under pressure to extend the handout beyond schools..Read more

PRESS ASSOCIATION WEBSITE - Free meals bid for college students: Ministers will discuss offering free meals to the poorest teenagers at sixth-form colleges, Education Minister Nick Gibb has said after coming under pressure to extend the handout beyond schools.. Read more