News Bulletin From Greg Hands M.P. #298
News Bulletin From Greg Hands M.P. #298
News Bulletin From Greg Hands M.P. #298
This week Greg Hands M.P. has published his Annual Report.
You can also read the Annual Report online by clicking here.
These denials confirm that Labour still aren’t being straight with
people on immigration. And there are other examples:
· Last month, the Shadow Home Secretary, Yvette Cooper,
tried to claim that Labour had reduced migration – when the
12 months before June 2010 actually saw record levels of
net migration.
· A few weeks ago, Ed Miliband’s former speech writer, Lord
Glasman, said that ‘Labour lied to people about the extent of
immigration’ – but Ed Miliband refuses to admit this.
· Ed Miliband has also attacked the Government’s cap on
economic migration, calling it a ‘very dubious thing’ – even
though it is backed by more than 4 in 5 people including two
thirds of Labour voters.
Greg Hands MP said: “Labour aren’t just in denial about debt, they
are also in denial on immigration –refusing to admit that levels of
migration have been too high. They are also refusing to back the
immigration cap and the reforms to student visas.
The borough is known for its fine primary schools, which inevitably
means that they are oversubscribed. The Council's plans for new
housing developments in the Warwick Road area will mean even
more parents applying for places in Royal Borough primary schools
and, therefore, a new school will be required to help meet demand.
K&C Council hopes that it will be possible to open the new school by
September 2014.
The £2.5m scheme will benefit up to 500 children and their families
in H&F, and ranges from support for a few hours in the family home
to respite care overnight. Parents can also choose to take a direct
payment from the council which they use to buy their own short
break, specialist play provision or specialist support.
"Every child and every family is different, and this important service
gives parents the choice to decide what support they receive and
how, so that it best suits the whole family."
The charity says shutting the children’s heart unit defies medical
logic and is not supported by the facts and figures in the review that
makes the closure recommendation. They highlight three key facts:
The charity says that analysis of figures in the review shows a clear
cut case for keeping all three specialist children’s heart surgery units
in London, which will save lives, safeguard medical expertise and
save money.
“It beggars belief it has been earmarked for closure. It is bizarre that
a review designed to improve children’s heart surgery should
propose closing one of the leading centres in the UK, if not the
world.
“The review also ignores the knock-on effects of closure. Each part
of the hospital is dependent on another. Closing children’s heart
surgery will inevitably lead to the closure of all children’s services at
the hospital – including the world renowned Cystic Fibrosis unit. You
can’t remove one brick from the wall without weakening the whole
structure.
The charity points out that reducing the number of London centres to
two would mean each having to undertake more than the review
identified as the upper safe threshold of 800 cases a year. They also
highlight the fact that it would mean Evelina Children’s Hospital
having to more than double its current case load of 337 cases.
According to analysis by the charity of the figures in the review,
retaining three centres in London would mean each one undertaking
around 500, which the review said was the ideal number.
The charity also say the review shows the additional investment
required to make such a change would result in additional costs to
the NHS of over £19 million.
The third ever ‘MINT Polo in the Park’ takes place from Friday June
3 to Sunday June 5 and will see some of the world’s leading polo
players charging around Hurlingham Park, on horseback. Last year’s
event saw 29,000 people enjoy unrivalled, exciting equine action,
complete with entertainment and hospitality and this year’s
competition will be even better.
As part of the deal for this year’s competition, and to mark the
forthcoming London 2012 Olympics, the council has 2,012 tickets to
hand out for free to local residents.
Last year’s competition was also voted the best sporting event in the
capital after being named Sport Attraction of the Year at the
prestigious London Lifestyle Award.
The first two polo events saw the council negotiate a raft of
improvements from the organisers. These included improved quality
pitches and sports equipment for schools and groups using the park.
www.greghands.com