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Nov 4, 2009
Downing Street made clear
Downing Street made clear yesterday that MPs who objected would not be
given a chance to overturn the report in the Commons. It issued a
statement saying that a minister, likely to be Harriet Harman, the
Leader of the House, would make a statement after the report is
released on Wednesday. MPs will be given a chance to debate it. It will
be for the inflatable
Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority (IPSA), however, to
devise and administer the new scheme, which will come in after the
general election. ¡°The Parliamentary Standards Act provides that
the IPSA must consult MPs when drawing up the expenses regime, but not
seek their final approval,¡± a Downing Street spokesman said. ¡°They will not need to seek Parliament¡¯s consent for the expenses regime. MPs have agreed the Parliamentary Standards Act inflatable bouncer
that takes the setting of their expenses out of their hands.¡± This
appeared to be an attempt by some senior MPs to find a way of voting
down the proposals. MPs tried to argue yesterday that their
right to claim mortgage interest on their second homes was enshrined in
legislation passed by John Biffen, the former Tory leader of the House,
in 1985. They said that fresh legislation was needed to overturn the
rules, which would have to be debated in the Commons and then voted on
¡ª presenting an opportunity to throw out Sir Christopher¡¯s proposals. Downing
Street said that it had checked with its lawyers, and MPs would not be
able to force a vote this way. However, its argument was undermined
when it emerged that Jack Straw had promised the inflatable castles Commons on June 29 that it would get the right to ¡°approve¡± the Kelly proposals.
Posted at 10:37 pm by whoyg10288
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MPs who stand down at an election
MPs who stand down at an election will lose their £60,000 ¡°golden
goodbyes¡± as part of reforms to the expenses regime, storing up huge
problems in future for party leaders. Sir Christopher Kelly, the chairman of the Committee on Standards in Public Life, is understood to be planning to scrap the pearl jewelry
resettlement grant after the next but one general election for MPs who
voluntarily stand down at an election. Incumbents who are defeated will
still be able to claim the paym ent, worth £32,383 to £64,766,
depending on length of service, but Sir Christopher is likely to
suggest that those who decide not to stand again receive a couple of
months¡¯ salary. This is likely to cause problems for party managers since it removes the financial incentive for MPs to stay until a general pearl jewelry wholesale
election and might mean more of them standing down in the middle of a
Parliament, triggering potentially embarrassing by-elections. It
will also encourage ¡°bed blockers¡± ¡ª MPs in marginal seats ¡ª to stay in
place in case they lose so that they can claim the money, rather than
announcing their retirement before a general election to give way for
fresh blood. These proposals are likely to be greeted with reluctance
by the party whips. Related Links In another significant change, Sir pearl necklace
Christopher will recommend an end to the communications allowance, a
£10,400 budget that MPs can use to spend on websites and leaflets to
promote their work. This is a big bonus for incumbents, and has been
opposed vigorously by the Conservatives, who said that they would scrap
it if they came to power. Sir Christopher may also step beyond
his remit and suggest reform of working hours, to bring them into line
with more traditional jobs. He is understood to believe that many of
the MPs¡¯ allowances stem from their unusual working hours, and bringing
them more closely in line with traditional 9-5 jobs would end this. If
his plan relies on additional reforms beyond his remit, there will be
uproar.
Posted at 10:36 pm by whoyg10288
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The revelations come on top
The revelations come on top of the plans that emerged on Tuesday that
MPs whose local railway station is within 60 minutes of Westminster
would not be entitled to second-home payments, that the allowances
would cover only rent, not mortgage interest, and that relatives would
be banned from working in Parliament. Downing Street made clear pearl jewelry
yesterday that MPs who objected would not be given a chance to overturn
the report in the Commons. It issued a statement saying that a
minister, likely to be Harriet Harman, the Leader of the House, would
make a statement after the report is released on Wednesday. MPs will be
given a chance to debate it. It will be for the Independent
Parliamentary Standards Authority (IPSA), however, to devise and
administer the new scheme, which will come in after the general
election. ¡°The Parliamentary Standards Act provides that the
IPSA must consult MPs when drawing up the expenses regime, but not seek
their final approval,¡± a Downing Street spokesman said. ¡°They
will not need to seek Parliament¡¯s consent for the expenses regime. MPs
have agreed the Parliamentary Standards Act that takes the pearl jewelry
wholesale setting of their expenses out of their hands.¡± This appeared
to be an attempt by some senior MPs to find a way of voting down the
proposals. MPs tried to argue yesterday that their right to
claim mortgage interest on their second homes was enshrined in
legislation passed by John Biffen, the former Tory leader of the House,
in 1985. They said that fresh legislation was needed to overturn the
rules, which would have to be debated in the Commons and then voted on
¡ª presenting an opportunity to throw out Sir Christopher¡¯s proposals. Downing Street said that it had checked with its lawyers, and MPs would not be able to force a vote wholesale pearl jewelry
this way. However, its argument was undermined when it emerged that
Jack Straw had promised the Commons on June 29 that it would get the
right to ¡°approve¡± the Kelly proposals.
Posted at 10:36 pm by whoyg10288
Permalink
The Ministry of Defence and Britain¡¯s largest defence company were
officially blamed yesterday for the deaths of 14 servicemen who were
killed when an RAF Nimrod surveillance freshwater pearl aircraft burst into flames over Afghanistan three years ago. In
one of the most damning official reports published, the MoD was accused
of sacrificing the safety of members of the Armed Forces to cut costs.
The ministry was guilty of a ¡°systemic breach of the military covenant¡±
between the nation and the men and women of the Forces, the report said. ¡°Airworthiness
was a casualty of the process of cuts, change, dilution and
distraction,¡± Charles Haddon-Cave, QC, concluded after a 20-month
review of the background to the disaster on September 2, 2006, which
represented the single biggest loss of life of service personnel in one
incident since the Falklands freshwater pearl jewelry conflict in 1982. He
named ten individuals whom he blamed for playing principal roles in the
failure to ensure that Nimrods were safe: five from the MoD, three from
BAE Systems, which reviewed Nimrod¡¯s safety, and two from QinetiQ, the
company formed from the MoD¡¯s research agency, which monitored its
safety in an advisory role. Related Links Bob Ainsworth,
Defence Secretary, told the Commons yesterday: ¡°I am sorry for the
mistakes that have been made, and that lives have been lost as a result
of our failure.¡± Two of the named officers involved in the
Nimrod integrated project team are still serving ¡ª Group Captain George
Baber, now promoted to air commodore, and Wing Commander Michael Eagles
¡ª although they have been moved to different posts. The pearl jewelry wholesale RAF said they had switched jobs as part of the normal career structure. Trish
Knight, whose son, Sergeant Ben Knight, was killed, called for
resignations ¡°from the very top over the lies they have been telling us
since 2006¡±. ¡°This is disgraceful. It¡¯s what we said all along,¡± she
said. ¡°The MoD tried to tell us everything was fine.¡± Joe Windall,
whose son Marine Joseph Windall also died, said he was ¡°shocked and
severely disappointed¡± by the failures highlighted. ¡°The inefficiencies
of someone caused me to lose my son,¡± he said. The families are seeking
compensation.
Posted at 10:35 pm by whoyg10288
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There had been signs before the disaster that the Nimrod MR2, of which
aircraft XV230 was one, had design faults, notably the juxtaposition of
fuel pipes with hot-air ducts which presented a ¡°catastrophic fire
risk¡±. Mr Haddon-Cave said new evidence had revealed that fuel had
overflowed into a dry tank during air-to-air refuelling. But when BAE
Systems carried out a safety review between pearl jewelry 2001 and 2005, the flaw was not discovered. ¡°The
Nimrod safety case was a lamentable job from start to finish,¡± the
report said. ¡°It was riddled with errors. It missed the key dangers.
Its production is a story of incompetence, complacency and cynicism.
The best opportunity to prevent the accident to XV230 was, tragically,
lost.¡± Mr Haddon-Cave said the Nimrod safety review was ¡°fatally
undermined by a general malaise: a widespread assumption by those
involved that the Nimrod was ¡®safe anyway¡¯ (because it had flown
successfully for 30 years) and the task of drawing up the safety case
became essentially a paperwork and ¡®tick-box¡¯ exercise¡±. The MoD
announced in March that any Nimrod that had not had its hot-air duct
removed ¡ª the perceived design fault identified in the RAF¡¯s board of
inquiry report in December 2007 ¡ª would not be wholesale pearl jewelry
flown until the work was done. An RAF spokesman said all 11 Nimrod MR2s
at RAF Kinloss in Morayshire and three MR1s at RAF Waddington in
Lincolnshire had now had the air ducts removed. No Nimrod is flying in
Afghanistan. Mr Haddon-Cave said of those on the aircraft: ¡°Faced with
a life-threatening emergency, every member of the crew of XV230 acted
with calmness, bravery and professionalism, and in accordance with
their training. They had no chance, however, of controlling the fire.
Their fate was already sealed before the first fire warning.¡± If
the Nimrod safety case by BAE Systems, monitored by QinetiQ, had been
drawn up ¡°with proper skill, care and attention, the catastrophic fire
risks dormant within the Nimrod MR2 fleet would have been identified
and dealt with, and the loss of XV230 in September 2006 would have been
avoided¡±, Mr Haddon-Cave said. He likened the organisational causes to those of other disasters, in particular the loss of the Space Shuttle Columbia in pearl jewelry wholesale
2003, the sinking of the ferry Herald of Free Enterprise in 1987, the
King¡¯s Cross Underground station fire in 1987 and the Marchioness
riverboat¡¯s sinking in 1989. Poor procurement practices had
damaging effects. The Nimrod MR2 should have been replaced by the
Nimrod MRA4, but the programme had been delayed. ¡°But for the delays in
the Nimrod MRA4 replacement programme, XV230 would probably no longer
have been flying in September 2006,¡± Mr Haddon-Cave said. A
former RAF officer had told his inquiry: ¡°There was no doubt that the
culture of the time had switched. In the days of the RAF chief engineer
in the 1990s, you had to be on top of airworthiness. By 2004 you had to
be on top of your budget if you wanted to get ahead.¡±
Posted at 10:35 pm by whoyg10288
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