Gregory Campbell: To ask the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland how many racially motivated assaults (a) were reported and (b) resulted in a case being brought before the courts in each parliamentary constituency in Northern Ireland in the last 12 months.
Gregory Campbell: To ask the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland what the total cost was to public funds of the public launch of the St. Columb's Park Masterplan on 4 October 2006 in Londonderry.
Gregory Campbell: To ask the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland what progress is being made in treating patients in Northern Ireland with syringomyelia.
Gregory Campbell: To ask the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland if he will require the Equality Commission for Northern Ireland to take steps on recruitment of staff from under-represented minorities in the work force employed by local councils in Northern Ireland.
Gregory Campbell: To ask the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland what the composition was of the monitored full-time workforce of companies employing 11 or more people in (a) 1995 and (b) 2005, broken down by religious designation.
Gregory Campbell: As a résumé of the debate, does the hon Member agree that, as other Members have said, the under-representation of nationalists, or Catholics, in the voluntary or public sectors has generally been diminishing in recent years? That is true almost everywhere. The converse is equally true: where there is unionist, or Protestant, under-representation, under-representation is getting worse. The...
Gregory Campbell: Further to that point of order. Is it not the case in this debate that the only Members who have spoken against the motion have been female? No male Members have been speaking against the motion so far.
Gregory Campbell: So it is OK to barrack males and not females?
Gregory Campbell: I beg to move That this Assembly notes the recent publication by the Equality Commission of its Annual Monitoring Report on the Northern Ireland workforce, and calls on the Commission to investigate trends in recruitment, particularly in the public sector, in order to ensure that the workforce being recruited is a reasonable reflection of the working age population in Northern Ireland. This...
Gregory Campbell: To ask the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland how many people in Northern Ireland he estimates were eligible for winter fuel payments in 2006.
Gregory Campbell: To ask the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland what the total cost to the public purse is expected to be of the work envisaged to be undertaken at Magilligan Prison as a result of the planning application which appeared in the local press in the week commencing 8th January.
Gregory Campbell: To ask the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland how many people reported injuries from the police in Northern Ireland using plastic baton rounds in 2006.
Gregory Campbell: To ask the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland how applicants to the Police Service of Northern Ireland who have moved from other EU countries to live in Northern Ireland are regarded in determining the religious background of applicants for the purpose of the 50/50 policy.
Gregory Campbell: To ask the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland what the take-up has been of the Warm Homes scheme in each Northern Ireland constituency for 2006; how many installations there have been; and what the total cost was of the work involved.
Gregory Campbell: To ask the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland what the total cost to the public purse was of the salary, pension, redundancy terms and other associated payments to the former chief executive of Translink during 2006.
Gregory Campbell: This topic is important, and I wish to address my brief remarks to elements of both amendments, which were tabled in the names of SDLP Members and my colleague Mr McCausland. There is no doubt that much research has been carried out on underachievement, and the underachievement of urban working-class Protestant children has become part of folklore, with the children on the Shankill Road being...
Gregory Campbell: Thank you for that freedom, Madam Speaker. I am glad that we have the liberty to speak and elaborate on the subject matter. If there was some concern among Sinn Féin circles at the start of my speech, I am sure that there will be even more as I reach the end. The links are there and are well documented. The Department of Education must produce a full report that establishes how literacy and...
Gregory Campbell: To ask the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland how many traffic violations resulting in fixed penalties being issued there were in Northern Ireland in (a) November 2005 and (b) November 2006.
Gregory Campbell: One issue that has not been raised in the debate is precisely the one that the Member is about to talk about, which is the private sector. Given that house prices in Northern Ireland have more than doubled while the level at which stamp duty begins has remained static, could the Chancellor not put several thousands of pounds into stamp duty for first-time buyers to make housing much more...
Gregory Campbell: To ask the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland what the daily average volume of traffic using the A26 road between Coleraine and Ballymoney is in Northern Ireland.