Tim Loughton: Details of the number of full-time staff employed at each Civil Service grade in each Minister's office are as follows: Grade 5 Grade 6 Grade 7 Higher executive officer Executive officer Executive assistant Michael Gove 1 1 1 1 2 4 Sarah Teather 0 0 0 1 3 1 Nick Gibb 0 0 0 1 3 2 Jonathan Hill 0 0 0 1 3 1.7 Tim Loughton 0 0 0 1 3 1...
Tim Loughton: In 2009 and 2010, the Department employed 14.7 full-time equivalent staff to handle ministerial correspondence. The Department's public communications unit employed 117.5 full-time equivalent staff in 2009 and 112.9 full-time equivalent staff in 2010.
Tim Loughton: Academies are able to allocate time for teachers’ learning and development, including training days, at the most suitable time for the academy and its staff, including outside an academy’s published term time.
Tim Loughton: holding answer 24 May 2012 The Secretary of State's private office subscribes to the following newspapers and periodicals: The Wall Street Journal The Financial Times The Guardian The Independent The Daily Mail The Daily Express The Daily Mirror The Sun The Times The Daily Telegraph The Economist New Statesman The Spectator Times Higher Education Times Educational Supplement London Review of...
Tim Loughton: To ask the Secretary of State for Health (1) how many staff were employed in his Department in each of the last six years broken down by (a) headcount, (b) part-time and (c) whole-time equivalents; (2) how many staff have (a) joined and (b) left his Department in each of the last six years, broken down by (a) headcount, (b) part-time and (c) whole-time equivalents.
Tim Loughton: ...the Department for Education last travelled in a ministerial car. Minister Date Michael Gove 29 March Nick Gibb 29 March Sarah Teather 29 March Jonathan Hill 11 March Tim Loughton 22 March Information on the times and dates each minister travelled to their constituency in a ministerial car since May 2010 could be provided only at disproportionate cost. Ministers...
Tim Loughton: ...State for Health (1) what estimate her Department has made of the optimum number of school nurses in England; (2) how many school nurses are practising; (3) how many school nurses work (a) part time and (b) full time; (4) in how many schools on average each (a) full-time and (b) part-time school nurse practises; (5) how many school nurses have been in practice in each year since 1997.
Tim Loughton: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, pursuant to his Answer of 18 December, ref 87475, how much funding has been allocated and over what time period for the full time and part time suicide prevention co-ordinators; what definition he uses of the term prisoner listeners; what the purpose of the initiative is; and if he will list the establishments piloting the new health care...
Mr. Tim Loughton accordingly presented a Bill to provide for the zero-rating of the supply of items of clothing and footwear for use only as part of an approved school uniform: And the same was read the First time; and ordered to be read a Second time on Friday 6 February, and to be printed [Bill 103].
Tim Loughton: To ask the Secretary of State for Health what the average response time was in 2001 for the (a) London ambulance service and (b) Sussex ambulance service; and what the Government's target response times were.
Tim Loughton: To ask the Secretary of State for Health how many GPs in England and Wales work part- time; and how many worked part-time in 1997.
Tim Loughton: To ask the Deputy Prime Minister how many (a) full-time and (b) part-time staff have been employed at the Central Office of Information in each year since 1997; and at what cost.
Tim Loughton: To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, Local Government and the Regions how many calls the Cones Hotline received in each year since 1995, how many staff were employed on full-time and part-time contracts; and what the running costs for the service were in each year since 1997.
Tim Loughton: I take the Minister's point, but will she admit that setting strict targets—especially for initial referral—ties up consultant time, which adds to the time delays for people needing treatment. In some cases, it distorts the system because of staff shortages.
Tim Loughton: To ask the Secretary of State for Health what the average waiting time is for the start of radiotherapy following diagnosis for cancer patients in each hospital trust in England; and what the average waiting time was in each of the last six years.
Tim Loughton: ...Secretary of State for Health how many (a) consultant psychiatrists, (b) mental health nurses and (c) primary care mental health workers are employed by the NHS; and how many of these work (i) part-time and (ii) full-time.
Tim Loughton: ...of State for Health how many paediatric (a) doctors and (b) nurses (i) are working in the NHS and (ii) were working in the NHS in each of the last seven years, broken down by (A) those working full-time, (B) those working part-time and (C) gender.
Tim Loughton: We are going to be on clause 1 for a very long time. I shall give way for the first time to the hon. Lady.
Tim Loughton: I beg to move amendment No. 77, in clause 6, page 4, line 11, after ‘in,’, insert ‘part time or full time’.
Tim Loughton: If contact has been thwarted, how often does the Minister think that courts award additional contact time by way of compensation, rather than just replacement contact time, which is hardly anything of a penalty, but a way of shifting the opportunity to have contact?