Access to Radiotherapy

A Bill to make provision to improve access to radiotherapy treatment in England; to define access in terms of the time that patients are required to travel to places providing treatment; to specify 45 minutes as the maximum time patients are to travel; and for connected purposes.

Link: Access to Radiotherapy
Source: Public Bills

Press release: Independent review calls for greater community use to give church buildings a sustainable future

Churches should be opened up for new and different uses by communities to help build a more sustainable future for the buildings, an independent report has recommended.

The Taylor Review: Sustainability of English Churches and Cathedrals says that congregations should be empowered to involve more local people in enjoying, valuing, using and caring for their churches.

The review panel, chaired by Bernard Taylor and made up of representatives from the Church of England and heritage bodies, was set up last year to find new ways to maintain Church of England buildings and look at the potential for different funding models.

A total of 12,200 Church of England churches are listed and since 1999 there has been £2.6 billion invested in repairs and new build projects, with Government and lottery sources providing £810 million of this investment.

Bernard Taylor, Chairman of the English Churches and Cathedrals Sustainability Review, said:

Church buildings are an important and a much-loved part of our national heritage and form an integral part of our sense of identity and community. However, despite the hard work of many groups and volunteers around the country, they face complex problems of maintenance and repair, and are not always well used and supported.

Increased use and helping communities in their broadest form to see the value and potential of the local church is the key to the church building becoming more self-sustaining and ultimately ensuring its long term survival. The solution must be local and there is no instant solution, but these recommendations represent the next steps towards a more sustainable future for these important buildings.

Heritage Minister John Glen said:

I welcome this report and want to thank Bernard Taylor and the whole panel for their work. Our church buildings are a major part of our heritage and it is vital that they are cared for and protected. This report has shown how valued these buildings are and how many thousands of volunteers work so hard on their upkeep.

This review is an important first step to building a more sustainable future for thousands of church buildings across the country, and we will look at these recommendations carefully.

The review panel welcomed the work by the Church of England to simplify its processes and make it easier for churches to get consent to share use of their buildings. Guidance is also being prepared by the Church of England to support models of community ownership and responsibility such as the creation of local Trusts and Friends.

The Rt Revd John Inge, Bishop of Worcester and lead bishop on cathedrals and church buildings, said:

I welcome the findings of this Review. Our 16,000 churches are the jewel in the crown of our built heritage. They exist, as they always have done, to serve their communities. This is seen through daily acts of worship, celebrations of the joys of life and commemorations of its sorrows. They are, though, not just places of worship for their communities: they are social hubs for people of all ages, spaces to offer hospitality and vital services to the vulnerable; churches increasingly are the glue in community life.

I have enormous respect for the millions of volunteers and church workers who through the generations have cared for our churches.

The strategy proposed in this report to support these vital buildings will, I pray, help to protect their fabric and equip them to serve anew in the future.

The Review makes clear how churches and cathedrals are vital community assets in need of support nationally. We look forward to working with funding partners to put the proposals into place.

The review panel highlighted the best practice of many churches and of volunteers around the country, with buildings adapted and used for cafes, playgroups, and in some cases NHS and post office services. The panel said it wants to see more innovation of this kind.

It has proposed creating a national network of Community Support Advisers to help churches identify and strengthen wide ranging relationships within their local area. It hopes that through greater community engagement, churches will be used more frequently and can maximise new funding options reflecting this broad community involvement.

Congregations are individually responsible for the care of their own buildings and despite the commitment and hard work of volunteers, the panel found a lack of consistency in the ability of many churches to carry out routine maintenance and repairs.

The panel has recommended creating a group of ‘Fabric Support Officers’ who have practical heritage buildings expertise to ensure that all churches have access to high quality advice. It also wants churches to develop annual minor repairs plans. This will mean that repairs can be addressed immediately and prevent the development of more costly major repairs. In addition, it has recommended a rolling ten-year major repairs plan to be prepared and kept up to date so that larger works can be planned and given the best chance of being properly funded.

It has proposed that these recommendations should be tested through pilot schemes in both rural and urban areas.

ENDS

Notes to editors

  1. Read Bernard Taylor’s blog about the review
  2. The Taylor Review: Sustainability of English Churches and Cathedrals was established in May, 2016.
  3. A call for evidence to inform the review received almost 5,800 responses.
  4. The panel consists of:
  • Chairman: Bernard Taylor CBE, Chairman of The Royal Commission for the Great Exhibition of 1851
  • Sir Tony Baldry, Chair of the Church Buildings Council
  • Dame Helen Ghosh, Director General of the National Trust
  • Loyd Grossman, Chair of Heritage Alliance
  • Rt Revd Dr John Inge, Bishop of Worcester, Lead Bishop on Church Buildings
  • Sir Simon Jenkins, Trustee Churches Conservation Trust
  • Sir Peter Luff, Heritage Lottery Fund
  • Sir Laurie Magnus, Chairman Historic England
  • Neil Mendoza, Landmark Trust & DCMS Non-Executive Director
  • Very Revd Catherine Ogle, Dean of Winchester
  • Jennie Page, Vice Chair of the Church Buildings Council
  • Alice Perkins, former Chair of the Post Office

Link: Press release: Independent review calls for greater community use to give church buildings a sustainable future
Source: Gov Press Releases

Press release: Lord High Commissioner to the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland in 2018

The Queen has approved that His Grace Richard Walter John Montagu Douglas Scott, The Duke of Buccleuch and Queensberry, KBE, DL, FSA, FRSE, be appointed as Her Majesty’s Lord High Commissioner to the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland in 2018.

The Lord High Commissioner is the Sovereign’s personal representative to the Annual General Assembly of the Church of Scotland. He attends the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland on behalf of the Sovereign. He makes the opening and closing addresses to the Assembly, and carries out a number of official functions as the Lord High Commissioner.

Link: Press release: Lord High Commissioner to the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland in 2018
Source: Gov Press Releases

The Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 (Investigations in different parts of the United Kingdom) (Amendment) Order 2017

This Order amends the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 (Investigations in different parts of the United Kingdom) Order 2003 (S.I. 2003/425) (“the Investigations Order”), which contains the enforcement procedures within the United Kingdom for orders made and search and seizure warrants issued relating to certain investigations under Part 8 of the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 (c. 29) (“POCA”). The Investigations Order provides the appropriate enforcement procedures where section 18 of the Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments Act 1982 (c. 27) (“CJJA”) (enforcement of UK judgments in other parts of UK) does not apply.

Link: The Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 (Investigations in different parts of the United Kingdom) (Amendment) Order 2017
Source: Legislation .gov.uk

The Registration (Entries of Overseas Births and Deaths) (Amendment) Order 2017

This Order amends the Registration (Entries of Overseas Births and Deaths) Order 1982 (S.I. 1982/1526) (“the 1982 Order”). The 1982 Order applies provisions of enactments relating to the registration of births and deaths in the United Kingdom to certified copies of birth and death entries sent for deposit with the Registrars General in the United Kingdom.

Link: The Registration (Entries of Overseas Births and Deaths) (Amendment) Order 2017
Source: Legislation .gov.uk