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Response to Request for Information
[NOT PROTECTIVELY MARKED] Response to Request for Information Reference FOI 001348 Date 21 July 2017 Right to Buy and Universal Credit Request: I am requesting information under the Freedom of Information Act. Right to Buy 1. How many council housing units have been sold under the Right to Buy 'additional sales' scheme (i.e. subject to the one-for-one additions policy) since the start of 2012/13? Reading page 8 of the additional sales scheme document it says that the expected additional sales (following the new legislation) was calculated using the HMT self financing model. Without access to this information, certain assumptions have been made: Prior to the new legislation the City of Wolverhampton sold 51 properties in the financial year 2010/11 and 60 in 2011/12. Since 1st April 2012 up until 31st March 2017 we sold 997 properties – an average of around 199 properties per financial year. Therefore it is estimated that the Council is selling approximately 150 extra properties per financial year since the increase of the discount cap. 2. How many council housing units have been 'started on site' or acquired under the one- for-one additions policy as replacements for units sold under the additional sales scheme since the start of 2012/13? 66 properties It should be noticed that the development of these properties was not necessarily reliant on or as a result of the funding through the one-for-one additions policy. 3. How many council housing units have been sold under the Right to Buy scheme since the start of 2012/13 other than those listed in response to question 1? An average of 55 properties per year (see question 1 for calculation) 4. -
This 2008 Letter
The Most Reverend and Right Hon the Lord Archbishop of Canterbury & The Most Reverend and Right Hon the Lord Archbishop of York July, 2008 Most Reverend Fathers in God, We write as bishops, priests and deacons of the Provinces of Canterbury and York, who have sought, by God’s grace, in our various ministries, to celebrate the Sacraments and preach the Word faithfully; to form, nurture and catechise new Christians; to pastor the people of God entrusted to our care; and, through the work of our dioceses, parishes and institutions, to build up the Kingdom and to further God’s mission to the world in this land. Our theological convictions, grounded in obedience to Scripture and Tradition, and attentive to the need to discern the mind of the whole Church Catholic in matters touching on Faith and Order, lead us to doubt the sacramental ministry of those women ordained to the priesthood by the Church of England since 1994. Having said that, we have engaged with the life of the Church of England in a myriad of ways, nationally and locally, and have made sincere efforts to work courteously and carefully with those with whom we disagree. In the midst of this disagreement over Holy Order, we have, we believe, borne particular witness to the cause of Christian unity, and to the imperative of Our Lord’s command that ‘all may be one.’ We include those who have given many years service to the Church in the ordained ministry, and others who are very newly ordained. We believe that we demonstrate the vitality of the tradition which we represent and which has formed us in our discipleship and ministry – a tradition which, we believe, constitutes an essential and invaluable part of the life and character of the Church of England, without which it would be deeply impoverished. -
CCTV in Town Centres: Three Case Studies
CCTV in Town Centres: Three Case Studies Ben Brown CCTV IN TOWN CENTRES: THREE CASE STUDIES Ben Brown POLICE RESEARCH GROUP CRIME DETECTION AND PREVENTION SERIES: PAPER NO 68 LONDON: HOME OFFICE POLICE DEPARTMENT Editor: Barry Webb Home Office Police Research Group 50 Queen Anne's Gate London SW1H9AT ©Crown Copyright 1995 First Published 1995 Police Research Group: Crime Detection and Prevention Series The Home Office Police Research Group (PRG) was formed in 1992 to carry out and manage research relevant to the work of the police service. The terms of reference for the Group include the requirement to identify' and disseminate good police practice. The Crime Detection and Prevention Series follows on from the Crime Prevention Unit papers, a series which has been published by the Home Office since 1983. The recognition that effective crime strategics will often involve both crime prevention and crime investigation, however, has lead to the scope of this series being broadened. This new series will present research material on both crime prevention and detection in a way which informs policy and practice throughout the service. A parallel series of papers on resource management and organisational issues is also published by PRG, as is a periodical on policing research called 'Focus'. ISBN 1-85893-4737 Foreword Recent evidence indicates that nearly half of all metropolitan and non-metropolitan councils already have installed closed circuit television (CCTV) within their town centres, However, very few of these systems have been systematically evaluated. There is growing concern at this lack of evaluation, particularly amongst retailers who contribute significantly to the financing of many of these systems. -
640X1025 17/10/2011 16:30 Page 1
Bilston (DR) 640x1025 17/10/2011 16:30 Page 1 Direct Bus Services from Bilston ROUTE BUS Long Knowle 326 NUMBER BUSES TOWARDS STOPS Wobaston Primrose 25A 57 Lane Bloxwich 23 Stowlawn A Cannock Road 23 Wednesbury C 57 Bloxwich Station The Scotlands Amos Wood End 25 25A Wolverhampton B Lane Road Prestwood Road Lichfield Road Stubby Lane Oxley Park Lane 25E New Cross Hospital B Bushbury West Wednesfield High School Stafford Road Road 57 25A Broad Lane South 26 26A Wolverhampton C Sneyd Lane 25E 531 A E 26A Stowlawn D 25 25 25 25 Fallings Park Victoria 34 Stowlawn D Road New Cross Wednesfield Waddens New Invention Dunstall Hospital Brook Lane Fibbersley F * 34 334 Walsall Stafford Road 39 Walsall BB 57 Noose Lane Wellington Place 326 Lane Head 25 39 Wolverhampton BA 25A 57 Wolverhampton C BA 25 Sandbeds Road Dunstall Road Heath Town Aston Road 25A Temple Bar BB Bentley Bridge 75 Birmingham Retail Park 25E 531 Spring Bank 79 West Bromwich BB 79 Wolverhampton BA 57 Pinson Road 82 Neachells Stringes Lane 80 Charnwood Close E Old Heath Willenhall 303 West Park Road 82 Dudley G Wednesfield 82 Wolverhampton D Road Deansfield Clarks Western Queen County Bridge Road Deans Road Vaughan Road Lane Avenue Elizabeth E 57 Devon Road 223 Dudley Willenhall Road Avenue 326 228224 Cradley Heath E 545 Neachells Lane 229 Sedgley E Alamein Road Hawkswell Tyler Road Willenhall Road Drive 303 County Bridge G Plascom Road P&R Portobello Bilston Road 326 Bloxwich A (Willenhall) Stow Heath 26A 34 25 Wolverhampton Arnhem Road 339 Walsall B Lane Stowlawn Beccles 25A A Bilston Road Drive 401 West Bromwich E 25 25 Park Meadow 25E (Wolverhampton) Avenue 23 530 Rocket Pool A 26 26A Owen Road Priestfield 530 Wolverhampton C BA 39 57 Tram Stop Green Cumberland 303 57 Lanes Road 531 New Cross Hospital F BA 79 82 531 Rocket Pool C 23.26A 326 545 530 545 39 Wolesley Road 34.303 Bunkers Hill 545 Dudley D 79 531 Central Avenue George 545 Wolverhampton B 905 Street Willenhall Road The Lunt 34 39 Wolverhampton 545 (Lunt Road) 905 Mecca Bingo A Pounds Lane (The Lunt) 334 339 Penn Road College St. -
Once a Priest
together THE VOICE OF CATHOLIC ANGLICANS EASTER 2018 Once a UR AL C AT N ES O S I O T I C D I E D T A Y p a s s i o d n o o at h e a st Priest... bout prie On 23rd February this year I will have been a bishop for fifteen years. However, ACS Moving on Page 14 for only two of those years was I serving as a diocesan bishop in the Anglican Church of Papua New Guinea after which I was constrained to return home to The Church Union England because of a heart condition which, I was advised, would have limited and challenged the episcopal ministry the people of my diocese had every right to expect of their chief pastor. Since 2005, then, I have done what I have always done as a priest: I have been a pastor in the parochial ministry. At the beginning of this piece of writing, Communications & Growth perhaps I might be allowed to engage in a Page 12 little bit of reflecting on what this has meant for me? For all those years since I returned to a parish-based ministry, I have rejoiced in the privilege and calling of priesthood and of serving people in the everyday life of a parish. Only very occasionally do I stand amongst the faithful clothed as a bishop even though, of course, I share fully in the episcopal order and, I realize, every sacramental action I perform I do as a bishop. I am grateful to my episcopal colleagues who value my ministry (sadly, there are one or two who do not welcome this) and who allow me to share in consultation and decision-making on, say, the Council of Bishops. -
Black Country Secondary Schools, Published in 2008, 2009 and 2010, Were Well Received
Contents Introduction 3 Using the Families of Schools document 7 Black Country in context 11 Family pages 16 Contextual family pages 34 Annex 1 – What it all means: footnotes and explanations 39 Annex 2 – School contact details 45 2 Introduction 1. Families of Schools: the fourth edition The first three editions of Families of Schools for Black Country Secondary schools, published in 2008, 2009 and 2010, were well received. We have been working with schools and education professionals across the Black Country to develop this fourth edition for 2011. As with previous years, this edition includes GCSE results with and without English and maths, a Contextual Value Added (CVA) measure and contextual families focusing on English as an Additional Language (EAL) and mobility. 2. How have families been grouped? Schools are grouped into families based on an average of prior attainment data and context data. Prior attainment data is the Average Key Stage 2 (KS2) Point Score (APS) for all pupils in Year 7 to Year 11 matched to Key Stage 4 data. Context data includes: • Income Deprivation Affecting Children Index (IDACI) data, calculated by linking individual pupil postcodes to IDACI data and compiling an average figure for each school1. • The proportion of pupils eligible to receive Free School Meals (FSM). • The IDACI and FSM school averages are combined to give an overall indicator for the School Environment (SE). • The percentage of pupils whose first language is known or believed to be other than English (EAL). • A mobility measure, defined as the percentage of pupils in Year 10 or Year 11 who have joined the school within the last 2 years (L2Y). -
Walsall Bus Travel Area TON R R T E R Lakeside S Canes G K RD N RD P AR
60.62.937 BRIDGE CROSS ROAD 60 D 10 62 A S 937 H O Y R Chase C E Norton A CANNOCK R D M D O OAD N D Terrace R East O E R E D S O O D F W H R 3 A LL ROA O T A . 3 I K L HI R N G V D P 10 3C R A D 60 ROA H E U O N P ING B Burntwood 60 R 10 AKER E 60 STAFFORDSHIRE B T ST. R SP R 62 60 D D O D AS S OA TR R A OA R E 937 D L 10 60 E O Chasetown E AS HO E C H C 3 Norton T T Norton S EE D Walsall bus Travel Area TON R R T E R Lakeside S Canes G K RD N RD P AR A N NO N E E 937 R RR G A B UE W R HIGH Chasewater Q 60 . O ST. ERN T D F JEROME R D S D W 10 Heath DRIVE A 3C L A N E RED O AP O H CH R R I L D L C A S O Hammerwich L R h H L R L C a T. Highfields Hospital A O H S A R s T S A RC U HI I L 3C D e Church Street CHU GH P H FIE A L C w D S NORTON G S O RE W R EN a 10 O H BRAE D A L MAR R t 937 D A E e N N KEY E LA r RED LION L Chasewater ETTYS LANE i W B g H h A 3 E t High frequency bus services L D R S N a A E D 3C S il (10 minutes or less daytime) L w A L F O O a R R R y D O Other bus served road A Chasewater R D O A Brownhills 301 D M6 Bus route number TOLL R West Y OAD M6 TO New Town A LL ROAD H Occasional journey 10 H O W D D L 937 A E S Limited service O R E L LI A Y W N M A E Terminus of bus route 380 TL 3A.10A 23 E 23 IN 3 S HORS L E G ST H 936.937 23 G LA . -
Tackling Car Crime an Evaluation of Sold Secure
paper71 pre 6/2/97 11:52 am Page 1 Crime Detection and Prevention Series Paper 71 Tackling Car Crime An Evaluation of Sold Secure Rick Brown Nicola Billing Editor: Barry Webb Home Office Police Research Group 50 Queen Anne’s Gate London SW1H 9AT paper71 pre 6/2/97 11:52 am Page ii © Crown Copyright 1996 © First Published 1996 Police Research Group: Crime Detection and Prevention Series The Home Office Police Research Group (PRG) was formed in 1992 to carry out and manage research relevant to the work of the police service. The terms of reference for the Group include the requirement to identify and disseminate good policing practice. The Crime Detection and Prevention Series follows on from the Crime Prevention Unit papers, a series which has been published by the Home Office since 1983. The recognition that effective crime strategies will often involve both crime prevention and crime investigation, however, has led to the scope of this series being broadened. This new series will present research material on both crime prevention and crime detection in a way which informs policy and practice throughout the service. A parallel series of papers on resource management and organisational issues is also published by PRG, as is a periodical on policing research called ‘Focus’. ISBN 1-85893-633-0 (ii) paper71 pre 6/2/97 11:52 am Page iii Foreword In 1992, two initiatives launched in response to the Home Office car crime prevention campaign were ‘Sold Secure’, developed by Essex police, and Partnership Against Car Theft (PACT) in Northumbria police. -
Office of the Traffic Commissioner (West Midlands) Hillcrest House 386 Harehills Lane Leeds LS9 6NF
Office of the Traffic Commissioner (West Midlands) Applications and Decisions Publication Number: 2928 Publication Date: 29/01/2021 Objection Deadline Date: 19/02/2021 Correspondence should be addressed to: Office of the Traffic Commissioner (West Midlands) Hillcrest House 386 Harehills Lane Leeds LS9 6NF Telephone: 0300 123 9000 Website: www.gov.uk/traffic-commissioners The next edition of Applications and Decisions will be published on: 29/01/2021 Publication Price 60 pence (post free) This publication can be viewed by visiting our website at the above address. It is also available, free of charge, via e-mail. To use this service please send an e-mail with your details to: [email protected] PLEASE NOTE THE PUBLIC COUNTER IS CLOSED AND TELEPHONE CALLS WILL NO LONGER BE TAKEN AT HILLCREST HOUSE UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE The Office of the Traffic Commissioner is currently running an adapted service as all staff are currently working from home in line with Government guidance on Coronavirus (COVID-19). Most correspondence from the Office of the Traffic Commissioner will now be sent to you by email. There will be a reduction and possible delays on correspondence sent by post. The best way to reach us at the moment is digitally. Please upload documents through your VOL user account or email us. There may be delays if you send correspondence to us by post. At the moment we cannot be reached by phone. If you wish to make an objection to an application it is recommended you send the details to [email protected]. -
Download a PDF Version of the Guide to African American Manuscripts
Guide to African American Manuscripts In the Collection of the Virginia Historical Society A [Abner, C?], letter, 1859. 1 p. Mss2Ab722a1. Written at Charleston, S.C., to E. Kingsland, this letter of 18 November 1859 describes a visit to the slave pens in Richmond. The traveler had stopped there on the way to Charleston from Washington, D.C. He describes in particular the treatment of young African American girls at the slave pen. Accomack County, commissioner of revenue, personal property tax book, ca. 1840. 42 pp. Mss4AC2753a1. Contains a list of residents’ taxable property, including slaves by age groups, horses, cattle, clocks, watches, carriages, buggies, and gigs. Free African Americans are listed separately, and notes about age and occupation sometimes accompany the names. Adams family papers, 1698–1792. 222 items. Mss1Ad198a. Microfilm reels C001 and C321. Primarily the papers of Thomas Adams (1730–1788), merchant of Richmond, Va., and London, Eng. Section 15 contains a letter dated 14 January 1768 from John Mercer to his son James. The writer wanted to send several slaves to James but was delayed because of poor weather conditions. Adams family papers, 1792–1862. 41 items. Mss1Ad198b. Concerns Adams and related Withers family members of the Petersburg area. Section 4 includes an account dated 23 February 1860 of John Thomas, a free African American, with Ursila Ruffin for boarding and nursing services in 1859. Also, contains an 1801 inventory and appraisal of the estate of Baldwin Pearce, including a listing of 14 male and female slaves. Albemarle Parish, Sussex County, register, 1721–1787. 1 vol. -
1991 Ward, Census Code Range (WARDC91)
UK Data Archive Study Number 6330 - British Household Panel Survey, Waves 1-18, 1991-2009: Special Licence Access, 1991 Ward, Census Code Range (WARDC91) British Household Panel Survey, waves 1-18 (1991-2009) User Documentation: 1991 ward, Census code range (WARDC91) 03 November 2009 For more information contact: Birgitta Rabe [email protected] ++44-1206-874594 Institute for Social and Economic Research University of Essex Wivenhoe Park Colchester Essex CO4 3SQ 1991 Ward, Census code range (WARDC91) Details of the code ranges: Data Range of codes Comments description 1991 ward The 1991 administrative and electoral areas to which the 1 (Census metre postcode grid reference has been assigned using code range) point-in-polygon techniques and digital administrative and electoral boundaries. A pseudo code is included for Channel Islands and Isle of Man. The field will be blank for postcodes with no grid reference. 01AAFA-55TTFZ; England & Wales = {2-digit county code 71UB01-82UB30; Scotland = {2-digit district code {2-digit ward code 95AΔ01-95ZΔ51; Northern Ireland = 2-digit county code 1-digit district code 2-digit ward code 99ZZ00; 99ZZ00 = Channel Is/IoM (pseudo); or ΔΔΔΔΔΔ ΔΔΔΔΔΔ = no information available. Source: National Statistics website: www.statistics.gov.uk National Statistics Postcode Directory: 2007 User Guide v1 Crown copyright material is reproduced with the permission of the Controller of OPSI 00AAFA 01AAFA Aldersgate 00AAFB 01AAFB Aldgate 00AAFC 01AAFC Bassishaw 00AAFD 01AAFD Billingsgate 00AAFE 01AAFE Bishopsgate 00AAFF -
Wolverhampton M&G
Index to places served by bus, train and tram R Near rail station Near tram station l Places outside of the area covered by the Wolverhampton map To Coven and Stafford To Featherstone To Featherstone and Cannock To Cannock A B C D N E E F Destination Bus Route Number Map Grid Destination Bus Route Number Map Grid Destination Bus Route Number Map Grid L A and Cannock KEY 54.54A.877.878 ROOKHOUSE Bus and Rail Services in M C B A G P continued 54 M A E OTOR T SCALE WA l Y A High frequency bus services N M54 MOTORWAY Albrighton (Shropshire) 891 l Gailey (Staffordshire) 54, 54A Priestfield 53, 79 E4 A N 0 1/4 1/2 3/4 Mile L D (10 minutes or less daytime) R K Aldersley 5, 5A, 6, 6A C2 Goldthorn Park 25, 26A, 27, 27A, 61 C5 Princes End 22, 43 F6 E I T T 67 A T 0 1/2 1 Kilometre Other bus served road W 54 DS E WOLVERHAMPTON AN N M l BROADL Gornal Wood 27, 27A, 223 54 Ashmore Lake 25, 41, 57 F3 54A S MOT OR 529 L WAY Bus route number Q GR A Gospel Oak (Sandwell) 11A, 23 G6 65 N EENF 67 Ashmore Park 57, 59, 69 F2 5.5A.10B IEL E l 3.65 D LANE Occasional journey Quinton X8 71 Great Bridge 43 l BAKERS i54 South 70 5 . D 10B A Limited service D BIL Staffordshire V O W BROOK Codsall Pendeford 71A R l R A Great Wyrley (Staffordshire) 71 E R B A Upper K R N O Caravan D N 4 1 Y N Nature O C Terminus of bus route O A T O Codsall Fordhouses A 5.5A Northwood D Codsall I A 4.6.6A.25 3 N l T D Trail Site Pendeford N 71 Bearwood X8 O Rocket Pool 53, 530 F6 L A B A School U O 10B 6.6A R Park Railway line and station T S 877 O H OBASTON 54.54A 67 65 S W W A Moseley