HC Deb 24 January 1994 vol 236 cc64-6W
Mr. William Ross

To ask the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland how many civil servants, by Department, are employed in each council area in Northern Ireland; and what is his estimate of total salaries paid in respect of those employees in each council area.

Sir John Wheeler

The information requested in respect of civil servants employed by the Northern Ireland Office and the Northern Ireland Departments is as follows:

District council DFP DED DOE DHSS DANI DENI NIO (including PANI)
Magherafelt 15 89 71 21 18
Moyle 47 33 1
Newry and Mourne 77 237 175 72 35
Newtownabbey 142 74 82 17 26
North Down 29 16 138 74 510 58
Omagh 13 53 408 85 219 44
Strabane 13 81 72 43 19

District Council Estimated total salaries (£)
Antrim 7,126,390
Ards 4,176,401
Armagh 8,232,233
Ballymena 12,748,861
Ballymoney 1,907,594
Banbridge 2,278,365
Belfast 222,160,030
Carrickfergus 3,418,744
Castlereagh 8,349,002
Coleraine 12,700,635
Cookstown 5,252,903
Craigavon 14,254,904
Down 10,075,777
Dungannon 6,256,413
Fermanagh 10,372,301
Larne 2,730,642
Limavady 2,756,806
Lisburn 12,204,910
Derry City 12,913,559
Magherafelt 2,787,368
Moyle 1,050,692
Newry and Mourne 8,287,133
Newtownabbey 7,086,151
North Down 13,880,000
Omagh 12,437,926
Strabane 2,906,877

Mr. William Ross

To ask the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland what is the number of civil service jobs(a) created and (b) transferred to each location within Northern Ireland and to Northern Ireland from elsewhere in the United Kingdom; and if he will show for each such movement the location from which they were moved and the type of employment and grades of civil servants involved and the cost of the movement in payments to personnel and for buildings, equipment and furnishings.

Sir John Wheeler

The number of jobs created and detailed information on the movement of civil service jobs could be obtained only at disproportionate cost. However, the number of civil service jobs in the Northern Ireland Office and Northern Ireland Departments transferred within Northern Ireland since 1990 were as follows:

Number From To
1990
1991 664 Stormont Belfast city centre
18 Belfast Londonderry

Performance Markings
Grade Total Box 1 Per cent. Box 2 Per cent. Box 3 Per cent. Box 4/5 Per cent.
Analysis of year ending 31 December 1991
Grade 5 and Analogous 21 1 4.8 17 80.9 3 14.3
Grade 6 and Analogous 46 6 13.0 31 67.4 8 17.4 1 2.2
Grade 7 and Analogous 91 12 13.2 65 71.4 14 15.4
Deputy Principal and Analogous 173 19 11.0 101 58.4 52 30.1 1 0.5
Staff Office and Analogous 169 15 8.9 100 59.2 53 31.3 1 0.6

Number From To
24 Hydebank Belfast city centre
1992
1993 62 Stormont Londonderry
98 Bangor Londonderry
364 Stormont Belfast city centre
11 Coleraine Belfast
13 Antrim Belfast

Although no jobs in the Northern Ireland Office and Northern Ireland Departments were transferred to Northern Ireland from elsewhere in the United Kingdom, the following new jobs were attracted to Northern Ireland from Great Britain:

  • 580 social security benefit processing jobs to deal with claims from areas of central London have been created in a Belfast benefit centre since June 1990;
  • 211 jobs relating to accounting work on encashed books were created at a paid order unit in Lisahally, County Londonderry in 1991. This work was formerly carried out by the Post Office on the mainland; and
  • 455 jobs have been created in Belfast since 1993 to assess, collect and enforce child maintenance on behalf of the Great Britain Child Support Agency.

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