§ Mr. PawseyTo ask the Secretary of State for Education and Science whether he is now able to announce the names of those he proposes to appoint as university commissioners once the Education Reform Bill receives Royal Assent.
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§ Mr. Kenneth BakerThe appointment of Lord Fraser of Tullybelton as chairman of the university commissioners was announced last week. I am now very pleased to announce the names of the other commissioners
Lord Butterworth, former Vice Chancellor of the University of Warwick.Mr. Alan Gregory CBE, formerly Chairman of BP Oil Ltd.Sir James Munn, Chairman of the Training Commission.653WProfessor David Williams, President of Wolfson College, Cambridge.I am grateful to this distinguished group of people for their willingness to accept appointment as commissioners. I am sure that they will command the confidence of the entire British university system. I shall appoint them formally when the Bill receives Royal Assent.
§ Mr. SheermanTo ask the Secretary of State for Education and Science what are the overall additional estimated costs that will be incurred by local authorities as a result of the implementation of the provisions of the new Education Reform Bill.
§ Mrs. Rumbold[pursuant to her reply, 24 June 1988, c. 732–33]: I regret that the figure of £270 million referred to in line 5 of column 733 should have read £207 million. The corrected answer is therefore as follows:
The cost of the progressive implementation of the measures in the Education Reform Bill for schools and further education will vary from authority to authority according to developments already under way. Some redirection of recurrent and capital resources will be required. My right hon. Friend has announced proposals for the education support grants programme in 1989–90 which include some £65 million new expenditure related to the Bill's provisions for financial delegation and the national curriculum. A significant part of the programme of in-service training grants, currently supporting expenditure of £207 million, will be directed towards the implementation of the Bill's provisions in 1989–90 and subsequent years. There will also be implications for capital programmes within the Government's plans to enable local education authorities and voluntary bodies to spend more than £750 million on improving school buildings between now and 1990–91. The Government has set aside £65 million over the next three years mainly for the development and administration of assessment procedures, for which local authorities will not be charged fees. The Bill's provisions for the transfer of funding responsibility for polytechnics and colleges to central Government will lead to a reduction in spending and grant for local authorities of some £800 million from 1989–90.