HC Deb 01 April 1993 vol 222 cc397-400W
Mr. William Ross

To ask the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland how many dwellings are owned by the Northern Ireland Housing Executive in(a) each housing executive district, (b) each council area and (c) each housing executive region.

Mr. Atkins

I am advised by the chief executive of the Northern Ireland Housing Executive that at 1 March 1993, the number of dwellings owned by the housing executive in each housing executive district, region and council area was as follows:

Northern Ireland housing executive Housing stock as at 1 March 1993
District Gross stock District council Total
Belfast 1 3,941 Belfast 37,324
Belfast 2 5,656
Belfast 3 5,156
Belfast 4 5,088
Belfast 5 5,947
Belfast 6 5,155
Belfast 7 6,381
Belfast Region 37,324
Bangor 4,111 North Down 4,111
Newtownards 1 3,963 Ards 5,995
Newtownards 2 2,032
Castlereagh 1 3,719 Castlereagh 6,411
Castlereagh 2 6,411
Lisburn 1 4,850 Lisburn 10,708
Lisburn 2 2,630
Lisburn 3 3,228
Downpatrick 4,451 Down 4,451
South East Region 31,676
Banbridge 3,082 Banbridge 3,082
Newry 1 3,246 Newry and Mourne 7,043
Newry 2 3,797
Armagh 3,914 Armagh 3,914
Brownlow 2,035 Craigavon 7,836
Lurgan 2,978
Portadown 2,823
South Region 21,875
Ballymena 5,421 Ballymena 5,421
Antrim 5,017 Antrim 5,017
Newtownabbey 1 3,986 Newtownabbey 7,669
Newtownabbey 2 3,683

District Gross stock District council Total
Carrickfergus 3,527 Carrickfergus 3,527
Larne 2,626 Larne 2,626
Ballycastle 1,519 Moyle 1,519
Ballymoney 2,776 Ballymoney 2,776
Coleraine 5,481 Coleraine 5,481
North East Region 34,036
Londonderry 1 4,219 Derry 12,378
Londonderry 2 4,266
Londonderry 3 3,893
Limavady 2,820 Limavady 2,820
Magherafelt 2,658 Magherafelt 2,658
Strabane 3,998 Strabane 3,998
Omagh 3,410 Omagh 3,410
Cookstown 2,105 Cookstown 2,105
Dungannon 3,426 Dungannon 3,426
Fermanagh 3,943 Fermanagh 3,943
West Region 34,738
Northern Ireland Total 159,649

Mr. Hume

To ask the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland what estimate he has made of the costs of closing the Housing Executive's direct labour organisation this year and the total number of jobs which would be lost by district.

Mr. Atkins

This is a matter for the Northern Ireland housing executive, but I understand from the chief executive that the net cost of closing the direct labour organisation after taking account of anticipated receipts from the realisation of assets and the disposal of depots is £2.2 million. The number of job losses, by depot, based on employees, permanent and temporary, in post at the end of January 1993 is:

Number
Central unit 22
Belfast 250
Craigavon 54
Ballyclare 164
Coleraine 52
Derry 90
Omagh 102
Support services 15

The Housing Executive hopes that some of the salaried staff included in the above can be redeployed. It should also be noted that the Housing Executive had intended to scale down the DLO labour force from around 750 at present to about 250 to 300 by the end of 1993–94.

Mr. Hume

To ask the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland if he will list by district the total number of Housing Executive contract modules per category for which the executive's DLO tendered, the number of contracts which the DLO actually won and the number in which it came second.

Mr. Atkins

This is a matter for the Northern Ireland Housing Executive, but I understand from the chief executive that the information, by Housing Executive region, is as follows:

COT Electrical Building Plumbing Grounds Maintenance
A C B A B C A B C A B C A B C
Belfast 17 3 2 20 1 2 20 7 3 20 3 4 7 14 1
South East 6 2 1 18 0 1 21 4 5 19 3 0 6 14 0
South 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 6 0 1
North East 9 0 2 30 2 3 30 5 1 30 2 3 9 5 0
West 8 1 2 18 0 3 26 3 4 26 3 10 8 16 1
Total 41 6 7 87 3 9 98 20 13 96 12 17 36 19 3
1 The Housing Executive has questioned the viability of a number of these tenders.

Notes:

COT = Cchange of Tenancy.

A =Number of modules competed for.

B = Number of modules won by DLO.

C= Number of modules in which DLO came second.

Mr. Hume

To ask the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland if he will make a statement giving details of the criteria for commercial viability applied by the Housing Executive to its DLO; and what consultation took place with the DOE regarding the establishment, interpretation and implementation of these criteria.

Mr. Atkins

The criteria were that all work undertaken from April 1993 had to be won following competition with the private sector and that from the same date no deficit financing would be available to cover trading losses. This followed discussion between the Department and the Housing Executive in the light of trading losses of some £4.5 million in 1991–92 and a projected loss of £3 million in 1992–93. There was regular discussion between the Housing Executive and the Department on the interpretation and implementation of these criteria.

Mr. Hume

To ask the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland what is the total value of contracts won be each DLO district of the Housing Executive for the next year and the projected profits or losses.

Mr. Atkins

This is a matter for the Northern Ireland Housing Executive, but I understand from the chief executive that the information is as follows:

A. Building maintmance
Depot Valuations of contracts won Trading account projections for 1993–94
£ £
Belfast 1,561,942 1155,000 Loss
Ballyclare 308,713 2
Coleraine 445,777 35,000 Loss
Pennyburn 168,388 2
Omagh 294,896 2
1 This figure relates to combining Belfast and Ballyclare into a single operation.
2 The tenders won by these depots represented such a small fraction of the turnover required to support the existing Depot structures that the Housing Executive considered it impossible to conduct meaningful projected trading accounts with prospects of future viability.

B. Grounds maintenance
Depot Valuations of contracts won Projected profit-loss 1993–94 before application of overheads and running costs
£ £
Belfast 473,994 41,000 Loss
Ballyclare 306,671 35,000 Profit
Coleraine 142,695 17,000 Profit
Pennyburn 498,500 1,000 Loss
Omagh 110,920 14,000 Loss

Note:

An attempt to aggregate the Ballyclare and Coleraine operations with the most viable tenders won by other depots into a single operational unit (to reduce overheads and running costs to a minimum) produced a projected trading account net loss of £54,000.

Mr. Hume

To ask the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland what profits were made by each section of the Housing Executive's DLO over the past year.

Mr. Atkins

This is a matter for the Northern Ireland Housing Executive, but I understand from the, chief executive that provisional accounts for the 11 months to 28 February 1993 are as follows:

Depot Building maintenance Grounds maintenance Total
(£) (£) (£)
Belfast (571,000) (235,000) (806,000)
Carn (816,000) (75,000) (891,000)
Ballyclare (224,000) 39,000 (185,000)
Coleraine 45,000 5,000 50,000
Pennyburn (147,000) 36,000 (111,000)
Omagh (713,000) (75,000) (788,000)
Total loss (2,426,000) (305,000) (2,731,000)

Note: Figures in brackets indicate a loss.

The Carn depot building maintenance operation was terminated at the end of October 1992. The estimated total DLO trading loss for the full year to 31 March 1993 is presently estimated at £3 million.