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Speech in Lords Chamber - Fri 06 Feb 2015
Health and Social Care (Safety and Quality) Bill

"My Lords, I am the least qualified contributor to the debate, so I shall make my speech suitably short as an act of humility in deference to those who are so much my senior in this field. It was the Mid Staffordshire disaster and the reports following it which focused …..."
Lord Elton - View Speech

View all Lord Elton (Con - Excepted Hereditary) contributions to the debate on: Health and Social Care (Safety and Quality) Bill

Written Question
Ophthalmic Services
Monday 15th September 2014

Asked by: Lord Elton (Conservative - Excepted Hereditary)

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask Her Majesty’s Government whether their policy for the award of contracts for the provision of optometry and other services to their agencies includes a requirement to assess and compare the net tax revenue that would be provided by each competing bidder; and, if not, why not.

Answered by Earl Howe - Shadow Deputy Leader of the House of Lords

All Government agencies are subject to European regulations covering both competition and awarding public contracts. Additionally, they apply the Government’s principles of transparency in communicating commercial opportunities, which includes actions to stimulate and attract opportunities for small and medium enterprises.

Standard tender documentation for commercial contracts incorporates a pre-qualification questionnaire that requests information from bidders as part of the Government’s policy, to check compliance with company tax laws. The information requested is proportionate with the value of the contract to be awarded.

In line with Government policy all new procurement tenders and contract awards are published via the Government’s central record system known as ‘Contracts Finder’. It would not be possible to quantify prospectively the net tax revenue likely to be generated by each competing bidder.


Written Question
Ophthalmic Services
Monday 15th September 2014

Asked by: Lord Elton (Conservative - Excepted Hereditary)

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask Her Majesty’s Government whether they will publish their criteria for the award of contracts for the provision of optometry services to their agencies.

Answered by Earl Howe - Shadow Deputy Leader of the House of Lords

All Government agencies are subject to European regulations covering both competition and awarding public contracts. Additionally, they apply the Government’s principles of transparency in communicating commercial opportunities, which includes actions to stimulate and attract opportunities for small and medium enterprises.

Standard tender documentation for commercial contracts incorporates a pre-qualification questionnaire that requests information from bidders as part of the Government’s policy, to check compliance with company tax laws. The information requested is proportionate with the value of the contract to be awarded.

In line with Government policy all new procurement tenders and contract awards are published via the Government’s central record system known as ‘Contracts Finder’. It would not be possible to quantify prospectively the net tax revenue likely to be generated by each competing bidder.


Written Question
Ophthalmic Services
Monday 15th September 2014

Asked by: Lord Elton (Conservative - Excepted Hereditary)

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask Her Majesty’s Government what steps they are taking to ensure that the optometry services provided under contract to their agencies operate in a market in which there are sufficient independent providers to maintain the stimulus of fair commercial competition.

Answered by Earl Howe - Shadow Deputy Leader of the House of Lords

All Government agencies are subject to European regulations covering both competition and awarding public contracts. Additionally, they apply the Government’s principles of transparency in communicating commercial opportunities, which includes actions to stimulate and attract opportunities for small and medium enterprises.

Standard tender documentation for commercial contracts incorporates a pre-qualification questionnaire that requests information from bidders as part of the Government’s policy, to check compliance with company tax laws. The information requested is proportionate with the value of the contract to be awarded.

In line with Government policy all new procurement tenders and contract awards are published via the Government’s central record system known as ‘Contracts Finder’. It would not be possible to quantify prospectively the net tax revenue likely to be generated by each competing bidder.


Written Question
Hearing Impairment: Health Services
Monday 15th September 2014

Asked by: Lord Elton (Conservative - Excepted Hereditary)

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask Her Majesty’s Government whether they will publish their criteria for the award of contracts for the provision of audiology services to their agencies.

Answered by Earl Howe - Shadow Deputy Leader of the House of Lords

There are no national criteria for awarding contracts for the provision of audiology services with the exception of a small number of specialised services which are commissioned nationally by NHS England. The specifications, setting out what providers must have in place to deliver specialised audiology services, can be found on the NHS England website at the following link:

www.england.nhs.uk/ourwork/commissioning/spec-services/npc-crg/group-d/d09

The national contract for the provision of hearing aids is managed through the NHS Supply Chain and provides for the assessment of patients by National Health Service audiology professionals, as well as the provision and fitting of digital hearing aids. This contract ran from 2010 until 2014, and has subsequently been extended to July 2016. It is currently under review to determine the options for re-procurement after 2016. More information can be found at the NHS Supply Chain website at the following link:

www.supplychain.nhs.uk/product-news/contract-launch-briefs/2014/july/hearing-aids-and-accessories/


Speech in Lords Chamber - Tue 03 Dec 2013
Health: Talking Therapy

"Will my noble friend assure the House that this rule of parity will be introduced in the Prison Service as well as the National Health Service generally?..."
Lord Elton - View Speech

View all Lord Elton (Con - Excepted Hereditary) contributions to the debate on: Health: Talking Therapy

Speech in Lords Chamber - Tue 29 Oct 2013
Care Bill [HL]

"What the noble Baroness has just said prompts me to point out a difficulty. We are in an age when there is controversy about spirituality, when people can actually lose their jobs over issues of spirituality. If there were to be a case arising under this legislation in which such …..."
Lord Elton - View Speech

View all Lord Elton (Con - Excepted Hereditary) contributions to the debate on: Care Bill [HL]

Speech in Lords Chamber - Tue 29 Oct 2013
Care Bill [HL]

"My Lords, on the noble Lord’s response to me, if an employee is able to point to statute and say that they are carrying out a requirement of statute, that has a very considerable bearing on tribunal cases and should not be brushed aside...."
Lord Elton - View Speech

View all Lord Elton (Con - Excepted Hereditary) contributions to the debate on: Care Bill [HL]

Speech in Lords Chamber - Tue 30 Oct 2012
Winterbourne View

"My Lords, my noble friend is right: the care of people with learning difficulties requires a different order of commitment, compassion and patience. The Government are putting some weight on referring and sending people with learning difficulties out of institutions and into private homes. Can he give us reassuring news …..."
Lord Elton - View Speech

View all Lord Elton (Con - Excepted Hereditary) contributions to the debate on: Winterbourne View

Speech in Lords Chamber - Tue 30 Oct 2012
Winterbourne View

"My Lords, learning-difficulty patients are extremely aggravating at times and their carers have enormous power over them and can be tempted to abuse it—hence the results we have seen. The same can be said of prisoners and prison officers. When I was Minister for the Prison Service many years ago …..."
Lord Elton - View Speech

View all Lord Elton (Con - Excepted Hereditary) contributions to the debate on: Winterbourne View