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Jane Platt is chief executive of NS&I, Britain’s venerable state-owned savings bank. She talks to Joshua Chambers about keeping rival financial institutions sweet, diversity in the City, and the future for arm’s-length bodies.
The civil service’s separation of policy and delivery professionals is “artificial” and “crackers”, the government’s digital director Mike Bracken told an audience at Civil Service Live earlier this month, and IT policies should be produced by “multi-disciplinary teams” bringing together the two sets of specialists.
The current system for applying for carer’s allowance is “atrocious” and provides “a really poor service”, the man in charge of digital services at the Department for Work and Pensions has said.
The Department of Health has launched a new digital toolkit for policymakers.
PASC chair Bernard Jenkin is highly critical of aspects of the civil service – but he’s sympathetic to civil servants themselves, and earlier this month an audience of officials gave his arguments a warm reception. Matt Ross reports.
Officials leading major projects can now benefit from a ‘pivotal role allowance’ (PRA) introduced to encourage senior responsible owners (SROs) to stay in their job for the full length of a project, Sir Bob Kerslake, the head of the civil service, told Civil Service Live last week.
A national campaign to improve the treatment of long-term conditions was launched this week by an alliance of NHS managers and businesses.
America’s fracking revolution has driven down energy prices and given the economy a boost – but could the same happen here? CSW asked the Institute of Directors’ Corin Taylor and energy expert Professor Jim Watson of the University of Sussex to address the question: will fracking be good for the UK?
The civil service has been too slow to improve the working conditions of staff, civil service leaders have admitted. Speaking at Civil Service Live last week, they pledged that much more will be achieved over the next year.
Cabinet Office minister Francis Maude will today announce that secretaries of state are to be allowed to expand their private offices, mainly by appointing policy advisers on short-term civil service contracts. He is also expected to say that he does not intend to push for further changes to the permanent secretary appointments process this year.
A hospital doctor says government edicts and the fear of litigation are limiting medical staffs’ freedom to learn their trade and act in their patients’ best interests. Tom Barfield reports.
The Caxton Grill, housed in the newly refurbished four-star St Ermin’s Hotel by St James’s Park, has long offered refreshments to civil servants of the subterranean variety. MI6 and MI5 operatives met contacts here in the 1930s, and during World War II Winston Churchill ordered that the Special Operations Executive (now the SAS) be formed here. Ian Fleming used to work in St Ermin’s – as did traitors Guy Burgess and Kim Philby, the latter meeting his Soviet contact in the hotel bar.
Though their origins lie in military applications, drones are increasingly being used in a civilian context. Winnie Agbonlahor reports on how the public sector might capitalise on the opportunities around unmanned aircraft.
The government will do more to improve the workplace conditions of civil servants over the next year, cabinet secretary Sir Jeremy Heywood pledged this week at Civil Service Live.
The civil service has increased its productivity and begun to reform, cabinet secretary Sir Jeremy Heywood told an audience at Civil Service Live yesterday, but it will have to redouble its efforts to help the country deal with its huge economic and fiscal challenges.
As chief executive of the Shareholder Executive, Mark Russell is responsible for overseeing the running of more than 20 government-owned businesses. Joshua Chambers meets him to discuss transparency, pay and privatisation
Ordnance Survey and the Met Office should do more to support the open data agenda, according to Mark Russell, chief executive of the Shareholder Executive.
Weak civil service pay risks brain drain, warn top officials
The number of civil servants taking courses with the government's new training provider, Civil Service Learning (CSL), has increased from 40,000 to 400,000 in the past year, it was revealed today.
Benjamin Franklin once spoke of the perils of sacrificing precious liberty for a little temporary security. His words have a powerful resonance following the saga of state surveillance exposed in recent weeks.
Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) officials believe the department will be criticised by Sir John Chilcot’s inquiry into the Iraq War over the poor state of its record-keeping, according to its 2012-13 departmental improvement plan published last month.
The Land Registry is making a data set that previously was paid-for available for free, as part of its open data programme, it has been announced today.
The delivery of “crucial” infrastructure projects is to be coordinated by "commercial experts" - not civil servants - Danny Alexander, chief secretary to the Treasury announced today, when setting out the government’s £100bn infrastructure plan.
Bringing the UK Border Agency back under Home Office jurisdiction has involved more than cosmetic changes, the department’s permanent secretary has insisted.