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  • Priorities for the Coming Year (Supplementary) [8]

    • Question by: Elizabeth Howlett
    • Meeting date: 10 November 2007
    Can I just ask what you and Visit London are doing about increasing the number of hotel rooms in London? Particularly as we move forward to 2012, it is going to be a very important issue. A very important issue would be the standard of these rooms and also the cost. Will you be investigating hotel companies that actually put their room costs up to an exorbitant rate as they move towards 2012?
  • Barriers to Employment (Supplementary) [5]

    • Question by: Joanne McCartney
    • Meeting date: 11 October 2006
    I am glad to hear that because, of course, Tottenham and Edmonton have got some of the highest worklessness rates in London. I want to just briefly move on to the London Skills and Employment Board. Do you have a timetable yet as to when this strategy may be developed?
  • Barriers to Employment (Supplementary) [9]

    • Question by: Joanne McCartney
    • Meeting date: 11 October 2006
    I would like to ask firstly about Assisted Area status. You know my concerns with that, especially with developing part of the Lea Valley. I know the Chair sent a helpful letter in the summer and this Assembly also lobbied on this. Do we have any news, first of all, as to where those negotiations are going?
  • Barriers to Employment (Supplementary) [15]

    • Question by: Joanne McCartney
    • Meeting date: 11 October 2006
    I think in tackling worklessness, it is obviously important that you have children coming out of school and training and retraining for adults to meet the needs of the workplace, but I am wondering presumably you will be consulting with business, about what business needs and a strategy but will you also be consulting with young people as well? I know from some of the work we have done on the Economic Development Committee that the views of young people often is that perhaps academia is not the best place for many of them and that they should be given...
  • Barriers to Employment (Supplementary) [21]

    • Question by: Elizabeth Howlett
    • Meeting date: 11 October 2006
    It is not the fault of the education system. The educators will know that if young people have manual skills and are not academic, they can, at the end of their education, push them in the that direction, but there is nowhere to push them to because there are not enough training places. We do not have trade colleges now, we do not have apprenticeship schemes. It is really quite serious and it is about time certain people woke up to this. The Learning and Skills Council have done a very, very poor job in this area and we cannot...