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| Wednesday, 16 October, 2002, 10:13 GMT 11:13 UK Winter beds boost in budget handout ![]() Health workers await details of the NHS budget An extra �5m has been promised to help ease winter pressure on hospitals in Wales as part of the biggest ever budget windfall for health spending. Health and social services were the biggest beneficiaries in Finance Minister Edwina Hart's �230m draft budget on behalf of the Welsh Assembly Government unveiled on Tuesday - with an extra �110m pledged for health alone. As well as her commitment to helping in the traditional seasonal pressures on hospital beds, Welsh Health Minister Jane Hutt said she would spend another �13m on hospital equipment and �2m on social services.
"We are putting investment into key services and that is what people want to see," said Health Minister Jane Hutt. Part of an assembly pledge to build 10 new hospitals, these will replace ageing buildings in the same communities. But patients will want Ms Hutt to deliver on waiting list reductions, some targets for which have not been met. More details have been held back until next week's health committee gathering. 'I am prudent' Interviewed on BBC Radio Wales on Wednesday, Edwina Hart recognised structural issues had hampered the flow of cash to patient care. "Obviously, there are issues within the health agenda which we are ... determined to put right in the long-term," she said.
Ms Hart also pledged a 8.7% funds rise for education - most for Assembly Learning Grants. Higher education, school buildings and equipment, smaller class sizes, small and rural schools and special educational needs also benefit. The Welsh Assembly Government claimed the pledges for health and education showed its commitment to public services spending. However, Plaid Cymru and the Welsh Conservatives said they were a sweetener to woo voters at next May's assembly elections. Budget swelling Ms Hart denied she was handing out "quick-win" money to win the election, claiming she was "quite a prudent finance minister". The money which she distributes comes directly from the UK Treasury. Chancellor Gordon Brown, in his July spending review, gave Wales a 5% annual funds increase - the Welsh Assembly's budget swelling to �11.8bn by 2005/06. Ms Hart's hand-out includes an 11% year-on-year increase for health services, including �11m for the new Local Health Boards. Economic Development Minister Andrew Davies also announced how he will use �110m given by Ms Hart:
Other assembly ministers will detail plans for spending their individual cash allocation over the next week. |
See also: 10 Jul 02 | Politics 14 Jul 02 | Business 14 Jan 00 | Wales 14 Jan 00 | Wales 12 Jul 02 | Wales Internet links: The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites Top Wales stories now: Links to more Wales stories are at the foot of the page. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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