
HS2 boss was accused of covering up rail delays
The new chairman of HS2 was accused of covering up delays in another large-scale rail project.
Mike Brown, the former Transport for London commissioner, will be announced as the multi-billion-pound railway scheme's new chairman on Wednesday.
But six years ago, when Mr Brown was in charge of Crossrail, the London Assembly found he covered up delays to the cross-capital underground railway line.
A 2019 report said Mr Brown 'largely ignored' crucial information from engineers in favour of telling politicians and fellow senior public officials that everything was on track.
Keith Prince, the London Assembly Conservatives' transport spokesman, said on Wednesday: 'This is nothing short of a disgrace – the allegation that the then-chair of TfL lied, attempted to cover his tracks, and was ultimately rewarded for this completely boggles the mind.
'This will be a serious knock to the faith the public have in the Government, and the Mayor of London, as they ask themselves how else the wool is being pulled over their eyes.'
Internal Transport for London (TfL) messages, published by the London Assembly in 2019, showed how Mr Brown, who was TfL's project sponsor for Crossrail, withheld crucial details of delays from Sir Sadiq Khan, the London mayor.

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BBC News
41 minutes ago
- BBC News
Law change alone not enough to help homeless, say Yorkshire charities
The government has decided to decriminalise homelessness in England and Wales - but charity bosses say the move will do little to give dignity to rough week ministers announced plans to scrap the Vagrancy Act - first introduced in 1824 - with Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner labelling it "cruel and outdated".Representatives from homelessness charities in Bradford and Sheffield said they were unaware of the legislation still being used to prosecute people, with a government spokesperson admitting use of the act had "significantly declined over the years".Tim Renshaw, chief executive of the Sheffield-based Cathedral Archer Project, said: "I think it will bypass most people that they could have been arrested purely for being vagrant." Mr Renshaw, whose organisation helps people off the streets, said the law change was "probably going to be trumped up as something it probably isn't"."Nobody is seeing people who don't have homes as criminals by default," he said."They are seeing the behaviour of some of those people who don't have homes as anti-social and are therefore looking for enforcement against that."According to Mr Renshaw, the announcement "lacks the other element of how do we give dignity, if we are not going to say that people are criminals? How do we include them in society?". The Labour government said it planned to replace the Vagrancy Act with "targeted measures" that would "ensure police have the powers they need to keep communities safe".They would include new offences of facilitating begging for gain and trespassing with the intention of committing a Renshaw said any enforcement measures should be accompanied by support for homeless people."If we say: 'You can't do that activity in that place', at the same time we need to be saying: 'How do we support you not to do that activity in this place?'."It's not that enforcement doesn't have a place, it's just that by itself it will only ever displace [from one area to another]."In Sheffield, the Cathedral Archer Project is working on what Mr Renshaw calls a "support model", backed by authorities including the police and city has become more visible in the city centre in recent years, with an outreach charity counting 71 people sleeping rough in and around central Sheffield in August last year. 'Homeless have complex needs' Steve Richardson, a trustee of Bradford charity Homeless Not Hopeless, welcomed the law change as a "great step forward", but said it "should just be the first step"."People can at least live their lives without automatically being criminalised," he said."Let's start putting in place the mechanisms to actually help and support them."Mr Richardson described the Vagrancy Act as "a convenient rule if somebody needed to be moved on as a threat".However, in his view, "just giving people a flat isn't the answer"."These people, after years of sleeping rough, have complex needs," he added."They need some support to address them." Homeless Not Hopeless supports between 100 and 150 people in Bradford every week, a "significant proportion" of whom are homeless, said Mr is based next to railway arches at Forster Square Station, a location where some of the city's homeless would sleep until they were moved on by Bradford Council last year to provide space for art installations as part of City of Culture Richardson said he was "absolutely confident" people on the streets would "pay back every penny of investment to get them back on their feet"."They want jobs, they want to work, to pay tax. Many, many many of them also try to give something back."We have several people we have supported over the years who have come back and volunteered."The government said it had boosted funding for homelessness services by an extra £233m this financial year, bringing total investment for 2025-26 to nearly £1bn.A spokesperson said the deputy prime minister was also developing a new homelessness strategy with other government departments, as well as mayors and councils, to be published later this year. Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
MoD staff lose record number of security passes
Officials at the Ministry of Defence (MoD) have admitted losing a record number of security passes. More than 15,000 passes have been lost over the past five years by MoD employees, while another 1,000 were logged as stolen. It means the passes, which give access to buildings within the nation's defence institutions, are vanishing at the rate of almost 80 every week. Security experts fear the number of AWOL passes could pose a security or terror risk to the nation if they fell into the wrong hands. The revelation comes after pro-Palestinian protesters broke into RAF Brize Norton and damaged two military planes on Friday morning. Palestine Action said two of its activists had broken into the Oxfordshire base and sprayed red paint into the engines of two Airbus Voyager aircraft. Friday's incident has led to calls for Palestine Action to become a proscribed terror group in Britain, from high-profile politicians such as Nigel Farage and Robert Jenrick, the shadow home secretary. The numbers on missing MoD security passes, obtained under Freedom of Information requests, show the number of passes lost has almost doubled in the space of four years, rising from 2,043 in 2020 to more than 3,830 last year. The number of stolen passes trebled from 82 to 278 over the same period. The figures show there was a dip in reports of missing passes during the pandemic, but the number increased as workers returned to the office. A security industry expert said many organisations have opted for a pass system called 'exchange badging', where the employee only leaves their HQ with a blank plastic card that has no markings to reveal either the staff member or their employer. This unmarked card gains the employee access to their company building, where it is then exchanged for their named access card. The security source said: 'This system is used more frequently now and it has the advantage that if a card is lost outside it is just a blank piece of plastic and the security ramifications are much less.' 'Worrying lack of responsibility' Admiral Lord West of Spithead, the former navy chief, said in 2023 that lost passes were 'not something that should be taken lightly'. He added: 'It is a security risk, but also a terrorist risk.' In June 2021, the MoD suffered an embarrassing security breach when a senior official mistakenly left a stack of sensitive documents at a bus stop in Kent. John O'Connell, the chief executive of the TaxPayers' Alliance, said: 'It's ludicrous that thousands of security passes have been lost or stolen by those in the very department meant to keep Britain safe.' Col Philip Ingram, the former army intelligence officer, said: 'What the numbers highlight is a worrying lack of responsibility by employees so there should be consequences if passes are lost – as one has to ask what else is being misplaced. 'However, the loss of passes provides a small risk – to access sensitive areas there are always other checks, whether they be signing into guard rooms or security offices, using digital PIN codes or other means.' A Ministry of Defence spokesman said: 'We treat all breaches of security very seriously and we require all suspected breaches to be reported. All incidents are subjected to an initial security risk assessment, with further action taken on a proportionate basis.'


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
It is time to suspend Dominic Grieve's anti-Islamophobia group
There have been too many casualties in the grooming gang scandal. Yet so far, the political consequences have been few. It is far from clear however that Dominic Grieve's Anti-Muslim Hatred/Islamophobia Definition Working Group can, or should, survive this week's fall out. What a few weeks ago was dismissed as 'dog-whistle' politics or the agenda of the 'far-Right' – the scandal of mass grooming of girls by mostly Pakistani origin males – is now viewed very differently. This shifting ground greatly impacts attempts to establish a definition of 'Islamophobia ' – controversially signposted by Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner in February. A new Policy Exchange report How Not to Tackle Grooming Gangs: The National Grooming Gang Inquiry and a Definition of Islamophobia details just how difficult it has been, for over two decades, to describe openly what people could see about grooming gangs with their own eyes. Let four examples suffice here. For her past work on Rotherham, Louise Casey was put forward for an 'Islamophobe of the year award' by one activist group. The late journalist Andrew Norfolk was vilified, as was then Labour MP for Keighley, Ann Cryer. In 2020, when broadcaster Trevor Phillips was suspended by Labour for alleged Islamophobia, the first charge listed was journalism where he had written of 'the exposure of systematic and longstanding abuse by men, mostly of Pakistani Muslim origin in the North of England.' How ridiculous this orthodoxy now looks. On one level, Government appears to accept this new reality. On Monday the Home Secretary declared 'those vile perpetrators who have grown used to the authorities looking the other way must have no place to hide.' As she spoke, she was surrounded by female Labour MPs who appeared chastened by the weight of events. And yet, there are grounds for pessimism. For the national inquiry into grooming gangs to work it cannot be placed in a straitjacket. It will need to shine a torchlight into every Whitehall office, every stalled police inquiry, each Town Hall in England, and every licensing arrangement between a local authority and a taxi firm. Its hands cannot be tied by political, social or religious considerations. As Yvette Cooper spoke in the Commons, others were risking that very scenario. The call for evidence by Grieve's working group is underway, as he seeks to develop a new definition of Islamophobia. While ministers have said this would not be statutory, if accepted by the public and private sector (as activists will demand) it would in practice become binding policy if not law. To that backdrop, how confident would a care worker, teacher or local councillor in Rochdale or Rotherham be, about speaking openly on issues which concern them? Angela Rayner should thank Dominic Grieve and his team for their work, then put the group on ice. If the grooming gang inquiry finds fears of prejudice and Islamophobia have undermined the response to grooming gangs, then the retirement of the Islamophobia Definition Working Group must become permanent.