33rd year AADHIKAR
0225 GMT Thursday 06 June 2013
AADHIKAR Media Foundation Editor © Muhammad Haque
Founding News Editor
Shah M Azizul Haque
AADHIKAR Media Foundation established with the publication of AADHIKAR the weekly on Monday 19 December 1980 from London E1 UK.
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
KHOODEELAAR! TOLD YOU SO: "DfT to cut spending by a third”, news report 29 July 2009
DfT to cut spending by a third, says media report
Ben Cook, Regen.net, 29 July 2009
The Department for Transport's spending on transport projects in the eight years to 2018/19 will be almost a third lower than set out in a projection two years ago, according to a press report.
The DfT will reduce spending by a total of £28.9 billion between 2011/12 and 2018/19, says the report, which attributes the data to "internal Department for Transport figures".
The 2007 Comprehensive Spending Review projected spending of £88.1 billion during the period, but this will be cut to £59.2 billion, according to the report.
The cut in spending casts doubt on the DfT's ability to fund major infrastructure upgrades such as Crossrail, the report in New Transit magazine says.
But a spokesman for the DfT said: "The future budgets of the DfT have not been set yet - they will be set during the next Comprehensive Spending Review."
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KHOODEELAAR! TOLD YOU SO: "DfT to cut spending by a third”, news report 29 July 2009
DfT to cut spending by a third, says media report
Ben Cook, Regen.net, 29 July 2009
The Department for Transport's spending on transport projects in the eight years to 2018/19 will be almost a third lower than set out in a projection two years ago, according to a press report.
The DfT will reduce spending by a total of £28.9 billion between 2011/12 and 2018/19, says the report, which attributes the data to "internal Department for Transport figures".
The 2007 Comprehensive Spending Review projected spending of £88.1 billion during the period, but this will be cut to £59.2 billion, according to the report.
The cut in spending casts doubt on the DfT's ability to fund major infrastructure upgrades such as Crossrail, the report in New Transit magazine says.
But a spokesman for the DfT said: "The future budgets of the DfT have not been set yet - they will be set during the next Comprehensive Spending Review."