Published By London Fire and Emergency Planning Authority
Issued over 10 years ago
Summary
Description
[London Fire Brigade](http://www.london-fire.gov.uk/"London Fire Brigade") is the busiest fire and rescue service in the country and one of the largest firefighting and rescue organisations in the world. Each year they receive around a quarter of a million ‘999’ calls of which around 120,000 are incidents requiring a fire engine response. This dataset contains the details of every fire engine (pumping appliance) sent to an incident since January 2009. Information is provided for the appliance mobilised, where it was deployed from and the times recorded for arriving at the incident. The Zip file contains two CSV files. (31MB) [Metadata for this file](https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/londondatastore-upload/lfb-mobilisations-metadata.xls). (includes description of field names) Also available is all [LFB incident records](/datastore/package/london-fire-brigade-incident-records) since January 2009. This data about the incidents attended by the London Fire Brigade includes the fire station area where the incident happened; the fire station area is currently used for mobilising and other administrative purposes. On 9 January 2014, ten London fire stations were closed as part of the Authority’s Fifth London Safety Plan (LSP5), and fire station areas were changed to reflect these closures with the station areas of closed stations being distributed to adjacent fire station areas. To provide consistent incident data, stations grounds have been changed for all incidents in this data set and reflect the station areas in use from 9 January 2014.
Published By London Fire and Emergency Planning Authority
Issued over 10 years ago
Summary
Description
[London Fire Brigade](www.london-fire.gov.uk"London Fire Brigade") is the busiest fire and rescue service in the country and one of the largest firefighting and rescue organisations in the world. Each year they receive around a quarter of a million ‘999’ calls of which around 120,000 are incidents requiring a fire engine response. This dataset contains the details of every incident responded to since January 2009. Information is provided for when and where the incident happened an the type of incident dealt with. Zip file containing two CSV files (38MB) [Metadata for this file](https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/londondatastore-upload/lfb-incidents-metadata.xls) is available which also includes a Glossary and descriptions for the incident ‘Stop-codes’. Also available is all [LFB mobilisation records](/datastore/package/london-fire-brigade-mobilisation-records) (for fire engines) to incidents since January 2009. This data about the incidents attended by the London Fire Brigade includes the fire station area where the incident happened; the fire station area is currently used for mobilising and other administrative purposes. On 9 January 2014, ten London fire stations were closed as part of the Authority’s Fifth London Safety Plan (LSP5), and fire station areas were changed to reflect these closures with the station areas of closed stations being distributed to adjacent fire station areas. To provide consistent incident data, stations grounds have been changed for all incidents in this data set and reflect the station areas in use from 9 January 2014.
Impacts of the changes to fire stations and fire engines as a result of the Fifth London Safety Plan (LSP5)
Published By London Fire and Emergency Planning Authority
Issued over 10 years ago
Summary
Description
Data about response times to incidents, fires and fire safety work to support analysis of impacts of the implementation of changes to London Fire Brigade fire stations and deployment of fire engines in January 2015 as a result of the LFEPA Fifth London Safety Plan (LSP5) [London Fire Brigade](http://www.london-fire.gov.uk/) is the busiest fire and rescue service in the country and one of the largest firefighting and rescue organisations in the world. Each year they receive around 200,000 ‘999’ calls of which around 100,000 are incidents requiring a fire engine response. On 9 January 2014, ten London fire stations were closed as part of the Authority’s Fifth London Safety Plan (LSP5), 14 fire engines (net) and one fire rescue unit were removed from service, and some other fire engines deployed to different stations. In September, the Authority’s Strategy Committee requested a report assessing the impact of the LSP5 changes since January 2014. A report to the full LFEPA meeting on 27 November 2014 provides that assessment (report FEP2363 - Statement of Assurance 2013/14 and the impact of the Fifth London Safety Plan (LSP5)) and is available [here](http://moderngov.london-fire.gov.uk/ieListDocuments.aspx?CId=119&MId=337&Ver=4). Included in that report are detailed data tables providing relevant data to help assess the impact of LSP5 changes at borough and ward level. Those datasets – which comprise appendices 3 and 4 of the report – are made available here in open format (CSV). The data sets cover 12 month periods from 2011/12 to 2013/14 (12 months April to March each year) plus total data for the period January to August 2014. LFEPA already published full datasets for incidents attended since January 2009 (which details about that incident including location), plus a dataset which details of every fire engine (pumping appliance) sent to an incident. These datasets are updated on a monthly basis. Download: [Zip](https://londondatastore-upload.s3.amazonaws.com/dataset/impacts-of-the-changes-to-fire-stations-and-fire-engines/lfepa.zip) file containing five CSV files. (60 KB) [Metadata for this file](https://londondatastore-upload.s3.amazonaws.com/dataset/impacts-of-the-changes-to-fire-stations-and-fire-engines/Meta data for London Datastore LSP5 impacts FEP2363 - November 2014.xlsx) (includes description of field names) Also available is all [fire engine mobilisations](http://data.london.gov.uk/dataset/london-fire-brigade-mobilisation-records) since January 2009 Also available is all [LFB incident records](/dataset/london-fire-brigade-incident-records) since January 2009.
Published By London Ambulance Service
Issued over 10 years ago
Summary
Description
[Monthly London Ambulance Service call out data](https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/londondatastore-upload/ambulance-borough-monthly.xls) by type of incident and borough. This excel file contains numbers for ambulance calls for each borough in London including: All incidents attended, All assault incidents attended, Assaults on women, Assaults on teenagers, Gun injuries, Knife injuries, All weapon injuries, Animal injuries, Binge drinking (alcohol poisoning where patient aged under 40), Cocaine, and Heroin overdoses Volumes are derived by searching a database holding the records of all ambulances despatched in London. The records consist of data collected by paramedics or other ambulance staff, who record retrospectively if they believe an assault to have taken place. They also collect data on whether a weapon was used, or if the attended patient is suffering from an alcohol related illness. Each record has information from the 999 Call Handler. This can include data on specific type of weapon is collected. This is how we derive gun or knife injury as well heroin or cocaine overdose. From time to time the data collected may not be an accurate representation of the actual event. However the data is relevant for understanding broad patterns in different types of crime and disorder nonetheless. The number of incidents where a animal bite injury has been reported to the ambulance service. This data is filtered to include only bites from large animals (there are no specific data on dog bites, however the data is used to derive broad trends on dog issues.) The number of incidents where the ambulance service have attended someone suffering from an alcohol related illness. **Focussing on patients under 40 allows broad trends in Binge Drinking to be identified.** Older age groups may be more likely to be attended by the ambulance service for longer term alcohol related health issues.
Published By Department for Work and Pensions
Issued over 10 years ago
Summary
Description
Job Seekers Allowance (JSA) replaced Unemployment Benefit and Income Support for unemployed people on 7th October 1996. It is payable to people under state pension age who are available for and actively seeking work. Participants in some government training schemes are able to claim JSA. In addition to signing an agreement with Job Centre Plus stipulating work restrictions and a programme for finding work a person must: be living in Great Britain; be capable of work; not in education; not be working 16 or more hours a week on average. Additionally, the partners of claimants of income-based JSA should not work for 24 hours or more per week JSA is either contribution or income-based depending on individual circumstances. Those who have paid sufficient National Insurance contributions receive contribution-based JSA for up to six months. Those who do not qualify for, or whose needs are not met by contribution based JSA, may qualify for income-based help for themselves and their dependents, where dependents are defined as children under the age of 16 plus young dependent adults aged 16 to 18.
Published By Department for Work and Pensions
Issued over 10 years ago
Summary
Description
Incapacity Benefit (IB) replaced Sickness Benefit and Invalidity Benefit from 13 April 1995. It is paid to people who are assessed as being incapable of work and who meet certain contribution conditions. There are three rates of Incapacity Benefit. There are two short-term rates: the lower rate (IBST(L)) is paid for the first 28 weeks of sickness and the higher rate (IBST(H)) for weeks 29 to 52. The long-term rate (IBLT) applies to people who have been sick for more than a year. The higher short-term rate and the long-term rate are treated as taxable income. For the first 28 weeks of incapacity, people previously in work are assessed on the ‘own occupation’ test, i.e. the claimant’s ability to do their own job. Otherwise incapacity is based on the ‘personal capability assessment’ (formerly ‘all work test’), which assesses ability to carry out a range of work-related activities. The test applies after 28 weeks of incapacity or from the start of the claim for people who did not previously have a job. Certain people are exempt from the personal capability assessment. These include, those in receipt of the Disability Living Allowance care component at the higher rate, those registered blind, and those suffering from a severe illness (for example tetraplegia, persistent vegetative state, dementia). Increases are paid for a dependant who is caring for a child or where the spouse is aged 60 or over. Increases for children are paid with the short-term higher rate and with the long-term rate. With the introduction of the new Child Tax Credit on 6 April 2003 no new child dependency increases were awarded, although all existing increases were transitionally protected. An age addition is paid with the long-term rate.
Published By Department for Work and Pensions
Issued over 10 years ago
Summary
Description
Numbers and rates of [people claiming Employment Support Allowance](https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/londondatastore-upload/employment-support-allowance-borough.xls). Employment and Support Allowance (ESA) replaced Incapacity Benefit and Income Support paid on the grounds of incapacity for new claims from 27th October 2008.
Published By Department for Work and Pensions
Issued over 10 years ago
Summary
Description
[Table](https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/londondatastore-upload/income-support-borough.xls) showing numbers and rates of income support claimants. Income Support is intended to help people on low incomes who do not have to be available for employment. It can normally be claimed by people who are: \- aged 16 or over; \- not working or working under 16 hours per week (and/or with a partner working under 24 hours); \- not required to be available for full-time employment; and \- in receipt of insufficient income to meet prescribed needs. The main types of people who receive it are lone parents, the long and short-term sick, people with disabilities and other special groups. Rates are as a percentage of all people aged 16-64 from ONS mid-year estimates. This dataset is based on 100% of claims so is not subject to any sampling error. In outputs figures are rounded to the nearest 10. Data relate to a single point in time, the reference date, and provide a snapshot of claims at that point. The reference date is the last day of the month in question. Data are not seasonally adjusted so any comparisons should be made year on year. Exercise caution when using time series as figures are affected by the introduction of the Child Tax Credit (CTC) in April 2003. After August 2003 there was a sharp decline in the total number of claimants. This is due to the migration of most existing Minimum Income Guarantee claimants (1.8 million) to Pension Credit, which was introduced in October 2003. Figures under 500 are subject to high sampling variation and should be used with caution. \- These figures are missing. Download from NOMISweb https://www.nomisweb.co.uk
Published By Office for National Statistics (ONS)
Issued over 10 years ago
Summary
Description
[Tables](https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/londondatastore-upload/workless-households-borough.xls) show numbers and proportions of households that are classified as working, mixed or workless for all years between 2004 and 2012. Households include at least one person aged 16 to 64. '*' = Sample size too small to provide an estimate. Data comes from the Annual Population Survey (APS). Years are calender years, January-December. See more on the [NOMIS website](http://www.nomisweb.co.uk/).
Published By Thames Water
Issued over 10 years ago
Summary
Description
[Table](https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/londondatastore-upload/london-reservoir-levels.xls) showing daily Reservoir levels in London since 1989 as percentage of usable or deployable capacity in the Lower Lee Group and Lower Thames Group reservoirs. Usable or deployable capacity excludes water normally left in a reservoir for environmental or emergency contingency measures. View [Environment Agency website](http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk/research/library/publications/127606.aspx)
Published By Greater London Authority (GLA)
Issued over 10 years ago
Summary
Description
The Mayor is committed to providing financial transparency and has instructed that regular reports should be published on all GLA expenditure over £1,000, including VAT. From summer 2010 the reporting threshold was reduced to £500 (including VAT) and from June 2012 the threshold has been reduced to £250. These reports are available from the GLA website in both comma delimited format (CSV) and portable document format (PDF), and are listed chronologically (by month). See more on the [GLA website](http://www.london.gov.uk/mayor-assembly/gla/spending-money-wisely/budget-expenditure-charges/expenditure-over-250)
Published By Greater London Authority (GLA)
Issued over 10 years ago
Summary
Description
This report from the GLA Intelligence Unit looks at the most recent figures from the DWP's households below average income series, on which the government's official poverty targets are based. Please download the report at the link below. [Report](https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/londondatastore-upload/Update_09_2013_Poverty_Figures_2011_12.pdf) The data underpinning the report, are available to download at the link below. [Data](https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/londondatastore-upload/Poverty_2013_update.xls)
Published By Greater London Authority (GLA)
Issued over 10 years ago
Summary
Description
London Energy and Greenhouse Gas Inventory 2008 showing greenhouse gas emissions and energy consumption. LEGGI 2008 is a database of geographically referenced datasets of energy consumption within the Greater London area and estimates of the quantity of resulting greenhouse gases (GHG) – carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), nitrous oxide (N2O), hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), perfluorocarbons (PFCs) and sulphur hexafluoride (SF6) – emitted into the air. _Technical Information_ Due to the size of the LEGGI database this dataset has been zipped and needs to be downloaded in two parts: 1. [MS Access Database](https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/londondatastore-upload/gla-leggi-2008-database.zip) (63mb zipped) 2. [Supporting Folders and Files](https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/londondatastore-upload/gla-leggi-2008-folders.zip) (154mb zipped) To use the LEGGI database please download both files to a local drive and extract the contents to the same folder. Double-click the LEGGI_2008.mdb file to start the system. For further details please consult the User Guide and Emission Estimation Methodology Guide which can be found in the Documentation folder after the files have been extracted.
Published By Greater London Authority (GLA)
Issued over 10 years ago
Summary
Description
Results of first public survey of users of the cycle hire scheme and cycle superhighways used to inform London Assembly Transport Committee report, '[Pedal Power: cycle hire scheme and cycle superhighways](http://www.london.gov.uk/publication/pedal-power)', November 2010. Results of online survey by London Assembly Transport Committee of 1,297 users of the cycle hire scheme and cycle superhighways undertaken over September to October 2010. The survey was self-selecting and as such is not intended to be representative of all users. The [anonymised survey response data is provided in CSV](https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/londondatastore-upload/assembly-bike-survey-data.csv) format, along with a [list of the questions that were asked](https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/londondatastore-upload/assembly-bike-survey-questions.csv) and a [summary of responses](https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/londondatastore-upload/assembly-bike-survey-summary-tables.xls) for each question.
Published By Greater London Authority (GLA)
Issued over 10 years ago
Summary
Description
The LAEI 2008 has been replaced by the LAEI 2010 available from 10 July 2013. Estimates of eight key and six subsidiary pollutants are included for the base year 2008 and projected forward to 2011 and 2015. The LAEI area covers the 32 London Boroughs and the City of London and up to the M25 motorway. Detailed [concentration modelling maps](https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/londondatastore-upload/laei-2008-concentration-maps) from the LAEI 2008 can also be downloaded from the Datastore. Technical Information: Due to the size of the LAEI database this dataset has been zipped and needs to be downloaded in two parts. The front-end MS Access database is available in two formats - 2000 and 2003. Please choose the appropriate one depending on which version of MS Office (Access, Excel and Word) you have installed on your machine. 1. [MS Access 2003 Format Database](https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/londondatastore-upload/datafiles/environment/laei-2008-database.zip) (226mb zipped) 2. [MS Access 2000 Format Database ](https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/londondatastore-upload/datafiles/environment/laei-2008-database-v2000.zip)(219mb zipped) All users will also need to download the supporting files and folders in order for either databases to function properly. [Supporting Folders and Files](https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/londondatastore-upload/datafiles/environment/laei-2008-folders.zip) (98mb zipped) To use the LAEI please download either of the front-end databases and the supporting files to a local drive and extract the contents to a new folder using the "use folder names" option. The contents of the folder to which you extracted the files should look like [the example image](https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/londondatastore-upload/datastorefiles/images/laei-2008-extract-folder.png). Double-click the LAEI_2008.mdb file to start the system. Due to the size of this database we recommend working on a local drive rather than over a network. For further details please consult the User Guide and Emission Estimation Methodology Guide which can be found in the Documentation folder after the files have been extracted. In particular please note the final section regarding software object libraries which may be important if you experience any compatibility problems with different version of Access and Excel. Find out about Clearing London's air [here](https://www.london.gov.uk/priorities/environment/clearing-londons-air"Clearing London's air")
Published By Greater London Authority (GLA)
Issued over 10 years ago
Summary
Description
The [Code of Recommended Practice for Local Authorities on Data Transparency](http://www.communities.gov.uk/publications/localgovernment/transparencycode), issued by the Department for Communities & Local Government in September 2011, set out a number of principles for local authorities which were intended to underpin best practice in the creation of greater transparency through the publication of public data. One of the key requirements was the publication of senior employee salaries above £58,200 together with names, job descriptions, responsibilities and budgets. [View senior staff salaries for the GLA, together with links to job descriptions](http://www.london.gov.uk/mayor-assembly/gla/spending-money-wisely/salaries-and-expenses/gla-senior-staff-salaries). A [departmental organisation chart (PDF)](http://www.london.gov.uk/sites/default/files/GLA%20org%20chart%20July%202012_0.pdf) is also available. It should be noted that the Code provided for individuals to be given the option to refuse consent for their name to be published and, where the name is given as 'withheld', this is because the individual concerned has expressly refused consent for their name to be included. The [CSV file of the senior staff data](http://www.london.gov.uk/sites/default/files/GLA%20employee%20salaries%2019%20July%202012.csv) is a basic format spreadsheet which permits analysis of the data.
Published By Greater London Authority (GLA)
Issued over 10 years ago
Summary
Description
The [Code of Recommended Practice for Local Authorities on Data Transparency](http://www.communities.gov.uk/publications/localgovernment/transparencycode), issued by the Department for Communities & Local Government in September 2011, set out a number of principles for local authorities which were intended to underpin best practice in the creation of greater transparency through the publication of public data. One of the key requirements was the publication of details of grants to the voluntary community and social enterprise sector. The relevant information for the GLA's current funding agreements is given below, as a PDF file. Where appropriate a link is provided to the Mayoral or Director's decision to grant the funding, which provides background details. The data is also available as a CSV file in a basic format spreadsheet which permits analysis of the data.
Published By Greater London Authority (GLA)
Issued over 10 years ago
Summary
Description
London Energy and Greenhouse Gas Inventory (LEGGI) 2010 showing greenhouse gas emissions and energy consumption for London. The is the final confirmed version of the LEGGI 2010. LEGGI shows estimates of energy consumption and carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from Homes, Workplaces and Transport within the Greater London area. It is produced by the Greater London Authority on an annual basis to measure progress against the Mayor's Climate Change Mitigation and Energy Strategy. LEGGI uses sub-regional energy (electricity, gas and other fuels) and CO2 data published by DECC for Homes and Workplaces, and data from the London Atmospheric Emissions Inventory (LAEI) for energy and CO2 data for Transport.
Published By Greater London Authority (GLA)
Issued over 10 years ago
Summary
Description
Declaration of personal interests by the Mayor's Office. The 25 Members of the London Assembly and the Mayor of London are required to declare their personal interests in the Standing Register of Interests. Members must register these details with the GLA's Monitoring Officer within 28 days of the commencement of their term of office, and must submit an updated notification within 28 days of becoming aware of any change to their personal interests. This currently links to the existing pages on the GLA website where the information can be found. We are working on making this data available in an easier to use format. Relevant link: http://www.london.gov.uk/mayor-assembly/gla/Maintaining-high-standards/register-of-interests
Published By Greater London Authority (GLA)
Issued over 10 years ago
Summary
Description
London’s Environment Revealed is a joint report on the State of the Environment in London, produced by the Greater London Authority, Environment Agency, Natural England and the Forestry Commission. The report looks at the state of London’s environment today, highlights the improvements that have been made, and the challenges the city faces. The report also features many projects and schemes at a local level that have improved the environment in London in recent years. The report uses a series of indicators to illustrate the changes in the state of the environment within eight themes: Climate change, Flood risk, Water quality, Water resources, Waste, Air quality, noise and transport, Biodiversity, and Landscape and green infrastructure. The report was first published in 2011. It has been refreshed in 2013 through an update of the indicators.
Published By Greater London Authority (GLA)
Issued over 10 years ago
Summary
Description
These datasets accompany the London Secondary Heat Study (2013) and provides an understanding of the technical potential (available heat) and deployment potential (delivered heat) of eleven key secondary heat sources in London. The accompanying reports are available on the [GLA website](http://www.london.gov.uk/priorities/environment/tackling-climate-change/energy-supply). Data available for Middle Super Output Areas (MSOA).
Published By Greater London Authority (GLA)
Issued over 10 years ago
Summary
Description
Register of any gift or hospitality worth £25 or over received by Mayor's Office in connection with their official duties. This currently links to the existing pages on the GLA website where the information can be found. We are working on making this data available in an easier to use format. Relevant link: http://www.london.gov.uk/mayor-assembly/gla/Maintaining-high-standards/gifts-and-hospitality-register
Published By Greater London Authority (GLA)
Issued over 10 years ago
Summary
Description
The percentage of the economically active population who are claiming Job Seekers Allowance (JSA). Output from the GLA claimant count model which uses administrative counts of Job Seekers and expresses them as a percentage of the labour force using GLA projections of the economically active population. Designed to complement ONS claimant count rates which use the whole population as the denominator - see the [technical note](https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/londondatastore-upload/Intelligence%20Briefing%202011-02%20Claimant%20count%20model%202011.pdf) for more information (this will be updated to reflect the move to 2012 denominators by 24th Feb 2012). [2012 & 2013 Data](/datastore/package/gla-claimant-count-model-output-2013) [2011 Data](/datastore/package/gla-claimant-count-model-output-2011) [2010 Data](/datastore/package/gla-claimant-count-model-output-2010)
Published By Greater London Authority (GLA)
Issued over 10 years ago
Summary
Description
Declaration of personal interests by the Mayor's Office. The Mayor of London is required to declare personal interests in the Standing Register of Interests. He/she must register these details with the GLA's Monitoring Officer within 28 days of the commencement of his/her term of office, and must submit an updated notification within 28 days of becoming aware of any change. The Mayor has stated that the Register of Interests for Mayoral appointments will also be published in his promotion of openness and transparency. This currently links to the existing pages on the GLA website where the information can be found. We are working on making this data available in an easier to use format. Relevant link: http://www.london.gov.uk/mayor-assembly/gla/Maintaining-high-standards/register-of-interests
Published By Greater London Authority (GLA)
Issued over 10 years ago
Summary
Description
Declaration of expenses incurred by Mayor, Deputy Mayor, Directors and Advisors. This currently links to the existing PDF and RTF documents on the GLA website. We are working on making this data available in a more easy to use format. Related link: http://www.london.gov.uk/mayor-assembly/gla/spending-money-wisely/salaries-and-expenses