Bristol
Introduction
Bristol is a cathedral city and former port on the River Avon. It is a unitary authority, formed on the disbandment of the former county of Avon. Bristol and the other three former Avon unitaries (Bath & North East Somerset, North Somerset and South Gloucestershire) are often collectively called West of England. The Bristol urban area is the largest in the South West; this includes large parts of South Gloucestershire, and smaller parts of both other former Avon unitaries.
Bristol is just south of the junction of the M4 and M5 motorways, and is also well served by the rail network. Although the city’s central floating harbour is no longer used for trade, Bristol has commercial docks on the Severn at Avonmouth and Portbury (in North Somerset). Bristol International Airport, to the south of the city in North Somerset, is the region’s busiest airport. As a commercial centre, Bristol’s largest industry sector is banking, finance and insurance. Manufacturing is relatively low compared to national average; however, aerospace is still a key industry, much of this based in Filton (South Gloucestershire). Public administration and education employ large numbers; there are two universities in the city: Bristol University, and the University of the West of England (UWE), although the main campus of the latter is in South Gloucestershire.
Recent Visits
• on 11 May 2009, Ben Bradshaw, Regional Minister for the South West, attended the Real Help Now Roadshow "Real For Communities" • on 27 April 2009, Kevan Jones, Defence Minister, hosted a meeting of the MOD regioinal engagement group and third sector invitees • on 16 April 2009, Jim Knight, Schools Minister, visited Bristol for an Economic Engagement Real Help Now event • on 19 March 2009, Kevin Brennan, Cabinet Office Minister, visited the National Programme for Third Sector Commissioning Training • on 18 March 2009, Dawn Primarolo, Minister for Health, spoke at the Change4Life event • on 11 March 2009, Lord Drayson, Minister for Innovation, Universities and Skills, visited Bristol University as part of 'Bloodhound Day' • on 10 March 2009, Sadiq Khan, Minister for Communities and Local Government, visited the Local Government Association Fire Conference and Salaam Shalom Radio Station • on 27 February 2009, Secretary of State for International Development Douglas Alexander, visited the Bristol Fairtrade Fashion Show opening, the International Affairs Society and other engagements • on 12 February 2009, Lord Young, Minister for Innovation, Universities and Skills, visited the National Skills Academy Financial Services regional launch, SS Great Britain and Student Listening, University of the West of England • on 6 February 2009, Minister for Transport Lord Adonis, visited Community Rail, and met with First Great Western Partnership and stakeholders • on 3 February 2009, John Denham, Secretary of State for Innovation, Universities and Skills, visited Aardman Animations • on 8 January 2009, Vernon Coaker, Home Office Minister, visited Bristol Council House and Shah Jahal mosque
Map
To navigate and view adjacent areas, use arrows on top left hand side, or click on map and drag. To zoom into Cities and Towns, click on the + or - buttons.

* See Audit Commission web site for more. Council Tax bands were averaged from Parish Precepts.
|
Bristol City Council |
MPs |
|
Address: The Council House, College Green, Bristol. BS1 5TR
Telephone: 0117 922 2000
Website: www.bristol.gov.uk
Chief Executive: Jan Ormondroyd
Leader of the Council: Barbara Janke (Liberal Democrat)
Regional Minister for the South West: Jim Knight MP
Council - Political Control: Liberal Democrat |
Kerry McCarthy -Bristol East (Labour)
Doug Naysmith - Bristol North West (Labour)
Rt Hon Dawn Primarolo - Bristol South (Labour)
Stephen Williams - Bristol West
(Liberal Democrat)
Dr Roger Berry - Kingswood (Labour)
|
Demographics for Bristol
Mid-2007 Population Estimates
|
|
Population
All ages
2007
(Thousands) |
Percentage of
Children 0-15
2007 |
Percentage of
Working Age
16-64 Males / 60 Females
2007 |
Percentage of
Older People
65 Males / 60 Females and over 2007 |
Live births
(Thousands)
2007 |
Deaths
(Thousands)
2006 |
|
Bristol |
416.4 |
16.7 |
67.9 |
15.3 |
5.9 |
3.5 |
|
South West |
5,178.0 |
17.8 |
60.1 |
22.1 |
57.0 |
52.2 |
|
England |
51,092.0 |
18.9 |
62.2 |
18.9 |
655.4 |
474.5 |
Figures updated annually. Last update February 2009. Source: Office for National Statistics.
Children and Learners
• Bristol and its schools have capital allocation of £19.9m for 2008-09, which will rise to £26.8m in 2010-11. Allocations for the three years 2008-09 to 2010-11, including ICT and the new primary programme, will amount in total to £71.4m • due to its good track record in delivering PFI schools, Bristol was chosen to be one of the four pathfinder authorities in Building Schools for the Future (BSF). In June 2006 Bristol City Council and partners reached financial closure on the first ever Local Education Partnership (LEP), who are now delivering the city's BSF programme, the first stage of which is worth £173m. The latest new school under the BSF programme is the £30m Brislington Enterprise College, which opened in September 2008 • September 2008 also saw the opening of five new city academies in Bristol, bringing the total to seven academies, more than any other city in England outside of London. The new schools, including two that are joining the LEA from the private sector are: Bristol Cathedral Choir School (former private), Colston's Girls' School (former private), Merchants' Academy (formerly Withywood Community School), Oasis Academy Brightstowe (formerly Portway Community School), and Oasis Academy Bristol (formerly Hengrove Community Arts College). The two existing academies are: City Academy Bristol (formerly St George Community College, opened September 2003), and Bristol Brunel Academy (formerly Speedwell Technology College, opened September 2007)
Health and Well Being
• more than £150m is being spent on major redevelopments within the University Hospitals Bristol NHS Foundation Trust precinct over the next five years • these include the £57m Bristol Heart Institute (BHI), which opened in May 2009. This state of the art centre wil unite cardiology and cardiac surgery as well as cardiac imaging and cardiac research. The BHI has been designed in partnership with patients, staff and the public and will deliver a full range of diagnostic and interventional treatments for heart conditions, including primary angioplasty, to the people of Bristol, the South West and beyond • the centralisation of specialist paediatric services at the Bristol Children's hospital and a major extension to the Bristol Royal Infirmary are scheduled to be completed by 2013-14 • North Bristol NHS Trust is in the process of procuring a £430m Private Finance Initiative (PFI) hospital on the Southmead Hospital site which will bring together the acute services currently provided on two hospital sites. The new facility will include an integrated community hospital. The procurement process started in June 2007 and, in March 2009, the Trust selected a preferred bidder, Carillion, to complete the design, construction and maintenance of the building. The new hospital is expected to be operational in 2013-14 • Bristol Teaching Primary Care Trust (PCT) is undertaking the development of community healthcare facilities in three of its most deprived areas funded through Local Improvement Finance Trust (LIFT) and PFI. These are the £38.5m South Bristol Community Hospital in Hengrove Park that will serve the south Bristol community, Southmead Community Hospital and the £8.5m Eastville Health Centre that will serve the north Bristol community. These developments will provide primary and some secondary services i.e. diagnostics, therapy, minor surgery etc, thereby providing patients with enhanced access to services
Crime
• Bristol has a strong track record in tackling anti-social behaviour (ASB) as a Home Office trailblazer authority, a Respect Action Area, and having being awarded Beacon status for Preventing and Tackling ASB in 2007-08 • the Department for Children, Schools and Families (DCSF) committed £6m of funding in 2007-08 for parenting classes in the 40 Respect Action Areas across the country, and over the next three years has committed a further £218.5m to support delivery of the Youth Taskforce Action Plan. In addition to this, Bristol is one of 69 authorities to receive a share of almost £60m over the next two years to deliver the Youth Crime Action Plan through early prevention, non-negotiable support and enforcement • in 2008-09, the Safer Stronger Communities (SSC) Fund and Basic Command Unit will bring nearly £1.6m of funding into Bristol to help the Safer Bristol Partnership address crime on behalf of the Local Strategic Partnership. The Integrated Offender Management scheme is being cross-funded with £280,000 from SSC capital, Police funds and Safer Bristol, to develop a new approach to manage offenders in Bristol. There is also further funding for Neighbourhood Renewal transitional projects around anti-social behaviour, domestic violence, hate crime and youth inclusion projects - £750,000 for 2008-09, and £650,000 in 2009-10 • Bristol is an Intensive Drug Intervention Programme (DIP) area, the only one in the South West. Over £3m has been secured under this programme for 2008-09 to help drug misusing offenders out of crime and into treatment • launched in Bristol in October 2008, Operation Safer Bristol is a 2008-09 initiative funded with £67,000 from the Home Office National Partnership Improvement Fund. Over a 6-month period, multi-agency teams will operate at hotspot locations throughout Bristol and its surrounding borders with South Gloucestershire. A two-pronged approach of co-ordinated crime reduction activity will have a beneficial impact, reducing drug supply and drug related crime across the city, and engaging local communities in developing and delivering community safety activity in their local area
Transport
• funding of £23.3m has been allocated to the four West of England authorities (Bristol, Bath & North East Somerset, North Somerset and South Gloucestershire) as part of the Local Transport Plan funding settlement for 2007-08 • £1.5m of Transport Innovation Fund was awarded to the four West of England authorities to investigate feasibility of road pricing • five Safer Routes to Schools schemes have been introduced into the city. These are 20mph advisory speed limit zones, which embrace a total of 23 sites and 36 schools • two new parking schemes have been introduced, one in association with showcase bus corridor schemes • the four West of England authorities have been granted programme entry for the Greater Bristol Bus Network. The £42m contribution from the Department for Transport (DfT) (total cost of project £69m) will provide 10 new showcase bus routes. It will include bus priority measures, improved bus stops, real time information and new buses. These measures will improve the speed, reliability and comfort of bus travel • the four West of England authorities have collaborated to produce a Joint Local Transport Plan, covering 2006-11, to meet transport needs and choice, and improve access to jobs, education and services
Social Inclusion and Regeneration
• the Bristol Partnership, the city's Local Strategic Partnership, was allocated £23m from 2001-06 by the Neighbourhood Renewal Fund (NRF). £8m of this was used to tackle crime and social problems, including racial harassment, truancy in Knowle West, and burglary in Southmead • Bristol did not receive any funding under the new Working Neighbourhoods Fund (WNF). However, they were awarded over £5m transitional funding, which will gradually reduce to zero by 2010-11. This funding is aimed at ensuring projects developed under NRF have an opportunity to be mainstreamed • over £8.3m was committed under the Single Regeneration Budget for projects to reduce the gap between Bristol's deprived areas and the rest of the country, and improve the quality of life for local people. This scheme ran until March 2007
European Funding
• over £730,000 of European Social Fund Objective 3 has been allocated to the Avon & Somerset Probation Service’s Crossroads (West of England) Project, which targets residents aged 18 plus for whom a criminal conviction is a barrier to employment • over £7.4m has been allocated under the South Bristol URBAN II programme to support regeneration and renewal in Hartcliffe, Withywood and neighbouring areas. Focusing on the needs of young people, URBAN II has been very successful, and now shares its experience and good practice with other urban areas in the UK and across the EU. The programme is now fully committed, and is currently in its closure phase • £10.6m was allocated between 2001-08, under the Objective 2 Bristol Action Plan (BAP), addressing social and economic exclusion in the five most disadvantaged wards of the city. Nearly 40 projects have been supported during this period. The plan is now fully committed, and is currently in its closure phase
|
Bristol, City of |
|
Labour market |
|
Employment |
Jan 2008/Mar 08 |
Jan 2009/Mar 09 |
% Change |
Claimant Unemployment |
May 2008 |
May 2009 |
% Change |
|
Bristol, City of |
201,586 |
200,526 |
-0.5 |
Bristol, City of |
5,225 |
11,472 |
+119.6 |
|
South West |
2,418,557 |
2,392,841 |
-1.1 |
South West |
40,729 |
96,527 |
+137.0 |
|
England |
23,652,971 |
23,398,015 |
-1.1 |
England |
693,870 |
1,311,683 |
+89.0 |
|
Youth Unemployment |
May 2008 |
May 2009 |
% Change |
Long-term Unemployment |
May 2008 |
May 2009 |
% Change |
|
Bristol, City of |
170 |
510 |
+200.0 |
Bristol, City of |
495 |
675 |
+36.4 |
|
South West |
1,485 |
4,370 |
+194.3 |
South West |
3,560 |
5,185 |
+45.6 |
|
England |
33,470 |
65,290 |
+95.1 |
England |
87,690 |
107,155 |
+22.2 |
|
Education |
|
Average Funding Per Pupil |
2004/ 05(£) |
2005/ 06(£) |
% Change |
Number of Teachers |
Jan 2007 |
Jan 2008 |
% Change |
|
Bristol, City of |
4,300 |
4,580 |
+6.5 |
Bristol, City of |
2,610 |
2,570 |
-1.5 |
|
South West |
3,950 |
4,160 |
+5.3 |
South West |
40,800 |
40,700 |
-0.2 |
|
England |
4,270 |
4,480 |
+4.9 |
England |
435,200 |
434,900 |
-0.1 |
|
% of 11yr olds achieving required standard in English |
Sep 2006/Aug 07(%) |
Sep 2007/Aug 08(%) |
Change |
% of 11yr olds achieving required standard in Maths |
Sep 2006/Aug 07 |
Sep 2007/Aug 08 |
% Change |
|
Bristol, City of |
72 |
75 |
+4.2 |
Bristol, City of |
69 |
73 |
+5.8 |
|
South West |
81 |
82 |
+1.2 |
South West |
77 |
79 |
+2.6 |
|
England |
80 |
81 |
+1.3 |
England |
77 |
79 |
+2.6 |
|
% of 15yr olds achieving 5 or more GCSEs A-C (or equivalent) |
Sep 2006/Aug 07(%) |
Sep 2007/Aug 08(%) |
Change |
|
|
|
|
|
Bristol, City of |
47 |
55 |
+16.9 |
|
|
|
|
|
South West |
59 |
63 |
+6.8 |
|
|
|
|
|
England |
61 |
65 |
+6.6 |
|
|
|
|
|
Crime |
|
Recorded Crime for Six Key Offences |
Apr 2006/Mar 07 |
Apr 2007/Mar 08 |
% Change |
Robbery |
Apr 2006/Mar 07 |
Apr 2007/Mar 08 |
% Change |
|
Bristol, City of UA |
30,821 |
28,886 |
-6.3 |
Bristol, City of UA |
1,494 |
1,371 |
-8.2 |
|
Avon and Somerset |
64,114 |
58,885 |
-8.2 |
Avon and Somerset |
1,987 |
1,906 |
-4.1 |
|
South West |
164,556 |
150,828 |
-8.3 |
South West |
3,587 |
3,330 |
-7.2 |
|
Domestic Burglary |
Apr 2006/Mar 07 |
Apr 2007/Mar 08 |
% Change |
Theft of and from a Motor Vehicle |
Apr 2006/Mar 07 |
Apr 2007/Mar 08 |
% Change |
|
Bristol, City of UA |
4,141 |
5,006 |
+20.9 |
Bristol, City of UA |
11,742 |
10,309 |
-12.2 |
|
Avon and Somerset |
7,450 |
8,761 |
+17.6 |
Avon and Somerset |
22,050 |
19,526 |
-11.4 |
|
South West |
18,218 |
18,751 |
+2.9 |
South West |
50,639 |
45,040 |
-11.1 |
|
Police Officers |
Sep 2007 |
Sep 2008 |
% Change |
Community Support Officers |
Sep 2007 |
Sep 2008 |
% Change |
|
Avon and Somerset |
3,413 |
3,341 |
-2.1 |
Avon and Somerset |
366 |
395 |
+7.8 |
|
South West |
10,923 |
10,921 |
-0.0 |
South West |
1,161 |
1,213 |
+4.4 |
|
England |
N/A |
N/A |
N/A |
England |
14,703 |
15,062 |
+2.4 |
|
Health |
|
No. Waiting for Inpatients Treatment |
Apr 2008 |
Apr 2009 |
% Change |
GPs |
Sep 2006 |
Sep 2008 |
% Change |
|
Bristol |
5,060 |
5,170 |
+2.2 |
Bristol |
339 |
391 |
+15.3 |
|
Nurses |
Sep 2006 |
Sep 2008 |
% Change |
|
|
|
|
|
South West SHA |
28,839 |
30,059 |
+4.2 |
|
|
|
|
Source: Office for National Statistics. Last updated 26 June 2009
Internet links
|