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| Diana Wallis MEP | <info@dianawallismep.org.uk> |
Declaration of Financial InterestsRead Diana's Declaration of Financial Interests for the Year 2008. Read Diana's Declaration of Financial Interests for the Year 2007. Salary and PensionIn the previous mandate, all MEPs received a basic salary paid by the parliaments or governments of the various Member States, which wass subject to the tax rules of the country in question. The amount of this allowance was equal to the amount of the national parliamentary allowance, less any additional allowances to which Members of national parliaments may have been entitled. As of 1 April 2008, Diana Wallis' salary was £63,291 per year. This is the same as that of a British MP and subject to the same British tax rules. House of Commons official guide to Members' pay. Before entering the Parliament, Diana Wallis was a senior solicitor with more than 15 years' experience in this profession. The current average starting salary for solicitors in private practice is £42000 (source: Law Society 2007 fact sheet). Basic pension arrangements for British MEPs and MPs are identical. Diana Wallis is not and has never been a member of the European Parliament's additional Voluntary Pension Scheme. These rules as subject to change in July 2009, when the Statute for Members enters into force. Read the Statute for Members of the European Parliament. Expenses paid for by the European ParliamentMEP's expenses are paid for directly by the European Parliament. Details of Diana's expenses and allowances for 2007 and 2008 can be found below. View Diana's general expenditure allowance invoices for 2010. Read details of Diana's expenses and allowances for 2008. Read details of Diana's expenses and allowances for 2007. Read the LDEPP Guidance Note on Use of Members' Allowances. Parliament's official page on allowances. Parliamentary activityAn independent summary of Diana's political activitiy, together with details of her voting record, can be found at votewatch.eu. Read Diana's profile on www.votewatch.eu. Access to DocumentsArticle 1 of the EU Treaty states that "decisions are taken as openly as possible and as closely as possible to the citizen." This is supplemented by a number of provisions, including Article 25(1) of the EC Treaty which ensures that "any citizen of the Union, and any natural or legal person residing or having its registered office in a Member State, shall have a right of access to European Parliament, Council and Commission documents", subject to certain defined exceptions. In 2001, the Parliament and Council adopted a Regulation which sets out the right of access in more details. This Regulation is currently undergoing a review process following the publication of a Green Paper by the Commission. On 2 October 2007, Diana Wallis chaired, as Vice President responsible, a meeting of the interinstitutional committee on access to documents set up under Article 15 of Regulation 1049/2001. This was the first meeting of the committee in three years. Read Regulation 1049/2001 regulating the right of access to documents. Read the Commission's Green Paper on Public Access to Documents. Read the Commission's recast proposal for Regulation 1049. List of documents related to a hearing in the LIBE Committee on 2 June 2008. Search for a document in the European Parliament's official register. Search for a document in the Commission's official register. Search for a document in the Council's official register. Transparency and Lobbying in the European InstitutionsThe Commission's register was opened on 23 June 2008. As of April 2009, 1334 organisations have registered with the Commission, providing a certain amount of financial disclosure. On 22 April 2009, Diana Wallis, together with Jo Leinen MEP and Ingo Friedrich MEP, met Commissioner Siim Kallas with a mandate to reach a first agreement on the creation of a common register for interest representatives. The group agreed to create a common register, initially on a non-mandatory basis, and building on the results of the review of the Commission's existing register to take place in June 2009. The group agreed guidelines for this future common register and a draft common code of conduct. Pending this "one-stop-shop", the two institutions launched a common web-page today for accessing the existing registers. In welcoming the agreement, Diana Wallis commented "the new webpage we are launching today, in advance of the elections, will give citizens a more comprehensive insight into who is seeking to influence decision-making at EU level. The approval of a revised code of conduct for lobbyists and the guidelines for our future common register are a positive outcome for the transparency of the lawmaking process at EU level. I look forward, as coordinator of the current EP delegation having negotiated with the Commission, to a final agreement early in the life of the new Parliament, and call on the incoming Swedish Presidency to take this issue up on behalf of the Council". Joint Statement and draft joint Code of Conduct agreed on 22 April 2009. Joint portal leading the Commission and the Parliament's existing registers. Read Diana's draft Opinion on Lobbying. Read the Commission's follow-up communication on the European Transparency Initiative. Read the Commission's Green Paper on a European Transparency Initiative. Historical ArchivesClick here to access Diana's page on the opening of Parliament's archives. Contact details for the Parliament's Archives and Documentation Center (Luxembourg). Correlation TablesDiana Wallis has long fought for "correlation tables". These should be sent by Member States when transposing Community directives, so as to ensure transparency and to make the Commission's watchdog task possible. So far, such clauses are systematically deleted at the request of the Council during the codecision procedure. It is however noteworthy that the Environmental Crime Directive, agreed in first reading last month, contains an obligation to produce correlation tables (see Article 9(2) : "Member States shall communicate to the Commission the text of the main provisions of national law which they adopt in the field covered by this Directive and a correlation table between those provisions and this Directive"). Click here to see Parliament's first reading of the Environmental Crime Directive. Citizens' SummariesFollowing several opinions and reports drafted by Diana and approved by the Parliament, Commissioner Wallstrom committed the Commission to implement such tables. The matter is largely unresolved, although certain parts of the Commission produce summaries (although not forming part of legislation). One of the recommendations of the Equitable Life Inquiry report (adopted by the European Parliament on 19 June 2007) reads: "The committee stresses the importance of improving citizens' understanding of EC legislation and therefore calls for the introduction in all legislative proposals of executive or citizens' summaries, as used in some Member States1, which, although devoid of any legal effects, would form part of the act itself and constitute a non-technical explanation destined to citizens and other interested parties (...)." Read a related publication from the Plain Language Commission. 26 June: Read the Commission's citizens' summary on the European Private Company Statute. Read a recent document entitled "Citizens' Summary" released by DG Competition . Printed and hosted by Prater Raines Ltd, 98 Sandgate High Street, Folkestone CT20 3BY.Published and promoted by Diana Wallis MEP, PO Box 176, BROUGH, East Yorkshire, HU15 1UX. The views expressed are those of the party, not of the service provider. |