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Updated Sat, February 4, 2012.
151.www.highways.gov.uk105000
152.www.splut.com104000
153.www.autotrader.co.uk103000
154.www.pbskids.org103000
155.www.le.ac.uk102000
156.www.bfi.org.uk102000
157.www.ofcom.org.uk101000
158.www.thesun.co.uk99600
159.www.homeoffice.gov.uk99500
160.www.vodafone.com99100
161.www.liv.ac.uk98800
162.www.debenhams.com98700
163.www.halifax.co.uk98500
164.www.bioportfolio.com98300
165.www.soton.ac.uk96600
166.www.maximonline.com96300
167.www.barclays.co.uk96000
168.film.guardian.co.uk95900
169.www.handbag.com93400
170.www.theargus.co.uk93000
171.www.alliance-leicester.co.uk92300
172.www.lancashire.gov.uk91800
173.www.topgear.com91700
174.www.cityoflondon.gov.uk91000
175.www.bris.ac.uk91000
176.www.fool.co.uk90400
177.www.sheffield.gov.uk90300
178.technology.guardian.co.uk88700
179.icliverpool.icnetwork.co.uk88700
180.www.hsbc.co.uk87800
181.www.radiotimes.com87000
182.www.overclockers.co.uk86500
183.www.jobs.ac.uk85900
184.www.britishcouncil.org84900
185.www.1job.co.uk84900
186.search.msn.co.uk84600
187.www.english-heritage.org.uk84600
188.www.londonmet.ac.uk84400
189.www.bsi-global.com84300
190.www.manchester.gov.uk83800
191.www.regus.com82400
192.aol.co.uk82300
193.www.royal.gov.uk81900
194.media.guardian.co.uk80700
195.www.wandsworth.gov.uk80600
196.www.hays.com80100
197.www.orange.co.uk79700
198.www.loot.com78300
199.www.coral.co.uk77800
200.www.nationwide.co.uk77400
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177. www.sheffield.gov.uk

Rating: 90300 points*
*amount mentions of word 'www.sheffield.gov.uk' on the other websites

www.sheffield.gov.uk

Sheffield City Council - Latest News

Description: The homepage of Sheffield City Council's website

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© 2005-2012 www.Top100England.com
Bank of England holds interest rates at 0.5pc, maintains QE
Decision could mask a three-way split among policymakers, amid conflicting information about the economy.
telegraph.co.uk
Quango cull of health bodies is coalition's third assault on NHS
Cuts follow abolition of 10 strategic health authorities and the Human Fertilisation and Embryology AuthorityThe latest batch of health bodies being abolished or "reconstituted" is the coalition's third assault on what the health secretary, Andrew Lansley, calls "a needless bureaucratic web".His radical white paper on NHS reform in July announced the abolition of England's 10 strategic health authorities and 152 primary care trusts, involving the loss of thousands of jobs.Soon after he said his department's 18 arm's-length bodies (ALBs) would be reduced to eight, nine or 10 to "cut cost and remove duplication and burdens on the NHS". They included bodies which play key, and independent, roles such as the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA), the regulator of the mainly private fertility treatment sector; the Health Protection Agency (HPA), which monitors and controls infections; the National Patient Safety Agency (NPSA), which tries to reduce clinical errors and the National Treatment Agency for Substance Misuse, which aims to wean drug addicts off their habit.The HFEA's abolition has drawn criticism from the patient charity Infertility Network, the British Fertility Society, which represents fertility specialists and the British Medical Association. Voicing "very serious concerns" about the loss of the HFEA and Human Tissue Authority, the BMA said they had "well-served" the UK "and both have been used as models for other jurisdictions".Lansley says he is enhancing transparency, but there has been no public consultation on his plans. Like his NHS reforms, usual rules of policy-making have been set aside.He accepts that most of the functions of most of these bodies will still need to be done, and thus they are being transferred to, for example, the Department of Health or the planned new Public Health Service. So existing influential government advisory bodies such as the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisations Scientific Advisory Committee on Nutrition will be reborn as expert committees. This is greater centralisation of advice and decision-making from a minister pledged to decentralisation.HealthQuangosDenis Campbellguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
Immigrants facing appeal charges
Immigrants and asylum seekers will have to pay for appeals against decisions made over their cases, the Ministry of Justice says.
bbc.co.uk
Small business hit by "extortionate costs" of pension enrollment
Small businesses will be hit by "extortionate costs" as the Government introduces its auto-enrollment pension rules, industry leaders have warned.
telegraph.co.uk
UK 'will lose fewer public jobs'
The independent Office for Budget Responsibility says public sector job losses will not be as high as previously thought.
bbc.co.uk