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TH Associates and sister company THA Recruitment have moved to larger premises in Hertfordshire.

The firm has moved to Hemel One, a Hemel Hemstead business park after winning several new accounts in construction and IT during the past three months.

The companies have also appointed Dylan Wendleken and Kylie Williams as resourcers.

Accounting firm Deloitte plans to hire 250,000 staff during the next five years as it seeks to benefit from rising global demand for regulatory scrutiny and risk management.

Recruiter is interested in finding out more about the attitude to risk within the recruitment sector. We are, therefore, offering the opportunity to participate in a profession-wide Risk Type survey and, at the same time, for you to learn about your own Risk Type.

Recruiters Brook Street, Prospectus, Sammons Group, Eurobase, Hays, Step Ahead and Spring Group have all won places on a new framework agreement for the supply of temporary staff, exclusively for London Universities Purchasing Consortium (LUPC) members.

There are marked differences between the UK and French recruitment markets which is partly due to contrasting attitudes to employment.

A campaign to get the public to vote for Gordon Brown’s next job has been launched by recruitment consultancy, Badenoch & Clark.

Members of the British public are being invited to vote for whether Gordon Brown should become an author, university lecturer or perhaps launch an anger-management consultancy if he fails to win the next election.

Office support recruitment Tate has opened a new office in Reading.

This brings Tate’s office network to 27.

I have just read ’CIPD: Immediate public sector cuts could threaten recovery’ (recruiter.co.uk, 19 April).

In response to ’CIPD: Immediate public sector cuts could threaten recovery’ (recruiter.co.uk, 19 April), surely it’s far better to curb spending and not hike up national insurance?

Contractor optimism has increased in 2010, according to a survey by specialist accountants CMEASY.

The survey shows that 35% expect business to be a little better in 2010 than last year, 7% a lot better, while 37% predict things to stay roughly the same. Just 6% anticipate things getting a lot worse, and 15% a little worse.

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