Coverage of Brent library closures in the Evening Standard can be found HERE
Saturday, 3 September 2011
Friday, 2 September 2011
DCMS still in libraries dialogue with Brent Council
I have received this response from the Department for Culture, Media and Sport regarding my request for a public inquiry into Brent library closures LINK
Dear Mr Francis,
Thank
you for your August letter to the Secretary of State for Culture,
Olympics, Media and Sport, the Rt Hon Jeremy Hunt MP, expressing concern
about library closures. Your letter has now been passed on to the
libraries’ policy team in the DCMS as they are responsible for
monitoring and assessing all correspondence to the Department on library
services.
DCMS
officials have met with officers from Brent Council and are in the
process of considering all the relevant evidence and all the issues. The
Department will continue to maintain dialogue with the local authority.
Once all the relevant issues have been considered, the Secretary of
State will decide whether or not to intervene, or whether further
actions on the part of Brent Council are required. It may be helpful for
some background information to be provided to you on the subject of
library services.
The
Government is committed to championing the public library service.
Libraries can and do contribute to a range of local and national
government priorities – for example, they can help people access a whole
range of educational materials, find employment or get online support
for many issues such as health and well-being improvement; and libraries
work with parents, schools and colleges to support education and
learning agendas. All these connections can have positive benefits for
communities.
Decisions
about library services, both before and after consultation with local
communities, are a matter for the local authority in the first instance.
The Secretary of State, the Rt Hon Jeremy Hunt MP, has several duties
imposed on him under the Public Libraries and Museums Act 1964 this
includes the duty to superintend the delivery of the public library
service provided by local authorities. Developments concerning library
services across England are being carefully monitored and assessed by
officials. The Minister for Culture, Ed Vaizey MP, has written to every
local authority in England to remind them of their responsibility under
the Act to provide a ‘comprehensive and efficient’ library service. In
that letter he repeated the key findings from the report of the inquiry
that was held in 2009 into proposed closures of libraries by Wirral
Metropolitan Borough Council: that when re-organising library services
it is important that authorities have a strategy, that they have
considered the needs of their local communities and that they have
consulted local people.
The
closure of a library does not of itself signal an automatic breach of
the 1964 Act. Sometimes a library authority will close or consider
closing a library to ensure a more efficient service across its
geographical area overall and this will be based on a local assessment
of library needs at the material time.
The
Department takes very seriously compliance by local authorities with
their statutory duty to understand the local need for public library
services and to provide a comprehensive and efficient service to match
those needs. DCMS is aware of the judicial review claim against the
London Borough of Brent. The Department has also received correspondence
in relation to public library services in Brent and is in the process
of considering these.
Brent’s
plans are being considered as part of our monitoring processes for
library authorities across England. No decision to intervene in the case
of Brent has been taken but we are monitoring this case along with
others. Consideration by the Secretary of State of whether or not any
statutory powers should be used to assess an authority’s compliance with
the 1964 Act will be made on a case-by-case basis and after careful
consideration of all relevant facts and issues.
Labels:
Brent Council,
Brent library closures,
Brent SOS Libraries,
Jeremy Hunt,
Libraries Transformation Project
Thursday, 1 September 2011
In Defence of Ward Working
Art display at Chalkhill Primary |
In the absence of a concerted anti-cuts strategy by the Labour Council it is all too easy for divide and rule tactics to pitch groups against each other.
Ward Working enables the local community to decide with their ward councillors what their ward of £20,000 should be spent on and I would argue that it unites rather than divides the community. When it works well it can produce real change in an area and brings councillors and the community closer. With the current cabinet system excluding rank and file councillors it also provides councillors with an opportunity to make a real difference at grassroots level.
The council sets out the remit clearly:
Ward Working operates in every ward in Brent. Every ward has a budget of £20,000 to tackle the top issues of concern. The money is for one-off capital projects. We aim to find new or innovative ways of tackling issues to provide lasting solutions. The money isn't used to substitute for things that should be done anyway.To declare an interest, I approached Barn Hill councillors on behalf of Chalkhill Primary School last year for some help with funding the temporary swimming pool installed at the school. This funding enabled people to learn to swim who would not otherwise have had the chance. The Ward Working section of the council website HERE has full details of the projects and is a good example of transparency.
Using Barn Hill ward as an example this is how the money has been spent:
- Chalkhill Primary school swimming pool for £5,000 - installation of temporary swimming pool
- Brent Town Hall library activities for £600 - Manga art sessions
- Kingsbury and Preston Somali youth project for £4, 000 - support for homework club
- Chalkhill DJ project for £2,170 - support for youth engagement project to engage young people
- Brent Town Hall library homework club for £510 - support for volunteer reading help at homework club
- Chalkhill Wanderers football project for £5,350 - support for pitch hire and other costs for locally-run team
- Chalkhill allotments for £1,000 - gardening and growing project
- burglary reduction initiative for £350 - purchase of security equipment for vulnerable elderly people.
- alley-gating scheme at St Thomas's Road for £1,905 - installation of alley-gates to prevent fly-tipping and anti-social behaviour
- Athletic Football Club (AFC) Wembley football project for £6,500 - contribution towards IT and music mentoring and support towards coaching qualifications. A joint project with Dudden Hill ward
- Harlesden Primary School equipment for £3,726 - contribution towards the cost of media equipment to enhance school provision and for community groups who wish to use it
- Cricklewood Homeless Concern winter night shelter project for £2,000 - support to homeless members of the community who are in need of shelter during the winter at All Souls Church
- Harlesden responsible traders scheme for £200 - support for a pilot a scheme in Harlesden Town Centre paying for boundary markers for shops licensed to trade on the pavement
- Challenge Close soil survey for £4,000 - funding of a soil survey for Challenge Close with a view to assessing the suitability for developing an allotment for community use
- Bang Radio and Harlesden SNT project for £400 - funding towards a partnership radio programme with Harlesden Safer Neighbourhoods Team to raise awareness of community safety issues
- Fortunegate Elders Forum £1,000 - contribution towards a community celebration to bring together elders to combat social exclusion
- energy solutions scheme for £270 - provision of emergency heaters to loan to vulnerable residents whose heating systems have broken down
Labels:
Barn Hill,
Brent Council,
Chalkhill Primary,
community,
Ward Working
Pile on the Pressure: e-mail your MP on NHS now
A message from 38 Degrees:
In just one week, your MPs have to vote on massive changes to our NHS. But 38 Degrees members now have something our MPs don’t – thorough, independent legal advice about what these changes really mean.
Our expert legal advice is sobering. Despite the “listening exercise”, the government’s changes to the NHS plans could still pave the way for a shift towards a US-style health system, where private companies profit at the expense of patient care.
MPs are being told by the government that the NHS is safe. If they read our evidence, they’ll know that the spin doesn’t stand up. We can put them under massive pressure to vote to save our NHS. So we need to work together to get the legal advice to our MPs right now!
Email your MP now:
https://secure.38degrees.org.uk/email-the-evidence
Our independent lawyers identified two major problems in the new legislation:
- The Secretary of State’s legal duty to provide a health service will be scrapped. On top of that, a new “hands-off clause” removes the government's powers to oversee local consortia and guarantee the level of service wherever we live. We can expect increases in postcode lotteries – and less ways to hold the government to account if the service deteriorates.
- The NHS will almost certainly be subject to UK and EU competition law and the reach of procurement rules will extend across all NHS commissioners. Private health companies will be able to take new NHS commissioning groups to court if they don’t win contracts. Scarce public money could be tied up in legal wrangles instead of hospital beds. Meanwhile, the legislation lifts the cap on NHS hospitals filling beds with private patients.
https://secure.38degrees.org.uk/email-the-evidence
It’s pretty extraordinary what we’ve managed to achieve together already. Nearly half a million of us have signed the petition to save the NHS. And after Andrew Lansley announced the last round of changes, thousands of 38 Degrees members immediately chipped in to get top independent legal advice on the new plans.
Barrister Rebecca Haynes found that the government's plans could pave the way for private healthcare companies and their lawyers to benefit most from changes, not patients. Another barrister, Stephen Cragg, found that we were right to be worried that Andrew Lansley was planning to remove his duty to provide our NHS.
This is the conclusion of a top legal team paid to have no other interest at heart but yours.
MPs vote in just seven days. Seven days to not only get the evidence, but be convinced there’s way too much public concern to ignore it. The good news is, with over 800,000 of us now armed with expert legal advice, we are just the people to speak up. Let’s give MPs from all parties the mandate they need to think again and vote against these changes to the NHS.
https://secure.38degrees.org.uk/email-the-evidence
Labels:
38 Degrees,
Andrew Lansley,
MPs,
National Health Service,
NHS
Eid Celebration a Lesson in Inclusivity
I had a stroll around the Eid funfair and celebration in Fryent Country Park earlier this week and was impressed by the friendly family atmosphere which managed to combine fun, food and prayer in a novel way.
The celebration was in Fryent for the first time having transferred from Barham Park where it was held last year and the move seemed to have been successful. Many local people, Muslim and non-Muslim, were enjoying themselves despite the dodgy weather.
The mixture was interesting in the light of Brent Council's decision not to fund religious festivals because they claim that they are not inclusive of all communities. This event has never claimed council funds and is funded by sponsorship and donations but the organisers, 1Eid, make it clear where they stand on inclusivity, They state that their mission is to strengthen and unite local communities by reviving, celebrating and sharing the essence of Eid and their aims include:
- Sharing Eid with the family of mankind
- Empowering women through Eid by including them
- Providing the opportunity for the development of unbiased opinions about Islam
- Delighting local communities with funfairs, food and culture
STAND WITH US FIRM and help us eradicate islamaphobia through celebration and smilesAs I remarked the organisers have never claimed government or council funding but what they are doing certainly challenges some of the ideas expressed by councillors and council officers about festivals and inclusivity.
Labels:
Brent Council,
Eid,
Eid1,
festivals,
Fryent Country Park
Tuesday, 30 August 2011
Pub Quiz to Raise Library Campaign Funds
Labels:
Quiz,
Save Our Six Libraries,
Save Preston Library
Private Tenants Need Protection - Jenny Jones
Responding to the National Housing Federation report projecting a decline in home ownership in the UK, Jenny Jones, Green Party Assembly Member and London Mayoral candidate said:
Home ownership in London has been in decline for a decade, dropping from 60% to 52% of households. This means that more and more Londoners rely on one of the most insecure rental sectors in Europe, where tenants are unable to resist rent hikes and are scared to challenge slum landlords.
Ireland is more enlightened - after six months you get an automatic right to stay for another three and a half years and landlords need a good reason to evict you. In the UK you can be kicked out with two months' notice and the landlord doesn’t need to give you a reason. We urgently need to protect London's private tenants, whether they live there by choice or because they're priced out of home ownership.
Labels:
housing,
Housing Benefit Cap,
Jen ny Jones,
landlords,
tenants
Write to Jeremy Hunt urgently on Brent library closures
Brent SOS Libraries has asked supporters to write to Jeremy Hunt calling for him to use his powers to order a public inquiry into the Brent Library closures. Letters should be sent urgently (address below) as he is likely to reach his decision in early September. Follow this LINK for details and letter writing ideas.
This is the letter I have sent:
Dear Secretary of State,
I am writing to express my deep concern about the potentially devastating impact on children of Brent’s libraries strategy, which involves the closure of half of its libraries. I urge you to use your powers under the Museum and Libraries Act 1964 [s10(1)(b)] to ascertain whether its closure plans will mean it no longer meets its s7 duties to provide a comprehensive and efficient service to local people.
I am a retired primary headteacher and Chair of Governors at two local primary schools so I have a particular interest in how these changes will impact on children. I outline below some factors that I think make a public inquiry vital.
Schools in the borough face a formidable challenge in educating their pupils due to Brent’s high levels of child poverty, high pupil mobility and high numbers of children at the beginning stages of learning English. I know from experience that many pupils have few if any books in their homes. Headteachers and teachers need every weapon in their armoury in tackling these issues and easily accessible, local libraries are absolutely essential. Older primary school children are able to go to local libraries independently and this is important when they have a single parent at home with young children or parents who work long hours and are unable to take them to the library.
Children also use these local libraries to attend homework clubs or access the internet for school work when they do not have a computer at home. I visited Neasden Library which is the nearest library to one of my schools on a Friday after school to find it buzzing with a homework club in session, children working on computers and others choosing reading books. The pupil School Council has told me how much they will be affected by the library’s closure. Other libraries will be too far away for them to travel to alone. Removal of these facilities will increase inequality in the borough.
Schools arrange regular class visits to their local library which gets children new to the country familiar with the public library system and encourages the habit of regular reading. These visits will no longer be possible if the nearest library is no longer a walkable distance. During the holiday I met an eight year old child from one of my schools at the local library who was going their every day to borrow books as part of the summer holiday Reading Challenge. Closure of libraries will mean that this extremely worthwhile nationwide programme is not accessible to some of our children.
In the light of the above I ask that in any inquiry you should decide whether:
- The Council has properly considered the impact on children of its plans and whether these will impact disproportionately on those from particular backgrounds or from specific geographic locations.
- The Council has adequately assessed the potential impact of loss of access to books and IT equipment on educational achievement and cultural enrichment of young people.
- The Council has assessed the potential negative impact on GSCE and A Level grades caused by loss of quiet study facilities for older children for research, study and revision. Many come from over-crowded homes or temporary accommodation where it is hard to study.
Brent schools have done a tremendous job in improving educational outcomes which are now often above national averages. The closure of local libraries will undermine these efforts.
Yours sincerely,Martin Francis
Write your letters to:
Rt Hon Jeremy Hunt MP
Secretary of State for Culture, Olympics Media and Sport
Department for Culture Media and Sport
2-4 Cockspur Street
London SW1Y 5DHhuntj@parliament.ukor e-mail
dempster.marples@culture.gsi.gov.uk
Labels:
Brent Council,
Brent SOS Libraries,
Jeremy Hunt
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