This is the speech I made at this evening's Budget and Finance Overview and Scrutiny Committee. Brent Council Leader Muhammed Butt and Deputy, Ruth Moher, attended but were asked only one question. Muhammed Butt confirmed that carers working for the private companies provided adult social care for Brent would not necessarily get the London Living Wage. All other questions on the Budget were addressed to Mick Bowden, Deputy Director of Finance.
I paraphrased towards the end of my speech when my 5 minutes deputation time began to run out.
I paraphrased towards the end of my speech when my 5 minutes deputation time began to run out.
I start with the assumption that none of the present
administration stood for election in order to make cuts that would be to the
detriment of the quality of life and the life chances of Brent residents.
I also accept that the Coalition Government’s increasingly
discredited approach to austerity is the motor for local authority cuts. I
would further argue that this is an ideological attack on local government and
local democracy which leaves councils with the job of local implementation of
the Coalition agenda.
Under Ann John’s leadership it seemed that the Council was
seeing itself in the role of ‘managing’ these cuts with the argument that they
could do this without harming services. After the leadership change there has
been a slight change of emphasis but there appears to be a contradiction in the
stance of Muhammed Butt, the new leader.
In his Priorities statement for the Full Council, Cllr Butt
says:
The first priority must remain protecting the integrity of the Budget and making savings.
But in his blog, he likens the Council’s task to the
‘impossible decisions’ that would have to be made in cutting a third from a
household budget.
Again in his press release on the Early Intervention Grant Cllr Butt said
that he is dedicated to making sure that no child in the Borough is left behind
at a time when' impossible choices' have to be made due to the highly punitive
cuts imposed on local authorities by the Coalition.
The issue is clear: maintaining the integrity of the budget and making cuts
will mean making ‘impossible choices’ that will inevitably, whatever the
council does in mitigation, damage the most vulnerable.
Of course Council officers will stress the legal requirements during the
budget process but councillors are not just ‘managers’, they are also
politicans and need to adopt a political response both to protect local
government as a democratioc entity and to protect local people.
I have likened their position to that of the Black Knight in Monty Python
and the Holy Grail who, despite having his limbs cut off one by one and left
(‘Tis but a scratch’ ‘Your arm’s off’ ) as just a bloodied torso, remains
defiant and totally unware of the impossibility of his plight. The cruel twist
is that the Coalition gives the Council the job of cutting off its own limbs!
The question for this year’s budget making is should the Labour Council
continue to make ‘impossible choices’ and continue to cut off its own limbs.
My answer to that quuestion is ‘No’. Doing the ‘impossible’ is also doing
the morally unjustifiable.
The impossible is compounded by the constant moving of goalposts by the
Coalition, the Council Tax Benefit changes which will not only put more
families into poverty and increase the number of defaults, the increased
temporary housing costs caused by homelesslessness after the Housing Benefit
cap, increased costs for Adult Social care, the permitted (but not
encouraged) increase in Council Tax
without a local referendum now established at 2% (3.5% envisaged in forward
planning) and anyway such an increase would again hit the poorest in the
borough. Only yesterday I heard that in one month 63 children, affected by the housing benefit cap, have moved from a local primary school.
To truly represent local people the Council needs to devise a ‘needs
budget’ which reflects the true cost of
services that the people of Brent need to maintain their quality of life,
consult on this in imaginative ways including going to the community in
schools, community centres, places of worship and publicise it, and make sure
that people understand who is responsible for the cuts being imposed and the
implications of more cuts. Gathering mass support in this way through local action,
and working with other councils, especially London ones, for a common approach,
could begin a concerted campaign against Coalition policies.
Ken Livingstone, back in the days of the GLC, mounted a
fierce challenge against Margaret Thatcher from his County Hal base. Yes, it didn’t
succeed in its immediate aims but did help undermine her in the long-term with
an alternative popular agenda. Brent
Council could be in the forefront of such a campaign.