Wednesday, 23 December 2015
Brent Connects Forums to discuss council cuts
Labels:
Brent Council. cuts,
budget,
Muhammed Butt
NHS Consultation on patient transport services in NW London
Thursday 21th January, at 2pm to 4pm
Venue: Wembley Centre for Health & Care, 116 Chaplin Road, Wembley, HA0 4UZ
Venue: Wembley Centre for Health & Care, 116 Chaplin Road, Wembley, HA0 4UZ
The NHS is reviewing patient transport across
North West London. They are looking for the views of patients and carers to
understand their experiences of using these services.
In January 2016 they would like to meet with
people living in North West London that currently use or care for someone who
uses patient transport services. They are holding workshops in Wembley and
Hammersmith to share their initial findings and to hear your views on their
proposed improvements.
More information is in the introductory letter and flyer – please circulate. If you are interested please contact by Tuesday
5th
January by email travel@nw.london.nhs.uk or phone 020 3350 4734.
Tuesday, 22 December 2015
Does the People's Assembly motion show us a way of fighting council cuts?
Following the discussion on this blog on local council cuts, after the Corbyn letter to council leaders, arguing that they had not choice but to make cuts LINK , I thought it would be worth publishing the motion passed at the People's Assembly Conference earlier this month. The motion from Cardiff PA was more contentious that other motions but passed with a clear majority.
“No Cuts” Campaign Against Council CutsThis along with the suggestions from Felicity Dowling LINK and William Quick LINK could provide the basis for a discussion at Brent Fightback and Brent Momentum early in the New Year.
Conference notes
1. People’s Assembly opposes all cuts. Five more years of council cuts is unsustainable.2. Council cuts derive from the Tory government’s austerity policies of making us pay for the financial crisis not of our making.3. People, especially younger people, across the UK are under financial pressure from benefit cuts and falling real wages. In these circumstances they increasingly rely on the collective provision of council and other services, only to find that they are being withdrawn whilst at the same time experiencing increased payments for less provision.4. Council cuts are transmitted down from the UK Tory government by a combination of withdrawal of finance and requirement to set a legal budget.5. Councillors, lacking politics and confidence to challenge this political and bureaucratic process, buckle under and pass âtheir problemâ as they see it, on to us.6. Historical examples of councils defying central government: Poplar 1921, Clay Cross & Bedwas and Machen 1972, Rate Capping Rebellion of 80s with 26 Labour councils pledging to defy government with Liverpool and Lambeth going furthest.7. Recently examples of Northern Ireland Assembly and House of Lords prepared to risk a constitutional crisis over implementation of Tory welfare reform and tax credits.8. A small number of Labour & Green councillors have voted for no cuts.Conference calls for
People’s Assembly to launch a national campaign for councils to refuse to set cuts budgets this year and instead set ‘needs’ budgets based upon estimating what is actually needed to adequately maintain services and campaigning for the government to provide it.Conference therefore resolves to
1. Publicise and develop arguments around ‘needs budgets’ to aid activists2. Prepare model motions calling upon councils to set no cuts budgets for use by local anti-cuts groups, trade union branches etc3. Give a platform to, and amplify voice of councillors who vote against all cuts 4 In all council areas an electronic petition could be drawn up demanding councillors vote against all cuts, raising directly the issues that we face and the responsibility our elected representatives have to fight back.5. Rectify lack of material on PA website supporting local campaigners around council cuts, especially around the political arguments (ie. responding to ‘cuts have to be made’, ‘we have no choice’, ‘what would you cut instead’)6. Organise a national meeting for councillors, trade unionists and anti-austerity campaigners to explore how councils can resist.7. Compile and share information on examples of council ‘best practice’ in resisting austerity such as using reserves, no bedroom tax eviction policies, pledges of non-cooperation with the Trade Union Bill, Manchester Council opening up empty buildings to homeless etc.”
Labels:
austerity,
Cardiff,
council cuts,
Jeremy Corbyn,
People's Assembly
Monday, 21 December 2015
Bennett welcomes Green and anti-austerity progress in Spanish election
The Green Party has welcomed the huge electoral progress made by
anti-austerity parties in yesterday's he Spanish General Election.
In the weekend elections, the new party Podemos, with which the Spanish Green Party (Equo) has a partnership, won 20.7% of the vote, while another new party, Ciudadanos, won 13.9%.
Green Party leader Natalie Bennett, who recorded a Green/Podemos message of support before the vote, said:
In the weekend elections, the new party Podemos, with which the Spanish Green Party (Equo) has a partnership, won 20.7% of the vote, while another new party, Ciudadanos, won 13.9%.
Green Party leader Natalie Bennett, who recorded a Green/Podemos message of support before the vote, said:
I congratulate the three Green MPs Rosa Martinez and Juantxo Uralde in the Basque Country and Jorge Luis in Aragon on their election and also Podemos for the historic level of support it won.Bennett also noted,
This is a powerful boost to the anti-austerity battle across Europe, and a further sign that politics is changing fast.
Podemos and Greens are offering a new open, democratic politics, one that offers the prospect of self-determination for Catalonia, support for grassroots campaigns and organisations, and a vision of a ‘social’ Europe that works for common good, not for the 1%.
Women now make up nearly 40% of the Spanish parliament – helped by half of the elected Podemos candidates being female. That puts a further spotlight on the scant progress made in Britain, where only 29% of Westminster MPs are female.
Labels:
green party,
Jiantox Uralde,
Jorge Luis,
Nalaie Bennett,
Podemos,
Rosa Martinez,
Sp[anish Green Party
UPDATE: Sudbury School situation raises wider issues
Unions at Sudbury Primary School report that there was
standing room only when they held a meeting last week for parents to discuss
the way forward for the school after the suspension of its headteacher. They
say that Sudbury teachers attended despite the threat of disciplinary action if
they did so.
The unions said:
Several staff made it clear that, through all of this, their priority was the education and care of the children. Parent and union speakers said that without the staff the children would not be doing as well as they are.
The meeting was reminded by an emotional parent that it was the children who were the reason there was a school and we had to get to the bottom of what was going on for them. It was pointed out that if the school had still been with the local authority instead of being an academy, Brent would have stepped in and taken prompt action to deal with the situation.
The headteacher remains suspended while an independent investigation takes place. As stated in earlier coverage suspension this a neutral act to allow the investigation of allegations to proceed.Parents were angry that it had to be down to the unions to call such a meeting and felt the governors had kept them in the dark. It was revealed that a new Chair of Governors Ian Phillips, had just been put in place. The Ofsted report is due imminently after the inspection which took place after the Headteacher was suspended. The section on management of the school should make interesting reading.
However, the unions say that a petition for parents calling on the headteacher to 'do the right thing and resign' has been started: 'Staff remain united and determined but if this does not happen they will be taking action in the Spring term.'
The situation is complicated by the fact that the Sudbury Primary School Academy Trust is a company limited by guarantee under the Companies Act 2006. A large school with a budget of £9m plus it comes under the Education Funding Agency/DfE rather than the local authority, Brent Council. The Regional Schools Commissioner acts for the Secretary of State regarding academies and free schools but he does not appear to have intervened in this case so far, although there are provisions for intervention in the funding agreement LINK and the powers of the RSC.
The headteacher of Sudbury Primary School is the company's Chief Executive Officer and it appears from the last company report that all the governors are also Trustees of the company. The company secretary is Irfan Khan. LINK
At the time of the last annual report that I can find (for the period ending August 2014) in addition to the headteacher, chair and vice chair, there were 8 parent governors, 4 community governors and 3 staff governors on the Board of Trustees.
The case clearly raises wider issues regarding academies (and free schools) of accountability, local democratic representation, powers of intervention and governance.
UPDATE
The Kilburn Times LINK is reporting that Ian Phillips, Chair of Govers at Finchley's Woodhouse College has been appointed to the Sudbury governors on the recoemmndation of the DfE.
Chair of Governors, Bob Wharton, a former Lead Member for Children and Schools when Lib Dems formed a coalition with Brent Tories to run Brent Council, welcomed the appointment and said Phillips had made a good impression on staff.
The DfE said, 'We take very seriously any allegationb that children's education is being put at risk. We are continuing to work with the academy trust to strengthem governance. We recommended they (the school) request support from other experienced governors.'
Jean Roberts, NUT, pointed out that if Sudbury had been an LA school they would have come in and taken control of the situation. It had only got to ths stage because it was an academy and being dealt with by the DfE. She added that this was why the education unions are against academies.
Labels:
academies,
Brent Council,
companies,
Ofsted,
Regional Schools Commissioner,
Sudbury Primary School
The need for a 'Needs Budget'
Mural to celebrate the Poplar rate rebels who used the powers of local
government to stand up to a Conservative and Liberal coalition
government in the aftermath of the First World War
Guest blog by William Quick, a Green Party member in Bristol. This posting was orginally published on his blog A Green Trade Unionist - In Bristol
I’ve just been selected by the Bristol Green Party to be
their candidate for Bedminster in next May’s Council elections. I’m
really excited and want to thank all our local members who voted for me; we
came second to Labour in Bedminster by only 3% this year and we have a really
good chance of getting atleast one of the two seat in the ward. I intend
to do a longer post on my priorities for the ward, but for now I thought I’d
dwell on something that came up in the hustings, my opposition to any and all
cuts budgets and the need for a ‘needs budget’.
As you should know the Green Party completely opposes
Austerity as a failed economic model, that has held back the economy, and
punished the poor and most vulnerable in our society whilst forcing
ordinary people to pay for the bailout of the banks.
Nationally our MP has been fantastic in continually voting
against cuts and austerity and has one of the best voting records of any Left
wing MP.
However, on the local level, the limited options available
to resist the imposition of cuts has seen Green Councillors – most famously in
Green controlled Brighton – adopt a ‘dented shield’ approach to try and
minimise the worst excesses of local cuts and vote for cuts budgets (so they
can amend and tinker with them).
The amount of money in the budget is imposed on local
authorities by central government and its austerity agenda. To set a
legal budget within those confines means passing on cuts.
The alternative is setting a ‘needs budget’.
Disregarding the limit set by Whitehall this would set a budget adequate
to cover provision for all the services local people need (hence a ‘needs
budget’). Such actions have been made illegal under section 114 of
the Local Government Finance Act 1988 which then obligates the
councils financial officer to alert Whitehall as to what’s happened.
After that the council would have 21 days to set a legal budget or
supposedly civil servants from central government would depose the council and
set a cuts budget themselves.
That being the case many feel they have no option but to
pass cuts budgets that have minimised the threat to vital services as much as
possible.
However, to me, and many others, this seems a very
improbable course of events. This is a government with a wafer thin
majority, and deposing the democratically elected council of one of the largest
cities in the UK would be a deeply unpopular move. The drama would
dominate the news and could be a spark that ignites the disparate movements
we’ve seen trying to resist austerity these last 5 years.
Should it even get so far as civil servants being sent
into the city, they would be met with large scale protests and no doubt a
strike from local government workers who would then refuse to help them carry
out their dirty work (and many civil servants are PCS members who would be
unlikely to cross a picket). With all that going on, the likelihood of
the worst case scenario (the deposition of the council) happening seems very
low.
Instead they’d no doubt try and reach a compromise, in
which we’d be able to win a better deal for Bristol.
One way this might work has already been laid out by our
Mayoral candidate Tony Dyer. The Conservatives have said councils can
keep their business rates (probably from 2020). Tony has challenged the
government to give Bristol its business rates from 2016, which would allow us
to reverse the cuts and invest in the many many infrastructural projects
Bristol urgently needs (chiefly social and affordable housing).
If we set a needs budget and demanded we be given our business rates
early to pay for it, it seems likely central government would, to some extent, give in.
It’s not as far fetched as some might have you believe.
Remember despite the apparent dire state of the nations finances, in the
last budget the Conservatives magicked up £12 billion in extra defence spending
(the exact same amount they’re cutting from welfare, coincidently), and another
£10 million for a private jet for the PM (among many other things). Last
year they found money for an 11% pay rise for every MP, and £15 billion for
Osborne’s ‘Road Revolution’. In short, they’re very good at finding extra
money when they need it. And in the kind of constitutional crisis they’d
provoke by trying to depose Bristol Council, they’d no doubt decided they’d
need the money.
Furthermore, councils have already had their budgets cut
by so much that there simply isn’t that much more they can cut before statutory
services start to fail. The so called ‘low hanging fruits’ of council
expenditure have already been picked. If councils continue to live within
the dictates of the law and refuse to try and set ‘needs budgets’, at some
point in the next 5 years we’re going to see a significant failure of the basic
services many people depend on.
The main argument against ‘needs budgets’ is that civil
servants aren’t going to know our communities needs and their cuts will be far
worse than the more compassionate cuts our Council will do itself.
As I’ve said this seems unlikely, and if it got to
the point where implementing cuts will result in the failure of services how
can civil servant driven cuts be any worse? Also it would focus the blame
for these cuts squarely back where it belongs with central government, and
would make the Tories do their dirty work themselves.
We’ve already seen massive mobilisations against the
government and its austerity program since the election. If unelected civil
servants started deposing local authorities to implicate savage cuts; the
protests, strikes and civil disobedience it would cause would be a
significant challenge to the government.
If several councils refused to set cuts budgets at the
same time, their likelihood of success would be even higher. The blowback
from them attempting to depose multiple authorities at once could likely bring
down the government (so they’d probably give in). For that to happen we
need people elected onto those councils making those arguments and willing to
make a stand against austerity.
If elected I will be one of those people. I pledge
to never vote for a budget containing cuts, and to consistently make the case
for the alternative whenever possible.
Labels:
austerity,
Bristol,
Council,
cuts,
green party,
needs budget,
trade unionist,
William Quick
Sunday, 20 December 2015
'Better to break the law than break the poor' - a response to Corbyn's council cuts strategy
This is Jeremy Corbyn's letter on local council cuts and a response from Felicity Dowling, one of the Liverpool 47 - councillors who refused to implement cuts in the 1980s.
This is what Felicity Dowling, one of the 47 Liverpool councillors stripped from office, fined and banned from standing again after Liverpool Council adopted the slogan 'better to break the law than break the poor' and refused to implement Tory cuts has to say
"As one of the Liverpool Councillors from the 1980s, I obviously disagree with the Labour Party decision to support cuts budgets at local government level.
What though could they do to effectively oppose these cuts with this 'legal'framework?
- They could honestly explain to the people in their wards what the effect of the cuts will be. No false distractions with how great they are doing while services are in reality being broken.
- They could insist all council reports are written in plain English and openly explain the likely consequences.
- They could organise community self defence groups in their community and make sure all council buildings and services are open to them.
- They could hold public meetings to explain the situation.
- They could insist that not one penny was spent on municipal fripperies and receptions for the rich.
- They could liaise with local authority workers for a huge national demonstration. - They could defend local authority trade union rights to organise
. - They could open all public buildings as places of succour and sanctuary in the cold weather. - Every home in the local authority control could be made available for social housing.
- Different councillors could become champions of the different services.
- They could declare that this is an emergency and operate as such.
- Every day they could be organisers for working class communities and recruit hundreds of thousands of people to socialist politics and workplace organisation, building a mass movement.
- They could organise lots of study groups and action groups on different issues.
- They could link all the Labour Councils together in a coordinated national campaign.
- They could become a voice that could be heard despite the press and media whiteout of the effect of the cuts.
- They could link with all the other campaigns for housing, education, health and social care.
- They could build links with other councils in Europe facing cuts.
Such campaigns would give hope to the desperate, courage to those tiring in the struggle, inspiration to the weary workers in the services and present an alternative. Left Unity would certainly help.What we won't accept is that our communities must suffer in silence until 2020."
Saturday, 19 December 2015
Sunset on a warm December day
Sunset over Barn Hill today |
If climate change is going to limit humans' future on the planet our last disastrous days may also be accompanied by an uncanny, regretful, staggering beauty.
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