Tim Farron: Mp’s “closed their eyes to those in need”

The Lib Dems backed A new amendment to the Immigration Bill from Lord Dubs which passed by 279 votes to 172. On whether the UK should provide sanctuary for 3000 unaccompanied child refugees

There will be another opportunity to vote on the issue and Lib Dem leader Tim Farron said, following the vote, that the government has “closed their eyes to those in need”. He added: “Britain has consistently stood up for the best in human nature – it has opened its doors with the Kindertransport to those escaping Nazi brutality and again to Ugandans fleeing Idi Amin’s brutal regime. Tonight the government have dishonoured that legacy.”

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Ignoring this will not make it go away. These children will remain stuck in limbo as the situation deteriorates. As time goes on more of these orphans will lose hope of finding a home, securing an education and living a stable and peaceful life.

Reporting Back – Full Council, Answers to Questions

Earlier in the month was the regular meeting of Bury’s ‘Full Council’. The Lib Dem Group asked our full allocation of four questions: (summaries below – full answers here)

– Children in Residential Care
Mary D’ALbert asked about the recent report that “Thousands of police visits ‘criminalise’ children in care homes”, and could we be assured that children from Bury that are placed in residential care homes outside of the Borough are monitored, and are not the subject of such action.
Answer: We currently have 23 young people in residential care out of approximately 300 children and young people in our care, so they are a very small, but important, part of our group of young people in care. The children are closely monitored through placement’ visits and social workers consultations with other professionals. The children have all been informed regarding Bury’s advocacy service and majority are accessing this service.

– Staff Bullying
Tim Pickstone asked about the recent report that 10% of Council staff reported bullying in the last year:
Answer: The Council takes any allegation of bullying and harassment very seriously and we place the utmost importance on dignity and respect for all our employees which is why we already have a number of key policies and practices in place to prevent and deal with incidences.
In response to this question26 Dignity at Work complaints have been investigated in the past three years (6 since April 2015) and there have been 18 cases which have been handled via the mediation route (4 since April 2015).
There have been 7 whistleblowing cases in this timescale.

– Review of Bus Lanes
Tim asked when the promised review of Bus Lanes would happen in the south of Bury (Prestwich, Whitefield and Radcliffe)
Answer: We have been unable to commence work on a wider review due to pressure of work and significantly reduced resources. However it is our intention to commence a wider review later this year and we will be happy to provide Councillor Pickstone with a more detailed time table once it is available.

Missing School Crossing Patrols
– Mary asked about the number of school crossing patrols that are currently without ‘lollypop men or women’:
Answer:There are currently 18 vacant school crossing patrol sites that do not have a permanent member of staff allocated to them. The number of sites that are not operational can change on a daily basis as priority is given to allocating relief/supply staff to cover unassisted crossings.
For the past few weeks there have been 9 crossings left without cover, these have all been assisted crossings (pelican or puffin), all unassisted crossings have been covered using relief staff. The school crossing patrol coordinator assesses the risk when making the decision about which crossings will be left empty and which will be covered with supply staff taking into account road speed and the road layout near/around the school.

Let us know if you have any queries or thoughts on these, or ideas for questions at future meetings.

Lib Dems secure Victory for Vulnerable Tenants

The Government has agreed a Liberal Democrat amendment to the Housing and Planning Bill, which protects vulnerable tenants from being wrongly evicted.Under the Housing & Planning Bill, landlords get faster access to a property if they believe the tenant has abandoned it.

The successful amendment requires a landlord to get in touch with a third party such as a charity, local authority or individual who has helped to pay the tenant’s deposit. If the landlord gets a response that the tenant has not abandoned the property they can’t change the locks and reclaim it.

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Lib Dem peer Baroness Grender, who is a former Director of Communications for Shelter, commented:

“I am pleased that the Government has agreed to this change which I have been raising throughout the committee stages of this Bill. Vulnerable tenants often have huge challenges, such mental health issues, and are often teetering on the brink when it comes to homelessness. This change will ensure the most vulnerable, who are supported by a charity or a local authority, are not evicted but kept housed.

“The section in this Bill on rogue landlords is important, but would have been ruined by the original plans to give landlords greater rights on abandonment.

“This does not mean that the Bill is fixed, far from it, and the damaging measures to sell off affordable homes overshadows it all. But in this area, the Government has agreed a change which is a good compromise on their original plans.

The Liberal Democrats are continuing to focus many aspects of the Housing and Planning Bill, as outlined here.”

Tax reform and the Panama Papers

Tim Farron has written about the Panama Papers and the opportunity to change our system to restore trust in tax and politics on Facebook, you can read and share it here.

These revelations and this issue is about more than just David Cameron. We must not miss this opportunity to change the system.

It is absolutely essential that British people have full confidence in our leaders, and that when decisions are made and Budgets are written there is not even a slightest hint of a conflict of interest or personal gain.

We need a politics that works for people and communities, where it is their interests which are at the heart of how things are done.

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Politicians must rebuild faith in politics by doing what matters, by reaching out and helping people, and doing what we were elected to do in the first place.

In March Tim Farron asked Vince Cable to lead a major review for our party on tax to ensure people can have faith in the system and that it works in a truly globalised world.

Liberal Democrats want to see:

  1. Moves to bring in a real anti-avoidance rule. The anti-abuse rules were a good first step we took in government but we need to go further.

  2. Strengthen penalties for participating in repeated aggresive avoidance schemes – the changes this Government is bringing in won’t even allow someone to be named unless they have been involved in three separate avoidance schemes that have been defeated by HMRC in the courts. We need tougher penalties for those persistently aggressively avoiding tax.

  3. Use the anti-corruption summit this May to push overseas territories to hold a central list of beneficial ownership in each fund created, and for that list to be made available to HMRC. The Panama Papers show there is a huge problem in this area and this anti-corruption summit is an opportunity for us to globally take real, concerted action to change things.

Saying ‘No’ to the Snoopers Charter

Liberal Democrats on Bury Council were last week successful in getting Bury Council to take a stand against the Investagatory Powers Bill (sometimes referred to as the ‘Snoopers Charter’).

There are three issues that particularly concern us:

– the Bill would require all communications companies (e.g. Internet Service Providers and telephone companies) too keep a complete record of our electronic communciation for a whole year (email,s instant messages, web browsing history, gaming, etc etc). With something like a mobile phone this effectively means a record of where we are, as this data is being sent continuously to our phone company. It means asking companies like Talk Talk (who lost a large amount of its own customer data not long ago) to keep this information and us trust them that it is secure.

– the Bill gives public bodies the right to have bulk surveillance warrants, which would grant public bodies the right to see the information on everyone with a ‘common interest’ – e.g. everyone who went to a meeting or rally, with just one warrant.

– a lack of properly resourced judicial oversight over the Home Secretary, to make sure that any surveillance that is done is approved in a very and proper legal process.

Lib Dem councillors proposed a motion, which raised serious concerns about the Bill. This was then supported by all Labour and some Conservative councillors and has now been successful in becoming the policy of Bury Council.

You can watch Lib Dem Group Leader Cllr Tim Pickstone speak on the debate here:

 

Britain must stand against Tax Avoidance

The ‪#‎PanamaPapers‬ huge leak of confidential corporate documents uncovers British tax havens at the centre of a huge tax avoidance network channeling crony money to corrupt leaders, and others cheating from paying their fair share.

Despite being called on last year, Osborne has done nothing to create tax transparency rules that would break the flow of dirty money.

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Ahead of Cameron’s summit on tax havens this May, we must call on Government to launch a full investigation into offshore tax avoidance, and what they knew about ‪#‎PanamaLeaks‬. We must call them to act and give the British people the tax transparency we all deserve.

Saying NO to forced Academies

Liberal Democrat Party leader T m Farron MP has strongly criticised the Government on its priorities for school education, and the decision recently announced that ALL schools must convert to being an ‘Academy’.

Tim wrote an Open letter to teachers at Easter, on the eve of their main teaching union conference. The full letter can be found here.

Ensuring every child has the opportunity to make the most of their talents and be anything they want to be is at the very core of what we believe

The Government think that converting a school to an academy will automatically drive up standards. They’re wrong. What drives up standards is a well-funded education system and a teaching workforce who receive proper support and recognition for their work.

Academies are schools that are run by a private sponsor. They are outside of the local family of schools, not accountable to the local community, allowed to set their own curriculum and terms and conditions for staff.

Our fear is that this policy will be a costly and disruptive process for thousands of schools across the county, most of whom are already facing significant pressures including squeezed budgets and falling teacher morale.