Reporting Back: Overspends and Road Repairs

Last week Councillor Steve Wright attended the Council’s Overview and Scrutiny Committee:

Council Finances
Current estimates are that the Council is heading for an overspend of £3.491 million in the 2017-18 financial year.

The reasons for for the overspend are largely:
– demand for services being higher than the budget were either demand pressures (mostly adult and children’s social care)
– the Council failing to make savings that it has promised to do (the largest being leisure and waste management)
– shortfall in income – mostly car parking and commercial rents – I asked about a £80000 shortfall in the bus lane enforcement I wondered if Bury people were driving better but unfortunately it is a case of an officer over estimating the income.

The minimum safe level of balances for Bury Council is £4.250m (the smallest amount of money the Council should have to meet its commitments and deal with any unexpected urgent expenditure). At present the Council is heading to being just £0.652 over that minimum balance at the end of the year, down nearly £3.5 million in a year. Not much room for things to go wrong…..

Highways Mainenance
The report outlined plans to spend the £10 million the Council is borrowing for road repairs over three years. £1.5 million over 3 years is being spent on potholes the rest on arterial roads (no information yet where that means). Bad news for Prestwich as Virgin Media are planning a lot of fibre works so road improvements are going to happen until Virgin have completed their work.

Worryingly the report said:
“The recently announced Highway Maintenance Investment of £10million, whilst welcome, will not be sufficient to achieve significant improvements in the condition of the highway network. The rate of formation of defects will therefore continue to accelerate and with that the demands on Highway Operations will increase. Despite the proven efficiency of Highway Operations an increase in the current level of highway maintenance revenue budget is required to meet the current and future level of demand. Without this investment Bury Council will in increasingly exposed to insurance claim payouts and potential reputational damage”.

Any questions please get in touch. The full papers for the meeting are here.

David Davis’ Withdrawal Agreement Bill is not good enough

Last week David Davis announced that Parliament will get a vote on the final Brexit the government comes back with.

On the face of it, this seems like a major concession. But the reality is it simply isn’t good enough.

First of all, David Davis has said that even if Parliament votes down the deal, the UK will still leave the EU. This means MPs are essentially being told to take it or leave it.

Secondly, the government is agreeing to give MPs a say on the final Brexit deal but not the public.

Imposing a Brexit deal on the British people without giving them a say would be theft of democracy.

The Liberal Democrats will continue to fight to ensure that the people, not politicians, get the final say, with a chance to exit from Brexit and stay in the EU.

The people voted to leave the EU, they should get to decide whether to accept the deal the government has negotiated.

If they reject the government’s Brexit deal, they must have the option to stay in the EU.

Reporting Back: Health Scrutiny

Last week was the regular meeting of Bury Council’s ‘Health Scrutiny’ Committee. Councillor Mary D’Albert reports:

Delayed Discharge from Hospital
Delayed discharge is a high profile issue within the health service with significant knock on effect to other hospital services (e.g. lack of beds to transfer people from A&E). There is also a cost implication. It is reported that it costs over £1000 per night to keep a patient in hospital.

The two main hospitals that serve the residents of Bury – Fairfield and North Manchester – have introduced a new way of working. Both now have an IDT (Integrated Discharge Team). Staff in the team is drawn from both the health service and local authorities. Social workers from Bury are based at the hospitals. The team will operate 7 days a week (this did not happen in the past)

Patients in hospital from outside of the borough will be assessed by the team. In the past social workers etc from where the patient lived needed to access the patient. There are instances where a patient is ready to leave hospital, but the care home of their choice cannot accept them immediately. A ‘step down facility’ has been introduced.

The NHS has allocated community beds in care homes. The patient can be safely transferred to these care homes until the patients preferred care home is ready to accept them. This frees up hospital beds. The aim is that all hospitals in Greater Manchester will introduce this way of working, with a common standard.

Care Home Ambulance Pilot
A pilot scheme is being run in Bury by North West Ambulance service. The pilot scheme is being run at: Killelea House, Nazareth House, Abbeycliffe Care Home and The Heathlands.

Care homes have always been one of the highest callers of 999. However, there is acknowledgement that some 999 calls are for minor conditions or incidents which do not require an emergency ambulance. There were 1,746 calls from Bury care homes last year.

The plan is to introduce a new system into care homes that will help staff to identifying what kind of medical help is appropriate using a Nursing and Residential Home Triage (NaRT) Tool. This is a question and answer system that is designed to be used by care home staff (no medical qualifications are needed to use this tool).

The ultimate aim is to not only reduce the number of 999 calls, but increase the number of residents that are treated in the home.
Older people who are admitted to hospital are at more risk of:
– Reduced bone mass and muscle strength, approx. 2-5% per day
– Reduced mobility
– Confusion due to changes in normal routine and environment

According to recent statistics, the average length of stay in hospital following admission is 11.9 days. Appropriate alternatives to taking an older person to hospital should always be considered in line with the patient’s immediate and ongoing care needs. During the pilot phase of the NaRT, the triage tool was proven to reduce inappropriate conveyance of patients and potential admission to hospital by over 50%, with no adverse incidents reported.

Any questions or comments please get in touch – mary@burylibdems.net

A budget that gives hope to Britain

Last week, Vince Cable set out the alternative Liberal Democrat approach to the budget and the problems with the Conservative one. 

Next Wednesday, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Philip Hammond, will present his Budget to the House of Commons.

He will attempt to balance demands to increase public sector spending with the Government’s own strictly imposed fiscal rules.

Their ideological commitment to constraining capital spending on much needed new infrastructure threatens jobs and the country’s long-term prospects.

With incomes squeezed, prices rising and an unacceptable increase in the number of working families struggling to cope, the Conservatives can no longer call themselves the party of economic credibility.

In a speech to entrepreneurs last week, I set out a Lib Dem economic strategy to deliver a modern, forward-looking, outward-facing economy which will offer opportunities to young people and higher living standards for everyone.

Underpinning this vision is, of course, our belief that Britain should remain a member of the European Union and that the hard Brexit being pursued by Theresa May’s Conservatives can only deliver damaging results for our economy.

A Liberal Democrat budget would commit to the following:

  • Increase capital spending, particularly on transport infrastructure and large-scale housebuilding. Borrowing to finance productive investment at very low-interest rates is financially responsible and good for the economy.
  • Put a penny on each pound included for income tax to raise £6bn a year for the NHS
  • Introduce a lifelong learning endowment to enable every 18 year old to fund their own training and professional development
  • Reform business tax and clampdown on tax havens; including through a public register of beneficial ownership for Overseas Territories

I believe that these are essential actions that we need to take right now to address the weaknesses in our economy and to prepare us for the future.

To give hope to Britain, a serious strategy for growth and prosperity is needed. In today’s politics only the Liberal Democrats are offering it.

World Diabetes Day 14 November 2017

1 in 10 adults across the world will have diabetes by 2040 if current trends continue. Including 313 million women. That’s why this year the theme of World Diabetes Day 2017 is Women and diabetes.

The campaign is designed to share the importance of affordable access for all women at risk for or living with diabetes to the essential diabetes medicines and technologies.

You can visit the International Diabetes Federation website (https://www.idf.org) to learn more about the challenges facing diabetics and how to raise awareness by hosting an event. Together we can help women and girls across the world get fair and free treatment, as well as the education needed to help prevent diabetes taking hold.

Diabetes in Great Britain
In Britain diabetes is an ever increasing problem, in fact since 1996 the number of diabetics has more than doubled. Luckily understanding the causes of type 2 diabetes can help prevent it ever being an issue for many people.

With a few simple steps you can limit your likelihood of getting type 2 diabetes and share that learning with your family too. Take a look here at the NHS guide to avoiding diabetes (https://www.nhs.uk/Livewell/Diabetes/Pages/Avoiddiabetes.aspx).–

Fin McCaul, Clinical Lead for Long Term Conditions at NHS Bury CCG said: “Around three in five cases of diabetes can be prevented or delayed. In Bury we offer local people help as part of the Healthier You National Diabetes Prevention Programme. GPs can refer patients at risk to a 12-month intensive programme where they can get personalised help to reduce their risk of type 2 diabetes, including education on healthy eating and lifestyle, help to lose weight and bespoke physical exercise programmes, all of which together have been proven to reduce the risk of developing the disease. The free NHS Health Check for people aged 40 – 74 years helps to identify patients at risk of developing the condition and detect those living with undiagnosed diabetes.”

Jo Swinson: We must end period poverty

Talking about periods apparently is still taboo. In fact we have had to wait until this month, in 2017 for the first ad ever in the UK to show a hand pouring a test-tube of blood-coloured liquid onto a sanitary towel, in lieu of the standard sterile-blue.

 

The advert, which forms part of a new campaign called ‘Blood Normal’, attempts to get rid of the embarrassment around the ‘Aunt Flo’ after a recent survey found that nine out of ten women attempt to hide the fact they are on their period, and 56% of girls said they would rather be bullied at school than talk to their parents about periods.

For something half the population experience on a monthly basis that is ludicrous.

For the majority of us they are an inconvenience, for example feeling we have to take our entire handbag with us to the bathroom at work, the surest tell-tale sign. But for others, particularly girls who have just started menstruating, the embarrassment can be enormous resulting in lost days of schooling and a huge knock to their self-esteem. This is particularly the case for girls from low-income families who might see their parents struggling to make ends meet and feel reluctant to ask them to add sanitary products to the weekly shop.

A survey by Plan International UK found that 1 in 10 girls had been unable to afford sanitary products. The fact that no one talks about this means that it remains hidden. In a country as well-off as Britain this simply shouldn’t be happening. And it can be stopped. We can end period poverty. The truth is it, it wouldn’t even cost a lot, relatively speaking.

That is why ahead of this year’s Budget I am calling on the Government to end period poverty by making sanitary products available for free in schools.

The issue came to light when some teachers in Leeds wrote to a charity, Freedom4Girls, who send sanitary products to girls in Kenya, to ask if they would be able to send some of their donations to West Yorkshire where the teachers had noticed girls were skipping school regularly every month because they couldn’t afford sanitary products. If the girls could go to the school nurse’s office and help themselves to pads or tampons, no questions asked, this problem could be solved immediately. That is why we believe if we could simply get sanitary products into school we would be well on the way to ending period poverty.

This year’s Budget will no doubt have various giveaways for business and investors – those who have a voice – and the money to influence. It is our job to speak for those who are left behind, who feel powerless and voiceless. We are not alone in advocating for a change. Tens of thousands of people have signed petitions calling for the end of period poverty, and it is time that as a party we add our voice, and add it in numbers. Please take a moment now to add your name to our petition here.

There are brilliant charities up and down the country making sure that girls don’t go without and big companies like Bodyform doing their bit to tackle the issue. The Government should be at the forefront, recognising that access to sanitary products are a basic right. Justine Greening looks after both the Education and Equalities brief so should be well appraised of this issue. It is not too late to make a difference, with the Budget coming up on the 22nd November now is the time to crank up the pressure and make it something they can no longer ignore.

Reporting Back Greater Manchester CA Scrutiny

Last month saw the second meeting of the new Greater Manchester Combined Authority Scrutiny Committees.

A scrutiny process is established in the laws which establish the city region Mayor (Andy Burnham), and in Greater Manchester these are just now taking shape. Three Scrutiny Committees have been established, each is made up of 15 councillors from across Greater Manchester (11 Labour, 3 Conservative and 1 Lib Dem). Under the legislation the Chair has to be from a political party that is different from the elected Mayor, so that is two conservatives and one Lib Dem.

Councillor Tim Pickstone is the Liberal Democrat on the Corporate Issues and Reform Scrutiny Committee, and one of two Bury councillors on that Committee (the other being East Ward Labour Councillor Stella Smith).

The first meet was mostly training, so this second October meeting was the first meeting getting down to business. The main issues considered were:

Greater Manchester Living Wage
The Mayor was there to discuss the proposal for Greater Manchester Combined Authority to sign up to the Living Wage Foundation’s ‘real’ living wage as an Employer.

Outside of London, the Living Wage Foundation’s ‘real’ Living Wage is set at £8.45 per hour and is reviewed and changed annually. By contrast, the National Living Wage is the legal minimum payable to those over the age of 25 and is set by Government. The National Living Wage is currently £7.50 per hour.

The idea is that the Combined Authority should ‘lead by example’ and become Living Wage accredited in order to encourage other employers to adopt this standard themselves.

The Accreditation would only apply to the staff currently directly employed by the Combined Authority (which is not that many at present), and also Greater Manchester Fire (and Waste from next year). At present there are hard any directly affected staff that are not already paid the ‘real’ living wage level, but the accreditation also applies to sub-contractors, so the CA would need to work with some contractors (e.g. secturity or cleaning companies which it contracts with) so they can comply as appropriate.

For me one issue which we do need to address is the significantly lower minimum wages which are currently allowed for people under 25 (e.g. £5.60/hour for 18-20 year olds or £3.10/hour for apprentices) which will be making it very difficult for young people to access bigger items like housing.

The proposal has since been agreed by the GMCA Executive. More information on the Living Wage Foundation here.

Future Work Programme
Much of the rest of the meeting was to determine which issues the Committee is going to Scrutinise at it’s monthly meetings going forwards.

The main role of this committees is to look at some of what are called ‘cross-cutting’ themes that the Combined Authority is dealing with.

The biggest one of these is around ‘School Readiness’. This is a particular issue for Greater Manchester because we are as a region significantly behind the national average – the percentage of children age 5 achieving a Good Level of Development (GLD) in 2015 at 62.4% compared to 66% nationally. Almost two in every five children in GM do not reach a GLD this increases to one in every two children in receipt of free school meals and one in five children with Special Educational Needs and Disability (SEND). This is going to be a significant agenda item for the Committee in future months.

The second issue which we need to focus on is around budget and money, and the Committee received a briefing on GMCA budgets across the different GM authorities (Fire, Police, Waste, Transport etc) and agreed a plan to provide proper scrutiny at meetings running up to the 2018-19 budgets.

The papers for the meeting are here.
More information please ask – tim@burylibdems.net

UK – Firefighters cut by 1,146

Firefighters cut by 1,346 while fire safety audits down 14% – figures published last week have revealed. The number of firefighters (FTE) fell by 1,346, from 34,395 to 33,049, in the year to March 2017 a reduction of 4%.
The number of fire and rescue support staff saw a 10% decrease, from 7,952 to 7,132

The number of fire safety audits of buildings is down by 14% compared to the previous year.

Wera Hobhouse MP, Liberal Democrat Spokesperson for Communities and Local Government, commented:
“These figures show fire services across the country are being cut to the bone. Firefighters do an incredible job, but are increasingly finding themselves overstretched and under-resourced. The government must reverse these cuts and give fire services the resources to keep our communities safe.

As the Grenfell Tower tragedy showed, we urgently need to invest more in fire prevention. Fire services need more staff so they can carry out vital safety checks and ensure buildings are safe.”

More information
In total 40,180 staff (FTE) were employed by Fire and Rescue Services on 31 March 2017. This was a 5% decrease compared with the previous year (42,347 in 2016).

33,049 staff (FTE) were employed as firefighters on 31 March 2017. This was a 4% decrease compared with the previous year.

7,131 (FTE) were employed fire control or support staff, a 10% decrease compared with the previous year
See figures on fire prevention and fire safety audits here

Fire safety audits are carried out by Fire And Rescue Authorities to check that premises are being properly managed regarding fire safety.

Fire and Rescue Authorities carried out 54,247 fire safety audits in 2016/17, 14% fewer than in 2015/16 (63,201)

In 2015/16 the highest proportion of fire safety audits were carried out on shop premises (20% or 10,880), followed by care homes (14% or 7,391) and licensed premises (13% or 6,867).

17,000 (32%) of fire safety audits were deemed unsatisfactory. This led to 369 enforcement notices, 527 prohibition notices, 61 alteration notices and 68 prosecutions

Reporting Back – Bury Council’s Cabinet

Last month was the regular meeting of Bury Council’s Cabinet. This is the meeting of the eight Cabinet members from the ruling Labour Group,  also attended by the two opposition Leaders on the Council – though Labour changed the rules so we couldn’t vote at the meeting earlier in the year.

Councillor Tim Pickstone reports:

The full papers for the meeting are here, the main items which may be of interest to residents included:

Business Rates Discretionary Relief
You may recall a lot of discussion earlier in the year about a review of business rateable values which meant that many businesses were facing increases in Business Rates. The Government announced a relief scheme for small businesses in the March 2017 budget, which is up to local Councils to administer.
Bury will be paying relief to smaller companies with rateable values of less than £100,000. In 2017-18 this will be 60% of any increase in rates, which will be given to people automatically without any need to apply. There are similar but smaller levels of relief in the subsequent three years.

New Neighbourhood Engagement Plan – Implementation
People may (or may not!) have noticed that the Council very quietly abolished ‘Township Forums’ earlier this year. For us this was the Prestwich Township Form which met about four times a year at the Longfield where members of the public could come along and take part in discussions about the local area.
What replaces Township Forums is still being brought into place. As we understand this uses three ways of working:
online engagement – using a new ‘online tool’ that the Council has paid for. (I asked at the meeting how confident we were that we were going to get members of the public to use a ‘Bury Council’ online tool, rather than the ones we’re all very familiar with to talk about local issues (like Facebook). I remain to be convinced that a Council can do this, but happy to be proved wrong…)
meetings – ONE a year at a ‘Township’ level – so there is a meeting in Prestwich in November, and meetings at a ‘Ward’ level – no details yet.
funding for community groups which are allocated either at a public meeting (two across Bury) called ‘The Pitch’, or a small budget to be given for ward councillors to allocate (with very clear rules on what this can be used for). For our area (Holyrood Ward) the three Councillors will work together on a single scheme, and we would want to make sure there was a fair and open process that everyone can see.
Some significant changes in this area of work, and early days to see if it will be an improvement on the Township Forum process.

New Homes to be built in Radcliffe
This item was restricted from the public because of commercial information so I can’t talk about any details, but the basics are have been made public by the Council.Essentially this is the Council building Eight two-bed homes on two current unused ‘garage sites’ in Radcliffe which are owned by the Council.
The properties would be for shared ownership, where a resident buys a share of the property and pays rent on the proportion they don’t own. They can then buy further shares in the property in the future. Our view is that Council’s should play a significant role in making sure that there are homes that people can actually afford to live in. If anything, Bury has been very slow to do this, and 8 new houses is not going to solve very much on its own. We would urge the Council to be more ambitious. Perhaps a better use of its money than buying commercial property outside of Bury…..

Any questions on any of the above – please ask! tim@burylibdems.net

Ed Davey: Rise in violent crime shows May failing to back Britain’s police

Violent crime has increased by 19% in the last year, figures published today have revealed.

Knife crime was up 26% year-on-year, while overall crimes increased by 13%.

Commenting on the reported rise in violent crime, Ed Davey, Liberal Democrat Home Affairs Spokesperson, said:

“People’s lives are under threat because Theresa May is failing to back Britain’s police.

“These increases in violent crime are frightening and it ought to be government’s first priority to protect the public. Yet with her police cuts, Theresa May has gone soft on crime and is letting the country down.

“Theresa May was the Home Secretary for six years: she ought to understand the needs of the police. Instead, she has left them out in the cold.”