Friday 14 January 2011

One Barnet: our Barnet

Barnet council's mass privatisation plan has had a couple of name changes. Starting out life as Future Shape, it soon became easyCouncil (though it was critics that liked to call it that, after then council leader Mike Freer said Barnet had a lot to learn from budget airlines). Trying to put this cheap and nasty association behind them, the Tory administration seems finally to have settled on "One Barnet".

It refers to the intention (far from being realised) of sharing back office and, to some extent, residents' personal information with other large organisations in the borough, including potentially the police, Middlesex University, the Department for Work and Pensions, and the NHS.

It also sounds friendly and we're all in this together-ish. We're not in it together, however, as the controversial attempt to raise senior cabinet members' allowances showed (and committee chairmen and women did get whopping great rises in the end).

The new Barnet Alliance for Public Services newspaper "Our Barnet" provides some details of the One Barnet that Lynne Hillan and her fellow Tories are trying to foist on us. It is a council with a £54.5 million financial hole to plug over the next three years. They say they will achieve this through a combination of:
- One Barnet £12.1m
- Efficiency projects £22.9m
- Increased income £4.2m
- Service reductions £15.2m
If One Barnet fails, ie, they don't save any money or, worse, wind up losing money, you can bet the "service reductions", eg, devastating the youth service, stopping the crossing patrols outside schools, cutting children's centres, axing the museums, abandoning the Arts Depot to an uncertain future and closing libraries, withdrawing EMA from sixth form students, and leaving school buildings dilapidated, will only increase.

And you can bet that "revenue income optimisation", eg, fleecing drivers, and charging social services users, will increase.

That's the Tories' One Barnet, for you. Our Barnet is about standing up to central government and challenging the cutting of Barnet's grant, defending vital public services, spending our taxes on services, not handing it over to large corporations for their profits, guaranteeing that working for Barnet means decent pay and conditions of service, libraries open for longer, school buildings are repaired, elderly people have the services they need to lead dignified lives, young people enjoy the meaningful activity they need to help them develop, and everyone has somewhere decent to live. I know where I'd rather live.

If you would be prepared to deliver some copies of the "Our Barnet" newspaper in your area, please email info@barnettuc.org.uk.

1 comment:

Moaneybat said...

It refers to the intention (far from being realised) of sharing back office and, to some extent, residents' personal information with other large organisations in the borough, including potentially the police, Middlesex University, the Department for Work and Pensions, and the NHS.

Pre-1990s Soviet Union, East Germany Romania. Maybe it's the New 'Left' Conservative Government we have in the UK that upsets OneBarnet, quite why Middlesex University want the private details of the community is a wonder