The Socialist

The Socialist 5 September 2012

March Together, and then we must Strike Together

The Socialist issue 732


On 20 October... March Together and then we must... Strike Together! to end austerity

Osborne's cuts plans aren't working


Southampton council pay dispute

London Met university crisis

Con-Dems criminalise homeless people

Them & Us


South Africa: Marikana massacre ignites a political volcano


EDL rally stopped by anti-racists in Walthamstow

Stopping the far-right - The need for democratic debate


Southampton: Save Oaklands Pool

Building TUSC in Manchester

Fight begins against massive outsourcing by Knowsley's Labour council

Campaign Kazakhstan: Solidarity concert for those facing oppression

London Paralympics; protests against disability cuts: "Atos kills, kill Atos!"

Hospitals lacking services? Save our NHS!

Boris' workfare - no solution

Brighton Pride 2012: anti-cuts group blocked

Socialist Party subs appeal


Unison Higher Education Service Group

Workplace news in brief


From addiction to recovery

Volunteering at the Games

 
 
 
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Socialist Party Policy statements
Socialist Party contemporary Marxist analysis

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Fight begins against massive outsourcing by Knowsley's Labour council

Hugh Caffrey, North West Socialist Party

Knowsley's Labour council on Merseyside has announced shocking plans to outsource almost all its services and jobs.

The Unison local government union branch has launched a fight to defend its members and the services they provide.

The Unison branch's strategy of informing members, preparing a public campaign and a mass lobby of the next full council meeting, is winning strong support from the workforce. A fighting lead can enthuse workers, even when facing an onslaught such as this.

The plans are devastating. Almost every service and job, whether 'backroom' or 'frontline', will be outsourced, with funding cuts of up to 25% across the board.

Adult social care, employment and skills, and transport are earmarked for "fast track" privatisation, to be in place by Christmas. Other services are to follow by April next year.

The range and quality of services will be hugely reduced, based on cutting council funding and using the cheapest private providers.

Knowsley's claimants of council tax benefit will lose a total £2.6-3 million. Council tax bills will be raised by the maximum possible without triggering a referendum, one that the council would be likely to lose.

In May the council for the first time became 100% Labour, with not a single councillor elected from another party.

In return, the council is carrying out policies on a par with the worst Tory-led councils and the Blairites' dream of American-style local government, in which councils exist only to award contracts to the private sector.

Clearly the council is taking advantage of its result in May, when this was never put to the electorate, and the fact that there are no elections to the council next year.

Council reserves

The council claims it has no choice, with a £38 million deficit due to government cuts over the next three years. This does not add up even according to the council's own figures.

The council's projections show that for the 12 months from April, it will be £6.85-£12.368 million in the red.

Yet £45.507 million sits in council-wide reserves, and another £10.201 million in a "portfolio reserve" for a variety of projects including PFI privatisation plans.

A further £8.618 million in "unallocated reserves" is available to spend right now! The council could use the £8.618 million plus 10% of the council-wide reserve, not have to borrow a single penny more, and have no financial need for cuts/outsourcing through to April 2014. The cut to council tax benefit is a tiny fraction of the sums sitting in reserves.

Many staff were already facing the possibility of major cuts to pay and/or conditions of service through the implementation of the Single Status agreement.

Unison is fighting this. If the council gets away with this, it could mean large cuts to salaries for many staff, despite a £5.27 million pot set aside for Single Status!

The only conclusion which can be drawn from these facts is that the council wants to privatise services, wants to cut benefits, and wants to see local authority workers suffer massive pay cuts.

Unison members in Knowsley face the fight of their lives. Socialist Party members in the Unison branch, elsewhere in Knowsley and across Merseyside will be mobilising maximum support to defeat these plans.

  • Lobby Knowsley council - Wednesday 19th September, 6pm, Huyton municipal buildings.

This version of this article was first posted on the Socialist Party website on 31 August 2012 and may vary slightly from the version subsequently printed in The Socialist.


In this issue


Fight the cuts

On 20 October... March Together and then we must... Strike Together! to end austerity

Osborne's cuts plans aren't working


Socialist Party news and analysis

Southampton council pay dispute

London Met university crisis

Con-Dems criminalise homeless people

Them & Us


International socialist news and analysis

South Africa: Marikana massacre ignites a political volcano


Countering the far-right

EDL rally stopped by anti-racists in Walthamstow

Stopping the far-right - The need for democratic debate


Socialist Party reports and campaigns

Southampton: Save Oaklands Pool

Building TUSC in Manchester

Fight begins against massive outsourcing by Knowsley's Labour council

Campaign Kazakhstan: Solidarity concert for those facing oppression

London Paralympics; protests against disability cuts: "Atos kills, kill Atos!"

Hospitals lacking services? Save our NHS!

Boris' workfare - no solution

Brighton Pride 2012: anti-cuts group blocked

Socialist Party subs appeal


Socialist Party workplace news

Unison Higher Education Service Group

Workplace news in brief


Readers' comments

From addiction to recovery

Volunteering at the Games


 

Home   |   The Socialist 5 September 2012   |   Join the Socialist Party

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Related links:

Knowsley:

triangleStriking against the 'fast track to the sack'

triangleSeeking TUSC candidates in Knowsley

triangleKnowsley council fears anti-privatisation campaign

triangleJobs threat in Knowsley

triangleNominate Roger Bannister: Unison's leadership battle

Outsourcing:

triangleOutsourcing fails again. For publicly owned and run services!

trianglePCS members in HMRC strike on 31 January

triangleManchester council cuts - figures don't add up

Labour:

triangleWales TUC: no fight against austerity

triangleTUSC builds support in Leicester byelection

triangleSocialist Party meeting against cuts

Council:

triangleProtesters demand councils reject blacklisting companies

triangleBrighton bin workers fight pay cuts - this time from the Greens

Cuts:

triangleGive us jobs, not Tory lies

Unison:

triangleUnison leader 'gets it wrong' over action on pay

Local government:

triangleLocal government: fight for decent pay, terms and conditions

Merseyside:

trianglePeter Taaffe speaks on BBC radio