Opposition forces Trusts to retreat

Wiltshire

Opposition forces Trusts to retreat

"PEOPLE POW-ER stalls closure plans" ran the headline in the Western
Daily Press. They were announcing the news that West Wiltshire and
Kennet & North Wiltshire PCTs were deferring decisions to close
hospitals or curtail services in Chippenham, Trowbridge, Warminster,
Devizes, Marlborough and Melksham.

The timing of this decision is supposed to be solely as a result of
the imminent setting up of a new countywide PCT, which may wish to
review recommendations that these busy units should be mothballed, on
top of recent closures in Bradford on Avon, Westbury and Malmesbury.

It is clear, however, that the outgoing PCT bosses were profoundly
shaken by the depth of opposition to their butchery and belatedly
realised that they have completely lost the propaganda war.

Significantly, the campaign to defend West Wilts’ hospitals has been
led locally by health workers, UNISON members in particular. Working
skilfully with community activists, hospital user groups and the wider
public, they have organised a series of demonstrations throughout the
county where a fighting strategy has been debated and industrial action
considered.

Socialist Party member and Senior UNISON shop steward Roger Davey,
speaking in a personal capacity, commented after the announcement: "We
have knocked them back and now have a valuable breathing space.

"This eleventh-hour postponement, whatever the PCTs’ real intentions,
gives us an opportunity to strengthen and deepen our campaign, make
firmer links with co-campaigners in Gloucestershire, Somerset, Devon and
Cornwall and put further pressure on the health union leaders to play
their role in taking the necessary steps to prepare for the next round."

The new PCT bosses take over on 1 October. It would be worth coming
equipped with tin helmets and blood pressure pills!


Anger growing in south-west

FURY IS escalating across the South-west at the slash and burn
policies being pursued by health trusts and PCTs as they seek to do New
Labour’s budget bidding.

Robin Clapp, Bristol

400 jobs face the axe in Cornwall where the trust’s response to a £31
million deficit is to consider closing Hayle’s St Michael hospital, the
A&E department in Penzance and wards and services at the Royal Cornwall
hospital in Truro. Hundreds of staff are presently preparing to ballot
for strike action as a consequence.

These blows ignited an unprecedented march of 27,000 in Hayle called
by a town councillor. The trust’s spokesperson, displaying all the
subtlety of Marie Antoinette, retorted that the public "need to
understand the reality behind the situation much more clearly."

In Plymouth too, the explosive situation prompted eleven health
unions to lead 2,000 people through the city on 9 May after the
announcement of 400 job losses and 60 bed removals at Derriford
hospital. Seventy staff are within days of receiving redundancy notices.

There has been a relentless assault in Gloucestershire and big
protests in Cheltenham and Stroud as midwifery and mental health
services are scrapped. 5,000 Foresters met up in Meeting Field in June
to commit themselves to a battle to the end to protect their community
hospital, paid for by the sweat of Forest of Dean miners many years ago.

Now another £9.6 million savings are to be made in day-care services
for mentally ill patients. Here too, local UNISON reps warn that
industrial action is inevitable.

Fresh community campaigns spring up daily as rural communities are
singled out. Many protesters are new to struggle and though very
determined, need to see a viable strategy for victory.

The Tories, long shunned even here after their serial offences of the
1980s and 1990s, are suddenly and hypocritically lamenting the passing
of Nye Bevan’s dream and pledging their allegiance to the battle.
Liberals too enjoy the novelty of speaking to workers through
megaphones. Only New Labour bigwigs are absent from this struggle
against privatisation, PFI and redundancies.

Not since the momentous anti-poll tax demonstrations of 1989-1991
have so many people taken to the streets of the Southwest, determined to
defend their community hospitals.

Time is not limitless, but as the shire counties show they’re not a
soft touch after all, swift lessons must be learned. To win we have to
weld the anger of the community campaigns to the power of the health
workers.

There is growing frustration at the trade unions’ apparent
unwillingness so far to co-ordinate the struggles and call for a
national demonstration and strike action across the NHS. But a clear
response to the attacks must start with the linking up of campaigns
across the region, the calling of a national demonstration by the health
unions and determined commitment to industrial action where provoked.


NHS round-up

Sheffield

AROUND 400 people, mainly health service workers, marched and rallied
in Sheffield on 9 September against the proposed closure of a ward in
Sheffield Children’s Hospital and other attacks on the NHS.

At the Socialist Party meeting after the rally Jon Smith, the GMB
branch secretary at the hospital who had organised the campaign joined
the Socialist Party which, he said, had given so much support to the
campaign to defend the NHS.

Mid Yorkshire

TRADE UNION members at Wakefield, Pontefract and Dewsbury hospitals
are being balloted for an overtime ban and work to rule against the
threat of compulsory redundancies. About 100 workers lobbied Mid
Yorkshire NHS Trust as the ‘turnaround exercise’ being carried out by
management aims to cut pay bills by 10% and could threaten jobs.

Now the union is organising a first response to these attacks after a
consultative ballot suggested 96% support for an overtime ban.

More in a future issue

Redditch

BIRMINGHAM SOCIALIST Party held a stall in Rubery, on the city’s
border with Worcestershire. We protested at cuts in services at the
Alexandra hospital in Redditch (the Alex) and job cuts at Birmingham
hospitals

We had people queuing to sign our petition. Retired workers from the
NHS bemoaned the ‘reforms’ of the Tory and New Labour governments.
Student nurses wondered whether there will be any jobs at the end of
their training. Young men stopped to sign the petition, including school
age youths who had been born at the Alex.

Wherever we campaign on the NHS we meet health workers and student
nurses and doctors. Everyone wants to know what’s being done about a
national demonstration or campaign to defend the NHS.

We handed out leaflets for a protest at the Alex on 5 October. We
sold 42 papers and raised £47 fighting fund.

Clare Wilkins

Southport

SOUTHPORT AND Ormskirk Hospital Trust are directing NHS cuts at
wheelchair users. From 1 October, wheelchair users who are able to get
in and out of a car will be banned from using the ambulance service to
take them to and from hospital appointments!

This uncaring ruling will be applied whether or not the patients have
access to a car. In an unconvincing attempt to justify this measure the
Trust claims to have uncovered abuse of the ambulance system by
wheelchair users who are not entitled to use it! The policy has been
condemned by NHS unions and patients’ groups alike.

Roger Bannister

No to cuts and ‘mothballing’

HAMMERSMITH NHS Trust and the Strategic Health Authority in West
London no longer discuss detailed plans for the future of local services
in meetings open to the public. Now they discuss behind closed doors,
due they say to ‘commercial confidentiality’.

Keith Dickinson

Commercial concerns dominate every decision. In the London Evening
Standard (29 August) we learned of the ‘mothballing’ of the "flagship"
Ravenscourt Park Hospital, purchased for £14 million of public money
only five years ago.

‘Mothballing?’ Is it an accident that, last year, the government
proposed to hand the Ravenscourt back to private sector interests? Will
the money-grubbers who sold it to the Trust at our expense now have it
handed back to them, to make another fortune out of the sick and
elderly?

People are queuing at the Socialist Party’s street stall to sign our
petition of protest on threats to the local Charing Cross Hospital, to
read our leaflets and the socialist for information. Last year we
presented a petition of 750 signatures and have twice as many again for
when a bigger protest is intended.

Our campaign representatives support the demands for campaigns to
come together with the unions to call a national demonstration and march
against privatisations, cuts in services, and to defend the thousands of
skilled health jobs which are being lost.


Berlin healthworkers need support

14,000 health workers at the CharitŽ university teaching hospital in
Berlin are striking for a wage contract. Management are refusing to
agree a contract despite 26 rounds of talks.

This action, only days before regional elections, is taking place
against a background of cuts and threatened privatisation.

Union spokesperson Carston Becker is on the WASG (an anti-cuts party)
list of candidates in the Berlin elections.

Health workers should urgently send messages of support to: [email protected]