plan will turn playground into a no-go area for the poor
Wandsworth council said its playground in Battersea Park was
'more than just swings and roundabouts'. For the children of Wandsworth, the age of innocence ends this autumn when their council puts a
price tag on playtime.
To help fund £55m worth of budget cuts, councillors in
the south London borough have decided to charge children £2.50 to use the local playground. The Tory-run council will pilot the charge at weekends from
October at an adventure playground in Battersea Park.
Labour politicians have
described the charges as "unbelievably mean-spirited" and an attempt
to turn play areas into no-go areas for the poor. An e-petition lodged
on the council's website had gathered 154 signatories by Thursday. The council said the park was "more than just swings
and roundabouts" and that because the adventure area contained zip wires
and 40ft structures, there were added health and safety staffing costs that
needed to be recouped in difficult economic circumstances. The council also
said the charge was being introduced to provide the "best value for
money" for local taxpayers.
A survey carried out at the playground by the council
revealed that half of the children came from neighbouring boroughs. "Why
should Wandsworth taxpayers subsidise children from other boroughs?" a
council spokesperson said. The borough admits it is not expecting to make much money
from the scheme and has no income target in mind but says the playground would
have to close if it did not introduce the charge. "The difficult economic
situation we face means we have to consider every aspect of the work we do and
the services we provide. The adventure playground is a very popular but also
very expensive facility to run.
"Introducing a pilot charging scheme at weekends will
allow us to carry on investing in the playground, recoup some of those costs
and allow us to continue providing the best value for money we can for our Council Taxpayers. At around half the
price of a child's cinema ticket we do not believe the fee is excessive." In
Wandsworth, band D Council Tax bills
are £687 a year, about half the London average. Sadiq Khan, the shadow justice minister and Labour MP for
Tooting, which is part of Wandsworth, said: "This is unbelievably
mean-spirited, even for Wandsworth council. It will be children from the
poorest families who lose out. "As families are squeezed by the Tory-led
government's cuts, Wandsworth should be promoting low cost healthy activities,
like those on offer at Battersea Park, not driving poorer children and families
away."
Ken Livingstone, the Labour candidate for London mayor, said
that parks and playgrounds should always remain free. "Only the
Conservative party could consider charging kids to play. I believe London's
parks and playgrounds should be free for London's families and I am deeply
concerned at this attempt to turn publicly funded playgrounds into areas which
only the rich and privileged can enjoy." The council says it will review the charges in the summer of
2012.
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