First Published by: local government
OVERWHELMINGLY
RESIDENTS IN WALES ARE FACING AN INCREASE IN COUNCIL TAX THIS MONTH.
In England there is a freeze or a reduction.
In some places in Wales the increase is over 3.5%. In England that level of
increase would require approval in a referendum. No English council has decided
to chance it.
But in Wales there is no need to get such
approval from residents. The Labour-run Welsh Assembly Government oppose it.
Plaid Cymru's Assembly member Llyr Huws Gruffydd agrees it would be
"inappropriate."
In England every council apart from
Nottingham has introduced spending transparency. In Wales only the
Conservative-run councils Monmouthshire, Newport and Glamorgan have done
so. Of course we can still get hold of a few figures via Freedom of Information
requests. The Conservative's Shadow Local Government Minister in the Welsh
Assembly Janet Finch-Saunders says:
In 2010-11, local authorities in Wales
spent over £630,000 on official cars and chauffeurs. Rhondda Cynon Taf and
Blaenau Gwent each spent £90,000, while Bridgend spent £75,000 and Neath
Port Talbot £70,000. I wonder whether the Minister was aware of those
figures until I mentioned them.
Local authorities spent an average of £1.5
million on printing and paper costs, but Swansea spent £0.5 million. Given
that this is public money, this kind of information should be
made available through online publishing, to enable processes to
be examined and efficiencies to be identified.
Labour Assembly member Jenny Rathbone
opposes this, saying residents mustn't be "bombarded" with
information. So it is better to keep spending secret. On Carmarthenshire
Council, run by Independents and Labour, a blogger was arrested for filming a council meeting using her mobile phone, and led
away in handcuffs.
Council tenants in England can exercise
their right to buy taking advantage of up to £75,000 in discounts - in Wales
the discounts are capped at just £16,000. In Wales there is no chance for
schools to become independent of council control by converting to be academies.
There is no opportunity to set up free schools. Michael Gove's reforms to
reduce red tape and make it easier to sack bad teachers and exclude disruptive
pupils do not apply.
But the rigour of competition is needed
more in Wales than anywhere else in the UK. In the Pisa tests we find that Wales
is behind England, Scotland and Northern Ireland in terms of science, reading
and maths. It is below the OECD average in all three. It has fallen behind in
the international league table in all three. The Welsh schools inspectors
Estyn finds that
40% of Welsh children arriving at secondary school arrive at least six months
behind in reading. But while failing schools in England are being taken over in
Wales there is just talk about the possibility of closing them.
The Education Minister Leighton Andrews
says he will close a school where the situation is "irredeemable."
But how many of the 5% of Welsh schools officially failing have been closed?
None. Where is the procedure for them to be taken over by an academy chain?
What is the trigger for them to be closed or taken over? The truth is that
under Labour schools in Wales are able to carry on failing. Bad teachers will
keep their jobs.
In Wales the Conservatives are fighting
against the establishment. They are the force of protest against the complacent
vested interests. In considering how Wales has fallen behind in terms of
transparency, accountability, the opportunity for home ownership, and parental
choice those of us in England can see what a difference the change of
Government has meant over the past two years.
No comments:
Post a Comment
I support Council Tax Rebates in assisting home owners and tenants in getting a rebate on their over-paid Council Tax.