In response to Liberal Democrat accusations, it is necessary to put the record straight.
Schools
Councillor Roy Perry says "Every child in Hampshire was offered a school place at the beginning of this term - well over 95% in a school of one of their 3 choices and almost 90% in their first preference.
"There is no
crisis, no shambles but there is a marked increase in the birth rate, and
people moving into the area which is certainly increasing the pressure on
school places. Measures are in hand to
increase school building over the next fifteen years so that there will
continue to be no shortfall."
Police
Hampshire Police
Authority state that there will be no reduction in front-line police
officers. Savings will be made by
cutting bureaucracy.
Libraries
Regarding libraries,
out of the 54 in the county, there will be no change in 17 of them and only an
average reduction of 2.5 hours in the rest.
Two libraries will be run by the community because of a drastic decline
in their usage over the last 5 years, North Baddesley by 33% and Stanmore by
50%. The latter is used by only 3% of
the population.
Buses
Despite LibDem claims to the contrary bus passes for the over sixties will NOT be affected.
Child Centres
4Children
vision:
“for
every child, in every community, to have the opportunities to realise
their potential – to learn, develop and
be with friends – and for every parent to access the support they need to build
a better future for their family”
This is what Hampshire County Council says:
We
want to make sure that the funding cuts have as little effect as possible on
the work children’s centres do with families, particularly those who need the
services the most. The changes we are thinking of making would keep centres
open and available for families everywhere to use.
To
achieve this, we are proposing an approach that would:
·
Keep children’s centres open and
accessible across the whole of Hampshire.
·
Take
half of the savings out of the County Council’s central costs of running the
children’s centre service.
·
As
far as possible, protect staff who deliver children’s centre services directly
to families - so that people who use the centres are affected as little as
possible.
·
Keep
enough managers across the centres to understand the needs of local families
and to organise and supervise activities.
·
Reduce
the costs of running the centres, for example allocating less money for travel
and equipment.
This is what Councillor Roy Perry said:
Commenting on the range of bids Councillor Roy Perry, Hampshire County Council's Deputy Leader and Executive Lead Member for Children's Services, said:
"I am delighted at the levels of response to the tendering process. We have had 17 bids involving at least 32 organisations with all clusters attracting more than one bidder.
"We have had significant interest from a range of local and national voluntary organisations and schools following the invitation to tender for the management contracts of up to 15 clusters of children centres. The centres will continue to deliver services through over 81 local centres and a variety of community-based venues."
In May the County Council approved the transfer of all its Children's Centres to third party management in a bid to secure the long-term future of Children's Centre services across the county and achieve savings in the wake of cuts in Government funding.
So don't believe the scaremongers! The children's centres are safe.
A Better Town Centre??
That remains to be seen. Fortunately, Sainsbury's have withdrawn their plans for extending their store so at least the Rec and market are safe.
But are the LibDems still intending to go ahead with their disastrous plans to move the civic offices into the town centre? To this, with virtually no parking space and thus inaccessible not only to staff but also to those who need to visit the council offices
From here
at a cost of £12 million. They say they'll recover £4 million by the redevelopment of the existing site.
Now that Sainsbury's have decided not to go ahead with their development, there is going to be a serious shortfall in parking for the proposed new council offices.
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