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Demo against council cuts: Thursday 25th

Working Class Heroine | 22.02.2010 18:16 | Social Struggles | Workers' Movements

A protest has been called at County Hall, West Bridgford against the Tory-run council's programme of cuts. This follows a rally in Mansfield over the weekend.



Campaigners will be protesting outside County Hall on the banks of the Trent on Thursday 25th February from 10am, 30 minutes before the council is set to discuss - and in all likelihood agree - £28.7m budget cuts.

This demonstration follows an event on Saturday 20th February. According to local rag the Evening Post, there were more than 100 people in attendance at the event held in Mansfield's Market Square. The secretary of Nottinghamshire, Mansfield and Nottingham Trades Union Council Richard Buckwell was pleased with the event, claiming "This was a very successful rally. There was widespread condemnation of the cuts."

Protesters are angry at the policy of cuts which is being produced by the new Tory administration which came into power in the elections last June. Cuts of £33m were announced in November last year. Among the proposals were the end of funding for Dial-a-ride and community transport regarded as essential by many disabled people and the elderly for whom these services are a vital safeguard of their independence. Council bosses also wanted to privatise all the council's care homes and increase the cost of day care services. Inevitably, there were also to be job cuts, with suggestions that as many as 1,400 jobs could be lost over three years.

In January, just before the end of the consultation, the council announced a set of modified proposals. Community transport was given a stay of execution and some of the steeper increases were reduced. Following the controversy which followed January's heavy snow, the council also decided to reverse its plans to cut the money spent on gritting roads. Unison were keen to present this as a victory, based on the suggestions they had made to the authority in an article in the Evening Post. Nevertheless, the council still proposed cutting £28.7m.

Inevitably, with a General Election around the corner, this has become a party political issue with Labour MPs jumping on the Tory-bashing bandwagon. The unions meanwhile appear to be unsure how to act. Despite a protest against an associated attack on terms and conditions in November and a high-profile media campaign they have only just decided to ballot their members on industrial action and are keen to emphasise that they are not considering strike action.

Working Class Heroine

Comments

Display the following 3 comments

  1. Cuts and Increases — I've read the papers
  2. Budget plan to invest in entreprenuerds, cut bus services by 7.5mill+& the tram — James
  3. Tribal warfare — reallyoldhippy