Almost
a decade on after the ‘Make a Noise’ for Bedlington event when Northumberland
Conservatives stirred up the local population to ensure that Bedlington
received a better commercial deal for local shoppers and demanded a leisure
facility was built in the town to rival the local towns of Cramlington,
Ashington and Morpeth who had new or improved leisure facilities either planned
or in train.
The then labour Council went full steam ahead and produced plans for both the town centre revitalisation to be known as Pipers Place and a study to build a leisure facility at Gallagher Park a site shared by both Town Councils, East and West Bedlington to ensure parity between the areas after the dry side facility built by Labour at Bedlington high school was heavily criticised by West Bedlington Town Councillors.
Labour lost control of the Council in May 2017 and the incoming Tory council have, covid apart, dillied and dallied on the Town Centre plans and have not taken up the mantle for planning a Leisure facility.
Councillor Alex Wallace is very concerned at their lack of initiative and is pointing the way to a new facility as an idea for Bedlington which has been developed at a cost effective £15M in Barnstaple by North Devon Council, £6M cheaper than the Ashington and Morpeth developments.
Councillor Wallace said: “Its been well reported that Eddie the Eagle Edwards has opened a new leisure centre in Barnstaple, home of Tarka the Otter with a 25m 8 lane competition pool, a 20m 4 lane learner pool a sports hall with space for 4 badminton courts, a large gym, 2 exercise studios a spinning area and play areas for young people and to top it all off is complete with an endless ski slope”.
He
went on to say: “This sounds like a very affordable proposition that would
become an unmitigated success in Bedlington, as we have the site and have the
will of our residents who want facilities of this nature and with the rising
ground of the old pit heap sitting alongside the site we could power this
facility sustainably using a solar array also sitting on County Council
land".
"I
urge the current administration to go and visit this facility taking local
Councillors with them and view what on paper seems an excellent use of
levelling up, infrastructure and section 106 funding that will come our way as
developments begin in earnest around the River Blyth Estuary and housing
follows the growth of industry.”
The recent announcements from Westminster that the Government wants to see austerity measures and pay restraint applied to public sector pay immediately and unlike Northumberlands neighbours in Scotland are not interested in any catching up exercise to help patch over the current period of rising inflation and growth stagnation which will damage rural counties like Northumberland says Councillor Lynne Grimshaw.
“Northumberland’s market towns outside the main tourism areas will be hit badly by the Government stance against its own civil service, NHS staff and Local Government. Northumberland’s three largest employers sit in these sectors and with spiraling household budgets and family costs already damaging business spend, decline is around the corner for many.”
“One of the shocks to me is that a small amount of help has been offered to Universal Credit claimants (and rightly so), that's larger than the 2% pay rise being offered to many lower graded workers in the public sector. So I need to ask does this conservative Government with a small c have any monetary policy in place at all other than lets make the mega rich richer and leave workers, pensioners and those struggling on benefits striving both financially and mentally as the everyday pressure is enormous particularly with rising mortgage rates, uncontrolled fuels costs and companies using the situation to force up profits for their shareholders”.
“ The BBC has reported that eight out of ten people questioned by them are seriously concerned about the current cost of living crisis in rip off Britain. Petrol pricing and energy costs are areas where people talk about their problems all of the time, so let's have the Government on TV to explain their current policy to us all because what I hear is weasel words from top Tories to cover up the truth”.
“The
Government places a windfall tax on energy giants and gives it to
people to help offset their bills which to me is simply borrowing the
money as the energy giants get it straight back; but not only do they
get it back those same giants on a falling market for crude oil and
gas push up petrol prices at the pump to stretch their shareholders
profits further what if any faith can we have in a Government which
allows this to happen? Get talking truthfully Tories or resign from
office.
Having read Keir Starmer's speech to the Local Government Association Councillor Eileen Cartie of Wensleydale Ward in the Town of Blyth told us that: “I completely agree with Labour’s vision for the future of Local Government, single year funding program’s and all decisions made secretly in Whitehall to ensure that control of local issues are not managed locally and councils are forced to vie with each other to secure funding for infrastructure projects is no way to gain traction towards levelling up England”.
“With the local government pay mechanism being wholly centrally managed by the vagaries of austerity’s working class ‘Project Poverty’ were now leaving employees 20% worse off in real terms than in 2010. Its making recruitment of the highly skilled workforce we require to ensure we can move forward as an industry almost impossible and when we recruit, many of the plugs of the projects we have recruited for have been stripped from the government’s completely negative agenda, take the A1 updating in Northumberland as a prime example, its on, its off, its on, its off its seems we have Government directing local government by whichever way the wind is blowing on Wednesday’s, not for and by what local people need”.
In Keir’s speech he points towards the Government dooming its own levelling up ambitions leading to failure of local ambition and "squandering" the potential of much of the country. Decisions should be made "as locally as practicable" as part of a new partnership between Labour and local government. "A new wave of powers devolved to help grow local economies".
He also said "An end to the uncertainty of one-year funding settlements, and more stable funding to allow councils to plan. More discretion for metro mayors and local government to spend their budgets how they see fit. No more pitting council against council for pockets of cash."
“I
fully agree with Keir’s and Labour’s vision for a fitter, better
understood by the electorate and visionary future for Local
Government where council’s can work together to benefit people and
not have to work undercover to ensure the council next door doesn’t
get the funding before you do”.
She told us that on the back of Brexit “I believe that Boris Johnson’s government is wrangling over how do we maintain a workforce large enough to grow the nation's economy yet still pander to those who want to stop immigration unless they are investors in in the gangmasters agencies and get a cut of workers wages, and they came up with let's keep the baby boomers working longer”.
“The baby boom generation, people born between 1946 and mid 1964 will all be of pensionable age sometime by mid 2031 and the current expression of spin by the Tories is of ‘how can we support such a large pensionable cohort?’ is another con and an element of what's becoming known as ‘Project Poverty’ to ensure we as a nation tip up £billions to investors and bankers while leaving ordinary people in dire jeopardy of starving or freezing to an early death”.
The pressure on Government finance to look after the elderly has been stripped away and DWP economists must have been crunching figures and data as fast as possible at the number of elderly deaths the Government inaction on the early pandemic period and the link with the extension of the pension age from 60 to 67 and then the disastrous for working class areas of the Government’s care and well being package that still forces people who live in towns with low value (by London standards) to have to sell their homes to fund their own care even though National Insurance payments have risen sharply under Boris Johnson.
Councillor Richardson went on to say”raising the pension age to 70 will certainly shorten working peoples lifespans even further than at present with health data showing how people who work on physical jobs such as the building trade, their upper body strength which enables them to perform at the rate employers expect falls away around 55 years of age and people working in the arena of public transport both eyesight and hearing essential faculties to safely deliver people to their destinations drop off at the same age so for many working until age 70 is simply impossible leading to people being destitute by the time their state pension arrives to bail them out a little bit.”
“ The
suggestion from the Tories fits neither equality nor equity
legislation as it currently stands and it's something even if you're
currently in your twenties you should think about when you cast your
ballot for the next Government.”
Their research found that the increase in the state pension age from 65 to 66 resulted in a 14 percentage point increase in the absolute poverty rate for 65-year-olds - with 24% of 65-year-olds in income poverty in late 2020.
Councillor Nisbett said “The research that was undertaken found that the massive increase in poverty was concentrated amongst those who rent their homes privately, single people and those with literacy and numeracy problems. With the high levels of private letsand people with problems concentrated in Croft Ward I noticed the changes first hand yet help is just not available to stop the problems people face growing daily”
The IFS associate director Jonathan Cribb told the press that a "key takeaway for policymakers is to ensure the working-age benefit system appropriately supports those approaching the state pension age, with this being increasingly important as the state pension age increases further".
Councillor
Nisbet said that “it certainly isn’t adequate but neither is the
help people need to try to budget without enough cash when not only
do we have rising pension ages but we also have the economy spiraling
out of control and local people worried sick about how they will
survive from week to week and that group will grow as this Government
sucks ever more people into the poverty trap of their making”
“
Councillor Grimshaw said: “My dogs and I love Druridge Bay and would hate to see the tourism element of it ruined through a nuclear power plant being sited within its dunes”. “Its not many years ago that people from all over Britain came to protect the area from coal extraction to keep ‘Britain powered up’ but the thoughts of a nuclear plant is certainly a visitor distraction and many would simply bypass its natural beauty and head for the well publicised North Northumberland or the Borders of Scotland, their pockets full of tourism gold would drift past areas of high need such as Lynemouth, Hadston and Amble”.
“My thoughts to help Northumberland lean more towards greeness would be to follow Manchester’s lead and site a Hydrogen production unit on the former old industrialised Alcan site to turn from high carbon domestic gas burning in homes to clean and green Hydrogen.”
“ I am not a technician but I do know that many of these plants are required nationally to ensure the nations gas grid gets greened up ASAP and it would help replace the highly paid jobs that went when Alcan backed out of its Northumberland site to enjoy the investment Scotland’s regional development area status could offer it”.
“Although
not in the same position as an RDA the North-East regions Local
Enterprise Partnership should pressure the government of the day to
try and get stuck in and bring a much needed future Green Energy
scheme into an area that still requires revitalising thirty years
after its heavy industry was lost”. “Not all new jobs need to sit
in the River Blyth basin with its already huge traffic problems and
we don’t want to revive our area with a nuclear power plant”.
“
“
Rishi Sunak’s attempt at helping families with the cost of living crisis may be one of the best pieces of spin of the twenty first century so far by a politician says Councillor Liz Simpson, told us “ I’m extremely pleased that the chancellor has followed Labours lead and announced a windfall tax on the energy giants profits, but I’m concerned in the fashion of distribution and that he didn’t follow Labour’s plan in how the tax was to be a real tax on energy giants and I believe Sunak was right to call his plan a ‘temporary energy profits levy’ as we the public only keep it for a very short time indeed and it's actually a Tax on public sector pension funds who are huge investors in energy shares.
They have been held back from profits for the last twelve years of Tory austerity and recipients of those funds will suffer later. Labour’s plans included help to offset the tax’s effect for both UK private and public sector pension funds”
“Sunak’s comms people seem to have designed the ultimate non-giveaway from Government, taxing energy giants in order to pay energy giants with the temporary levy and it's really a temporary lets borrow your cash levy, it's an unbelievable stunt of the first order, although I’m pleased people will receive the help from his stunt but the Tories have missed out a huge group of the most vulnerable people in the UK.”
“Unpaid carers have been overlooked in his dodgy giveaway yet millionaires will be given funds that Sunak suggests they should give to charity if they don’t need it”.
“The cost of living crisis will not be halted for the one million plus
unpaid carers across the UK as the Government has yet again chosen to leave
them behind. Carers allowance increased by 3½%, inflation now sits at 9% and I
think that the Government needs to look again at this group of people who need
help the most and ensure changes are made immediately to the allowance to keep
unpaid carers able to pay their way with dignity and not drive them into
poverty his refusal to help them shows how little Tories care about wider
society.”
Growth of businesses in Blyth will slow as a consequence says Councillor Eileen Cartie
With the recent announcement from Simon Clarke, a Treasury minister ruling out restoring the £20-per-week uplift to Universal Credit, introduced during the Covid pandemic, as a measure to tackle the cost-of-living crisis. Councillor Eileen Cartie, Labour Councilor for Wensleydale Ward in Blyth, which covers much of the retail and business area in the Town, challenges his decision.
Simon Clarke, the chief secretary to the Treasury, said it had been "explicitly clear" that the increase was only intended to helduring the pandemic. He said that cutting the taper rate - the amount of Universal Credit that is withdrawn for every pound that claimants earn through work - from 63p to 55p in December amounted to "a tax cut worth an average of £1,000 to two million of the lowest earners in society."
“This man has no idea how East Coast former industrial towns have suffered over the last twelve years with the permanent and ever ongoing loss of services which when added together allowed families to be able to put food on the table and pay their bills.”
“ The Tories have been very good in attacking the unemployed and have hidden the roll out of Universal Credit to the wider benefit claimants as a way of attacking unemployment, the truth behind their spin is that people who are being forced over to universal credit from other benefits in the main lose thousands of pounds as they go onto the frozen payments slate and will not get a rise for years.knocking back any business growth that the Tories shady ‘full employment’ statements are designed to lead people to believe”
least that some Tories have seen the error of their ways”.
Now that we have all seen the Conservative Culture Club operating at full speed, pumping out spin,with boozing and debauchery at the top of the agenda and taking no notice whatsoever in the requirements and needs of Communities and the residents of those communities nationwide.
The most recent fairy tales doled out on us, members of a gullible public affected by billionaire sponsored media, was that the new ‘levelling up and regeneration bill’ would be the catalyst to revitalise our high streets.
This new bill, the highlight of the Queen's Speech, dumps the responsibility and blame for the long term run downs of our high streets (as the car owning society we live has shown preference towards out of town single roof spending retail experiences for decades), onto cash strapped Councils and has been criticised from the off by professionals with top property guru Melanie Leech, chief executive of the British Property Federation, she said in response to the bill “such “political gimmicks” were “not the solution and will deter rather than encourage investment into the areas where it is most needed.”
But reading from the bill it's really about expanding Conservative Culture, retaining the centralised drip feeding of future promises, not real cash to communities who comply with the newly exposed culture from Downing Street and the love of Mayors over Development Agencies.
So the question that has to be asked is: ‘Will the bill encourage new
Mayors to pull down High Streets, turn them into car parks and have Hydrogen
powered green busses cart families to their local out of town shopping
experience complete with multiple food banking outlets? Now that's a culture we
all want to embrace isn’t it?
Councillor Liz Simpson who is also the Deputy Leader of Northumberland Labour Group whilst representing Newbiggin Central and East Ward has been noting the problems people in Newbiggin by the Sea are having to face every day since the Conservative Government's social, energy and cost crisis has come to the fore.
“As a member of Northumberland County Council, a huge and varied Council we spent a lot of time not so long ago supporting and accepting a ‘climate emergency’ which allows the Council to plan for the future and play its part in managing things which will contribute towards change on the world stage.”
“Now we have a real emergency on our hands and we haven't even discussed the matter yet. We have an agenda full of debate about what has gone wrong with the Council over the last six years, whilst people struggling every day have nowhere and no one to turn to.”
“We need to see where this £billion pound per year machine of local government in Northumberland can help those who live in the County and although it important to change the ethos and culture of the Council for the better we can’t currently change the past but should look to the now and declare a poverty emergency to help those in need and ease the burden of their struggles if we can, talking up the past renders us useless and it can wait until things get better for ordinary folk.”
Councillor Simpson went on to tell us about what she saw as the basis of problems locally and where a poverty emergency could be focussed by the Council.”People across the County are suffering from the inability to afford to place food on the table every day, the damaging effect of the change over of benefits to Universal Credit, fuel poverty, low levels of public transport, no access to private vehicles, inflation and product shortages.”
“farming needs to turn from its current monoculture base towards growing the crops people need in the shops as we can no longer rely on regular imports for all sorts of reasons and as a major rural council we should be moving towards aiding that change.”.
“These few items I’ve mentioned can be helped by a Council as large as ours and so can many more matters damaging the tradition and cohesion of families whilst relieving the stress and pressure on our residents and we need to investigate them all but only the declaration of a poverty emergency will focus the Council and its Councillors away from protecting themselves and spinning stories to cover up former actions and drive us towards becoming a benefit to our communities”.
“Let's do it now and not wait until it's too late.”
“It's time help and understanding was brought into the benefit system and not simply enforced change that will in the long run be worse for all, but when we live under a Government who want to spend £millions sending vulnerable refugees to Rwanda to make what they perceive as a problem
go away when in fact we have a shortage of Labour in some areas to harvest
crops etc., what do you expect?”.
The raging arguments while this general election draws to a head on 19th June when the millions of posta...