Christmas & New Year Message
Christmas & New Year Message from Cllr Jon Tandy
I would like to take this opportunity to wish all residents of Shrewsbury and Atcham and all my friends on facebook and twitter a very happy Christmas and peaceful and prosperous New Year.
In a number of ways 2009 has been a tough year for many of us, and my sincere sympathies go out to all who have suffered problems, be they related to financial, emotional, health or other matters. But let us not let the difficult global situation blind us to the everyday heroism all around us.
Local residents such as nurses, family carers and those in the voluntary sector have all worked tirelessly to help others, and my deepest thanks go to them. Of course our soldiers in Afghanistan and elsewhere have the toughest job of all, and deserve our fullest gratitude and admiration.
To me, it is difficult times that show the true value of working together in a caring society that protects the weakest and most vulnerable. I shall be doing everything in my power in 2010 to prevent any attacks on our welfare services, which are the foundation of a Britain that we still should be very proud of.
Jon Tandy
Shrewsbury Christmas Period Waste and Recycling Collections
by jontandy on November 25, 2009
in Community, General, Local Council
This has come to me by email so I thought that I would share it with you.
Re: Changes to waste and recycling collection days during the Christmas period
During the Christmas and New Year period there will be changes to waste and recycling collection days. Households will have their waste containers emptied on different days of the week to normal and this change affects household refuse, recycling and garden waste collections. The changes are being made because of the statutory bank holidays.
The important point to note is that, during the week prior to Christmas (week commencing 21st December) collections will be made one or two days earlier than normal. During the two weeks after Christmas, collections will be made one, two or three days later than normal, depending on what day that collection would normally happen.
I enclose for your information a copy of a leaflet that will be delivered during weeks commencing 7th and 14th December. The leaflet will be delivered by the refuse collection crews to all Shropshire households, this sets out the dates of the revised collections.
The other important point to note is that the pattern of alternate week collections will continue as normal, garden waste collections are not being suspended and there are no additional residual waste collections. Residents will be required to place out whichever bin would normally be collected, albeit on the revised collection day. Residents must put out their waste containers ready for 07.00 on the appropriate collection day.
This message is being communicated at numerous times and by various media; including the enclosed leaflet and in the Shropshire Magazine to ensure as far as possible that all households get the information. However, I would be very grateful if you could help to disseminate this information within your community, in order that residents do not miss their collections at a time when more waste is generated than usual.
As a final point please note that natural Christmas trees, cut into lengths of less than 5 feet, are accepted as part of the garden waste collections service for composting. Christmas trees can be placed in or alongside the wheel bin.
I thank you in advance for you assistance.
Yours faithfully
Mark Foxall
Policy and Development Manager
round up of todays queen’s speech
by jontandy on November 18, 2009
in Community, Election, General, Labour Party, Parliamentary
Without waiting to hear what might be in it, Nick Clegg has already told us that it should be cancelled and David Cameron that it will be shamelessly electioneering. Tory Lords told us that they would stop new legislation in its tracks, as if they already had a mandate from the people and didn’t need a General Election.
By contrast, the Queen’s speech set out what Labour will do – action for growth, jobs and restraints on unjustified city bonuses, legislative targets for high standards in education, health and Still committed to eliminating child poverty by 2020.establishment of the beginnings of a National Care Service for elderly and disabled, starting with free social care in the home for those most in need.
These are the measures that this country needs and that the Tories will oppose. Any party which aspires to govern for the whole people and especially one which now represents itself as compassionate and caring, should be finding areas of agreement with Labour in all these areas. But they won’t. Their opposition reveals their real intentions.
QUEEN’S SPEECH 2009 Summary brief
by jontandy on November 18, 2009
in Community, Election, General, Labour Party, Parliamentary
QUEEN’S SPEECH 2009
Summary brief
Labour’s legislative plans for the 2009/10 Parliamentary session
From the office of Rt Hon Harriet Harman QC MP
Leader of the House of Commons
CONTENTS
- Foreword
- Summary of Bills
- Bills by Department
For detailed briefing on each bill, please contact the relevant departmental Special Advisers
Foreword
The Queen’s Speech set out the next steps in Building Britain’s Future. Our legislation for the next parliamentary session is a programme of tough action on the big issues that matter to people, in line with this Government’s core values of fairness and responsibility.
At its heart is the conviction that government can be a force for good – to secure economic prosperity and build a fairer society. Not small government or big government, but smarter – reformed and responsive – government.
Our focus, as ever, is economic growth, locking in the recovery and forging a stronger, fairer, Britain for the many not the few.
This is a difficult period for our country, but we are optimistic. Britain has a bright future, not of austerity but progress, based on the country’s greatest strength: the talent and enterprise of the people.
- It’s little surprise that David Cameron doesn’t want to talk about the policies in the Queen’s Speech – and about how he would put them at risk. For example while we are introducing a National Care Service, all he would offer is a local care lottery.
- The Tories’ vision for Britain is fundamentally pessimistic – about a Britain that is broken and with only an age of austerity to look forward to. The Conservative approach is to abandon the responsibility of government; to let the recession take its course; and to leave people to sink or swim.
Investing for the future: building tomorrow’s economy today
We will ensure that the banking crisis we have experienced over the last two years should never again come at a cost to the living standards of Britain’s families. Instead we will rebuild banking so that it supports the economy and offers fairer finances for businesses and consumers.
So we will transform the way the financial sector is policed, through the Financial Services Bill, with banks themselves and not the taxpayer made to pay for bank failings. Part of this is about ensuring we have a tough supervisory regime; we will ensure the Tripartite system is strengthened, is more transparent and is accountable to parliament, with a legal duty on the Financial Services Authority to promote financial stability, to regulate bankers pay (including a power which allows the FSA to tear up future contracts which do not comply with the rules) and a requirement for banks to organise themselves to deal with possible future difficulties – so called ‘living wills’.
Reform also means empowering consumers to hold banks to account by taking collective action to get redress. We will require the financial services sector to fund independent consumer advice and education and ban credit card companies from sending consumers unsolicited credit card cheques.
As the economic recovery is established, we will legislate to require reductions in government borrowing in a fair and responsible way with the Fiscal Responsibility Bill. This will ensure the national debt returns to a sustainable level, with the Government accountable to Parliament rather than a new quango.
And as a key part of our strategy for growth, we will promote targeted investment that creates jobs and builds a modern green infrastructure for the digital age. The Digital Economy Bill is a key part of Labour’s active industrial strategy and will maintain and build on Britain’s leading position in the digital sector. It includes measures to ensure a competitive, modernised digital communications infrastructure, protect intellectual property and maintain plurality in regional news.
The Energy Bill will bring about a financial support mechanism to demonstrate carbon capture and storage at a commercial scale. It will also establish a mandatory social price support scheme to help more of the most vulnerable households with their energy bills, and requires the regulator, Ofgem, to ensure consumers get a better, fairer deal and access to secure, low carbon energy supplies.
Better protection for businesses, communities and homes from the risks of extreme weather as a result of climate change will be provided by the Flood and Water Management Bill. And the Child Poverty Bill will enshrine in law the Government’s commitment to eradicate child poverty by 2020, defining what this means.
- The Conservatives are wrong on the recession and wrong on the recovery. George Osborne would choke off recovery by cutting support at the worst possible time.
- For all George Osborne’s tough talk on bankers, they spent ten years calling for deregulation; and even as the financial crisis started, they welcomed a report calling for the abolition of all mortgage regulation.
Fair chances for all: building the next generation of public services
A better Britain means world class public services underpinned by guarantees not gambles. So we are moving to a system, building on the achievements of the last 12 years, where patients, parents and local communities have enforceable rights over the services they receive – and front line staff have more freedom to shape services.
The Children, Schools and Families Bill will provide guarantees for parents and pupils, setting out what they can expect, with School Report Cards letting parents know how their school is performing and a new duty on local authorities to act when parents are unhappy. Where standards are unacceptably low, Ministers will be able to direct a local authority to issue a warning notice to a school and to close any school which fails to comply with a warning notice. We will also set out in law new guarantees for pupils and parents at all state schools, including curriculum reforms to equip young people with the skills they need to succeed, and a new entitlement to one-to-one tuition for children falling behind.
The Social Care Bill means the dignity of a new national care service: free personal care in their own homes for those with the highest need. From next October more than 275,000 of those with the greatest needs will be protected for good from charges and top-up fees for care in their own homes, funded by making the tough choices necessary to secure efficiencies in lower priority programmes. To help more people meet this aspiration we will also next year, begin to offer 130,000 older people needing care for the first time, six weeks of more personal intensive support designed to help all who want to remain in their homes. This will mean that those who have suffered from a stroke, fall or hospital stay will have the best possible opportunity to return to their homes and the intensive support to give them dignity confidence in doing so.
- The Conservatives plan to introduce ‘Swedish-style’ schools – a policy the Tories admit could lead to schools in rented office blocks without playing fields. Evidence from the Swedish National Agency for Education suggests the policy could well cost the Tories more, not less as they claim.
- The Conservatives would scrap Labour’s guarantees for patients – including the right to see a cancer specialist within two weeks if your GP suspects you may have cancer. They would scrap our guarantees to young people – including the right to an education or training place for 16 and 17 year olds.
- The Conservatives offer a local care lottery – not a National Care Service. David Cameron’s plan would do nothing for people unless they leave their homes and move into permanent residential care. The Tories have been forced to concede that they would not cover the full costs of all residential care, so under Conservative plans pensioners may end up having to pay top-ups.
Fair rules: building a strong society
On crime, we will prioritise new ways to tackle the anti-social behaviour that still blights some estates and neighbourhoods. The Crime and Security Bill will protect communities by making parents take responsibility for their child’s antisocial behaviour, imposing parenting orders when a young person has breached an ASBO. The Bill will cut the time police spend on stop and search forms, help victims of domestic violence by allowing police to bar suspected perpetrators from their homes for fixed periods, set a six-year time limit on DNA record-keeping for adults whom are arrested but not charged, and introduce compulsory licensing for wheel clamping businesses.
The Digital Economy Bill will protect children through new age ratings for computer games. The Bribery Bill will equip prosecutors and courts to deal effectively with bribery at home and abroad.
With the Equality Bill (carried over) we will introduce a new public sector duty to narrow the gap between rich and poor, ban age discrimination outside the workplace, and introduce reporting for large employers on gender pay. And we will enact the Agency Workers Regulations 2010 to provide agency workers equal treatment with permanent staff on pay and holidays after 12 weeks in a job.
- The Conservatives talk Britain down. David Cameron claims our society is broken.
- The Conservatives would cut 3,500 Police officers from our streets this year and they would make it harder for the Police to use DNA evidence to track down criminals.
Rebuilding trust in a modern, democratic Britain
We must also restore confidence in our democratic institutions. The Constitutional Reform and Governance Bill (carried over) contain measures to rebuild trust in our democracy by putting the civil service on a statutory footing, provide a power for the House of Lords to expel a member and end the by-election of hereditary peers. The draft House of Lords Reform Bill will set out how the Government will bring about a wholly or substantially elected second chamber of Parliament.
Britain in a fairer, safer world
We will also ensure a better world by extending Britain’s influence as a global force for good. Fulfilling our responsibilities means we must remain at the heart of Europe and a leading member of the wider international community. And a safer Britain means continuing to tackle the terrorist threat at source – in the borderlands of Afghanistan and Pakistan.
The Cluster Munitions (Prohibitions) Bill will implement in UK law the Convention on Cluster Munitions that bans the use, development production, stockpiling, retention or transfer of cluster munitions. And the draft International Development Bill will make binding the Government’s commitment to spend 0.7 per cent of gross national income on international development by 2013.
- The Conservatives’ obsession with Europe means they would spend 5 years on institutional wrangling in Brussels. David Cameron has dragged his party to the fringes of Europe – and by leaving Britain isolated he would put British jobs and businesses at risk
Summary of Bills
This pack includes details of the following bills and draft bills we plan to introduce as part of Labour’s legislative programme for 2009/10.
- The Agency Worker Regulations will follow a joint declaration signed by the CBI and TUC agreeing to a 12-week qualifying period for agency workers to be given equal treatment with permanent staff.
- The Bribery Bill will develop a comprehensive UK strategy for tackling foreign bribery, which will strengthen our work with international partners, establishing a clear legal, regulatory and policy framework.
- The Child Poverty Bill (carried over) will enshrine in law Labour’s ambitious pledge to abolish child poverty by 2020.
- The Children, Schools and Family Bill will introduce guarantees for pupils and parents to raise educational standards.
- The Cluster Munitions Bill will put into law the significant new arms control agreement banning the use, production and transfer of cluster munitions, as laid out in the Convention on Cluster Munitions (CCM).
- The Constitutional Reform and Governance Bill (carried over) will help restore public confidence in the political system.
- The Crime and Security Bill will protect communities by ensuring that parents take responsibility for their children’s antisocial behaviour and by tackling youth gang crime.
- The Digital Economy Bill will ensure a competitive digital communication infrastructure, protect intellectual property, and maintain plurality in regional news. It also will ensure the UK is at the leading edge of the global digital economy and that our creative industries remain among the worlds’ best.
- The Energy Bill will provide support for energy consumers, giving a greater amount of help to the poorest and most vulnerable, as well as introducing a new financial incentive for carbon capture and storage
- The Equality Bill (carried over) will make Britain a fairer place where people have the opportunity to make the most of their abilities whatever their race, gender, disability, age, sexual orientation, religion or belief, or family background.
- The Financial Services Bill will give consumers more protection and empower the FSA and the Government to introduce tougher regulation of banks and their risky practices to protect the taxpayer.
- The Fiscal Responsibility Bill will enshrine in legislation the plan to secure the recovery and then take the steps necessary to keep the public finances on a sustainable footing.
- The Flood and Water Management Bill will help protect people from flooding and introduce a fairer system of charging for water bills for churches and community groups.
- The Northern Ireland Assembly Members Bill will permit the NI Assembly to delegate powers in relation to the setting of salaries and expenses for MLAs.
- The Personal Care at Home Bill will make it possible for those with the highest care needs to receive free personal care in their own homes.
Draft Bills
- The House of Lords Reform Bill proposes to complete the reform of the House of Lords and replace it with an elected second chamber.
- The International Development Spending will make binding the government’s commitment to spend 0.7 per cent of gross national income on official development assistance from 2013.
- The Third Parties (Rights against Insurers) Bill will modernise and simplify the procedure for a person who has suffered an injury or loss, caused by an insolvent person, but who is likely only to be able to recover compensation from the wrongdoer’s insurer.
List s of Bills and their Department
BILLS
Agency Worker Regulations BIS
Bribery MOJ
Child Poverty HMT, DCSF, DWP
Children, Schools and Families DCSF
Cluster Munitions (Prohibitions) FCO
Constitutional Reform and Governance MOJ
Crime and Security Home Office
Digital Economy DCMS, BIS
Energy DECC
Equality GEO
Financial Services HM Treasury
Fiscal Responsibility HM Treasury
Flood and Water Management DEFRA
Northern Ireland Assembly Members Bill NIO
Personal Care at Home DoH
DRAFT BILLS
House of Lords Reform MOJ
International Development Spending Bill DFID
Third Parties (Rights against Insurers) MOJ
The Queen’s Parliamentary Speech 2009
by jontandy on November 18, 2009
in Community, Election, General, Labour Party, Parliamentary
I have just been watching the re-opening of Parliament and this years speech by Her Majesty the Queen. I am very pleased with the content of her speech and I am pleased to see the needs of the everyday citizens being addressed.
I firmly believe that the role of any government is to work as a force for good with a key responsibility to ensure that the country has economic prosperity, ensure fair and equal representation for all and work in the best interest of the entire nation that they are elected to represent and not just for the benefits of a privileged few.
This is the Labour Party ideal, an optimistic ideal, Britain is a great country and its greatest strength lies in the talent, determination and resourcefulness of its people. Great Britain excels in tough times; it was our wartime spirit that led to the development of the NHS after the second world war and now with the country coming out of the global recesion, I am pleased that this same national spirit is working to make this better, fairer and accessible under the newly announced plans for the development of a National Care Service which includes making in home care services available for free to the most needy ealderly which in the UK is somewhere around 350,000 people
I am glad to hear of tighter regulation of banking industry pay, the multi million £ bonuses with the interaction of a duty on the Financial Services Authority (FSA) to regulate pay who will have backstop power which, if necessary, will allow the FSA to tear up future contracts which do not comply with the rules. This is part of the UK leading international action to reform the financial system – which only twelve months ago was on the brink of collapse.
The Labour government has consistently spent money on much needed areas of public services such as healthcare and education and this is very apparent in Shrewsbury and Atcham with the continuing development and improvement of the Royal Shrewsbury Hospital allowing increased access to new and exiting services from the hospital
With the Parliamentary session begun. we are on the countdown to the next General Election where I will be standing as the Labour Party candidate for the Shrewsbury and Atcham borough
The Labour Party have promised to
- guarantee education or training place for young people up to 18; and a job or training place for 18-24 year olds out of work for a year.
- guarantee diagnosis within one week if your GP suspects you have cancer.
- free personal care at home for those with high needs.
- no-nonsense intervention to tackle 50,000 problem families.
- cut the deficit in half in four years.
The next general election will be a big choice about the change we want for Britain. I have mentioned Labour’s promises above but lets compare them to those of the Tory party.
- give a £200,000 tax cut to the 3,000 wealthiest estates.
- cut £1,000 in child trust fund payments from families earning modest incomes.
- scrap guarantees for cancer patients.
- cut schools funding from next year and offer only a gamble – not a guarantee – for young people out of work.
- cut the equivalent of 3,500 police from our streets this year.
We’ve shown since the last Queen’s Speech what we can achieve together. At that time there were stark predictions on the likely levels of
unemployment and repossessions. But we chose action – investing £5bn to help people back to work; helping 300,000 people to stay in their homes by providing help and advice with paying their mortgage. And our timely action is working. There are 1.7 million more people in work than if the experience of the 1990s recession had been repeated; and repossessions and mortgage arrears are running at around half the rates at which they peaked in the early 1990s
It’s little surprise that David Cameron today doesn’t want to talk about the policies in the Queen’s Speech – and about how he would put them at risk. For example while we are introducing a National Care Service, all he would offer is a local care lottery.
I believe that Labour offers change for the mainstream middle. The Conservatives offer change to benefit the privileged few – a change you can’t afford.
