If you want to get an idea of what may get cut locally go and complete this survey.
Out of the £4500 each household gets in services around £650 will be lost as part of the spending review. 58% of the budget goes to kids services so it is obvious what will get cut!
You can help chose whether you would prefer the school breakfast club to be shut, or the older members of our community that need care assistance loose it at night, or close the library, stop maintaining the parks etc
http://www.haringey.gov.uk/shapethefuture
Comments
That survey is annoyingly organised. For instance, libraries (a vital part of the nation's culture) are bracketed with sport (a vile canker on society which, in so far as it has to exist at all, can surely be adequately supplied as community outreach by the obscenely wealthy and massively disruptive clubs).
As an aside, I went to the library near Holloway Road for the first time the other day. I was amazed at the range of things you can get involved with and borrow. Its a great service.
The Tories (cough, sry, Lib Dems too, they are having a biiig effect) are likely to free up most of the rest of the councils budget, which was quite circumscribed under government. The irony of Gove saying he is setting schools free is that councils have relatively little say in schools - the curriculum, inspections and national pay spine are the key barriers to teachers and head teachers taking targeted action. And Goves key actions on these topics? Telling schools to teach a list of kings, and giving them the option of being a freeschool, or.... oh wait no, thats the only option they are ´free´to take...
@BrodieJ - a fair point, if it is of interest, try Paul Ormerods recent paper for the RSA on network dynamics and policy - a good intro to the topic, and discussions about why throwing money at a policy isn't always the best method. Unfortunately, the services delivered by local authorities are generally service based, and labour or capital intensive - less money = less people repairing roads, caring or collecting bins. Subsidies, incentives, communications and regulation are mostly the preserve of central govt. and its agencies.
Agreed, though, that too often bureaucrats find ways to guard their own 'vital' input at the expense of fripperies like the actual bloody services.
I would dispute, however, that private companies do those things as a matter of course. I see so many lights left on all night, or computers, and it makes me deeply annoyed. I even tried to change the latter at my last staff job (it was official policy that we should log off but not turn off) but for various tedious and nonsensical reasons was told it couldn't be done.
Cuts mean cuts. I'm sure they could squeeze out 10%, especially with flexi time (although i'd agree with ADGS on that), and most people would only notice strains, less opening hours and so on. But 25% means services getting cut completely. I just wish they'd do the job they were elected for, and not bother around with this ridiculous survey. They should know which services are wasteful, which are councillors pet political projects, and get on with the nitty gritty.