Forum Topic

Labour actually extended its tax base to include severely disabled and forced terminally ill people to pay the expenses of Labour counsellors last year.Ealing Labour leader Councillor Julian Bell and Councillor Yvonne Johnson, Cabinet Member for Finance, Performance and Customer Services said they are reducing income generation by £4.5million to deal with the 2018 planned budgets deficits. Julian Bell blames Prime Minister Theresa May’s public funding arrangement which he claims will cost him £143 million less in 2021, a 64% drop. Julian lives in a social rent flat from A2 Dominion while renting out his own 5 bed room house in Noel Road, Acton W3 for which he has increased the rents 224% in 3 years.Parking enforcement is to be sold to private car park firms like Wink to stop cash coming into the Council own accounts. More staff reductions, re-negotiating contracts, increasing local land charge search fees for home buyers, renters and litigants is Ealing Council’s response to their failure to balance the books by the imposition of Council Tax on the severely disabled last year. Labour are actually reticent about charging developers for planning advice because it would lead to Community Neighbour forums getting relevant information on planning in the Borough.Before the policy changes were announced Wink had increased the parking enforcement charges it currently collects in Ealing for Roderick Nicholas Cahill, chair of Action West London and director of 22 other firms. In Reading, Berkshire and Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire Cahill runs private rental and deposit firms but his rat invested share ownership scheme in South Acton was reported in Facebook, The Sun and the Independent which mentioned the £70 million loan Labour raised on Rod Cahill’s behalf in 2010 and the taxpayers are paying for so his firm CHL can own 75% of these 132 flats.Leader of the Conservatives on Ealing Greg Stafford disputes Labour's financial claims and said:  ''A year ago, the Council voted unanimously to accept the Government’s 4 year settlement deal in relation to its main Revenue Support Grant in recognition that Business Rate retention will soon become the main source of funding.” In real terms the Government has only cut 0.5% in its funding of the London Borough of Ealing but due to mismanagement and legal expenses of its service charges Ealing is £73 Million in the red as Socialist economics fail everyone.Greg Stafford explained the reality was that there is no protection from further reductions due to Labour’s incompetent financial management. Their personal greed is the phrase he should have used. All cabinet decisions are subject to call in for a period of 5 working days from the date of publication of the minutes of the meeting on November 14th 2017 but Tories, pushing opportunity and environment policies, lack number to do anything. The parking enforcement idea was from Bassam Mahfouz who helped Rod Cahill make money from a similar arragment on the Friary Park estate, Acton W3Councillor Yvonne Johnson did not explain her role that cause looking after the most vulnerable to be more costly. For over 20 years she has sat on Ealing Council committees, claiming in expenses and consistently failed to get social care contracts right. She organised a public consultation and then changed the results so Ealing could levy Council Tax on the most vulnerable, leading to at least 4 suicides in Acton. Jeremy Corbyn’s close IRA connections could be bettered by Councillor Johnson just as donations to Hammas by Councillor Abdullah Gulaid exceed those of Acton Labour MP Rupa Huq. Labour say the most vulnerable are protected by them handing all community assets over to their friends. Councillor Gulaid is currently chair of the Acton Central Ward Forum for which he receives for 2 hours work more than a woman on Universal Credit, after working 26 years, receives to live on for 6 month. Local government councillors’ expenses start at £12,000 a year and are going up by 5% while CEO Paul Najsarek and all managers on £120,000 pa are awarded with a 20% rise in personal expenses so the elite of local government can pay their golf club fees at the taxpayers’ expense.For years Labour has paid experts like the Temple Group, architects of the London Plan for Saqid Khan, to design ways to keep people healthy and living in their own homes and working to prevent problems like homelessness. Health Promotion England after consulting Sadiq Khan is paying millions to the admen Saatchi & Saatchi to help people live better lives and reduce demand for expensive services without using the word poverty except in long boring sentences. These expenses to taxpayers are on the rise in all Labour local authorities, partly to give jobs to people with pointless qualifications.There is no doubt that the Labour Party services itself first or that Labour lack soul, sorry SOLE –a Self Orientating Life Experience. Consolidating council assets and increasing charges for services is now covered by the Local Audit (Public Access to Documents) Act 2017 that broadened account inspection rights to citizen journalists and bloggers, anyone who has published material on the web now has the rights to inspect local authority accounts and request supporting documents.– but are stronger and broader. It is now a criminal offence for councils to withhold info, unlike with Freedom of Information Act in England.

Martin Cain ● 3077d

The full statement explains more.Ealing Council’s cabinet meeting heard last night (Tuesday 14 November) that the budget gap the authority will need to close over the next four years now stands at £73million.Public funding austerity measures, introduced in 2010, will mean that the council will have £143million less government funding to spend on local services in 2021 than it did at the start of this decade.  This is the equivalent of a 64% drop in government funding, which is a greater cut than both the London and national average. The council has taken steps to address these extensive cuts in central government funding, along with the additional challenges of rising costs and demand for services over the past seven years.  This has included ongoing efficiency savings, staff reductions, re-negotiating contracts, consolidating council assets and increasing income through charges for services as well as using its financial reserves. These challenges will remain in the coming years and the council eventually expects to have made a staggering £265million of savings between 2010 and 2021.  Last night, proposals for £4.5million in budget reductions and income generation for the next financial year were approved at the meeting. This includes proposals to delete 38 posts across the council; charging developers for planning advice; increasing local land charge search fees for property buyers; and selling parking enforcement services to private car parks.  A second round of proposals will need to be considered by councillors early in the new year, ahead of the council setting its budget for 2018/19 in February. As government funding to local councils decreases local services will instead be funded through council tax, business rates and fees and charges for council services.The council has sought to increase investment in the area and boost the local economy in an effort to create jobs and much needed homes which has helped to increase both council tax and business rates receipts.  Alongside this, the council has embarked on an ambitious programme to transform the way it works. This programme, called Future Ealing, seeks to improve the lives of local people by prioritising the council’s limited resources and reducing budgets against nine key aims.Councillor Julian Bell, leader of the council, said: “Seven years of swingeing austerity cuts are causing real pain and mean further cuts are unavoidable. We have a growing and ageing population and demand for services is increasing year-on-year.  “Given this, we have set ourselves an ambitious challenge to review services and find ways to improve them with less money; be creative and innovate including harnessing digital technology.“We have also been working to grow our way out of austerity. Our ambitious regeneration projects have helped secure transport improvements and more decent and affordable homes; and, by encouraging new businesses to locate to the borough, new jobs have been created and more income has been generated from business rates.”At the same time as facing unremitting central government cuts, the council is also experiencing sustained demand for adults’ and children’s social care and housing, which adds to the pressure on the council’s budget. Councillor Yvonne Johnson, cabinet member for finance, performance and customer services, said: “Looking after our most vulnerable residents is one of the most vital things we do but it is also the most costly.  But, we cannot turn our backs on those who need us the most. Social care is in crisis across the country and we, like other councils, need a national funding solution urgently.“Although we passed on the government’s social care precept to residents in their council tax bills last year, it simply wasn’t enough to bridge the financial gap and meant we had no option but to use the council’s savings, known as reserves, to fund the shortfall. But of course, you can only use this money once and it will eventually run out.“We are prioritising what we do to protect the most vulnerable, including trying to keep people healthy and living in their own homes for as long as possible and working to prevent problems like homelessness. This helps people live better lives and reduces demand for expensive services. We also want to build community pride and encourage residents to help look after the borough so that we can protect funding and ensure it continues to be a great place to live, work and visit.”To ensure it sets a balanced budget the council is continuing to identify additional savings and efficiencies from across the organisation. Under the Future Ealing programme the council has already started to see results being delivered that improve peoples’ lives and saves money. For example, the council has significantly reduced the number of children who are looked after by the council by carrying out intensive work with families to help them stay together – this improves children lives and saves millions of pounds.  The council continues to face uncertainty regarding schools’ funding and grant funding. By the end of the decade there will also be a change to the retention of business rates, but the full details of what this will mean for the council are not yet known. However, Ealing (in partnership with all London boroughs) is seeking to participate in a government business rate pilot next year.All cabinet decisions are subject to call in for a period of five working days from the date of publication of the minutes of the meeting.The full budget report and appendix outlining savings proposals is available online

Paul Webster ● 3085d