DARK DAYS FOR LANCASHIRE: Jobs and services go into meltdown
A leaked document seen by the Evening Post reveals massive cuts, including £5.6m from the county’s bus services, £2.7m from the highways budget and £5m from the libraries and museums budget.
Figures are due to be released on Monday and council workers, living in the shadow of possible redundancy, will be briefed about the proposed changes, which will affect many of their jobs.
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Hide AdMany services could go, others will be scaled down and many buildings could be sold off over the next two years.
But still councillors have predicted the council will be broke within two years – despite planning to dip heavily into its reserves.
The Evening Post understands proposals under discussion this week include:
* Reviewing the future of all county council buildings and relocating many services to county hall
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Hide Ad* Cutting £5.6m from public bus services in the coming year
* Cutting £9.2 m from the Community Wellbeing fund in 2016/17
* Slashing a further £2.7m from the highways budget in 2016/17 on top of £946,000 plus already agreed
* Cutting £1.3m from the skills, learning and development budget next year
* A £640,000 cut from the Youth Offending Team budget
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Hide Ad* Multi million pound cuts in waste services, including cuts at household waste recycling centres
* Total library cuts rising to £4.1m and museums and cultural services losing £1.3m from budgets in 2016/17.
*An extra £450,00 off street lighting
* cutting £1.8m off transport to day centres and an extra £282,000 plus off school transport costs.
Even the Knott End ferry is listed as a possible victim, with a suggestion that £85,000 of council funding could be cut.
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Hide AdThe Post understands that with target savings of another £66m on top of £15.3 m already agreed for 2016/17 the council would be forced to dip into its reserves for another £68.7m to keep certain services afloat.
The council has predicted it will need overall to make an additional £223m savings by April 2020 to tackle a funding gap caused by a combination of reduced funding from central government and rising demand for essential services, especially care services.
It predicts that between 2011 and 2020 it will have had to have made £685m savings in total.
The recommended cuts will be discussed by the council’s Executive Scrutiny Committee on November 24 and considered by the Council’s Cabinet on November 26.
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Hide AdOne Labour councillor, Coun Terry Brown from Chorley, said everything was “in the melting pot”.
“We haven’t decided what the cuts are. By the end of 2018 the county council is going to be bankrupt – everything is being looked at right across the board.
“We are making some very unpopular decisions that none of us want to make. We have to do it, we have got to try to accommodate the government cuts.”
Labour’s Deputy Leader County Coun David Borrow declined to comment on the forthcoming cuts, but confirmed that the next meeting of Cabinet would be deciding which cuts to apply so that, where required, formal statutory consultation could proceed as soon as possible. This would mean any economies could be introduced at the start of the new financial year.
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Hide AdConservative leader Coun. Geoff Driver said: “When we are given the information we will consider it carefully. However I am concerned that they (Labour) don’t appear to have approached it in the best manner – for example they have restructured the officer organisation of the county council before they determined exactly what it is the county council is going to do. We need tor remember the county council is here to serve the people of Lancashire and especially the vulnerable people of Lancashire.”
But Green party Councillor Gina Dowding warned, with 30 per cent more cutbacks to come over the next few years: “Things are very, very bad already. I’m surprised people aren’t already on the streets to be honest. They are going to cut so deep. The County Council has actually managed to hide (previous) cuts from the public so far, but it’s absolutely clear that we can’t carry on any longer. People are going to see visible cuts and see that drop in service. I think it’s going to be almost an impossible decision for county councillors to make.”
Her concerns include rural bus series. She said: “We need bus services, not only for rural communities but for young people and the 30 per cent of people who do not have access to a car in the day and also for climate change reasons.”
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