At least 50 members of the public attended the Manchester
City Council Executive meeting yesterday. They were mainly campaigners and
supporters of local services from Withington, Levenshulme and Miles Platting
hoping to have change council minds about the closure of swimming pools and
libraries in those areas.
3 speakers from the public were allowed in defence of
those facilities and they spoke well, the effectiveness of the Withington
campaign and work of Councillor Chris Paul were noted.
The initial response from Council to keep the pools open
were met with cheers. These quickly changed to shouts from the public area once
more details were revealed.
- Only the pools were considered in this apparent change of heart.
- The Withington pool (which had the most vigorous campaign and the most active campaigning Councillor (Paul)) would be the most likely facility to remain open. The Levenshulme and Miles Platting pools have ‘less viable business plans’.
- All the pools to be saved from closure would have find a way to fund running costs for two years, until the new facilities are built otherwise all bets are off.
All decisions would be considered as part of the current
and ongoing consultation.
Most of the campaigners left after that but strangely
enough, despite the long list on the
Exec agenda, the committee ended soon afterwards, without any substantive
examination of any of these areas.
Despite the victory tweets and Facebook updates,
presumably mainly from Labour supporters, the campaigners impromptu gathering
was a more sober affair. The acknowledgement that they had a very temporary
reprieve and recognition that the e Council offer could be considered a ‘divide
and rule’ tactic led to a resolve that the separate local campaigns should
coordinate and work together where they can.
It was good to see all the support for local services. It
was good to see Green Party supporters there. It was good to see Alexandra Park put
forth from the public area.
But stepping back and looking again, its clear that moving
the Council, even temporarily, has only been possible with the combination of
organised public pressure AND an active, willing councillor onside.
The Council seems unwilling to have any meaningful public
discussion of the budget cuts its proposing for the city, even within its own
forums. The council’s agenda included its Budget Strategic Response, how the
newly combined Adult and Child Services department will work, the overall
Neighbourhood strategy which includes parks, pools and libraries. All completely
sidestepped.
The Executive meeting was a fantastic display of
political illusion. Not only did the important elements on the agenda
disappear, even the commitment to keep the pools open appears to be ‘close-up magic’.
Levenshulme activists were not impressed, commenting to
the Withington protesters they had seen this trick before. Manchester City
Council promised
to keep their baths open until the new facility is built as a result of their
2011 campaign.
There are reports now that Levenshulme
Labour councillors will vote against budget cuts.
We will wait and we will see.
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