Issued by: Ashley Lumsden, 5 Glasshouse Walk, London SE11 5ES
Embargo: Immediate, 9/12/99

Kramer and Davey launch cost of living petition

Susan Kramer, Liberal Democrat candidate for Mayor of London, is launching a petition today with London Economics Spokesman Edward Davey MP to call on the Government to introduce a cost of living index for London.

The index will be used to guarantee that public sector workers in London get a fair wage, to ensure that those people such as teachers, nurses and police officers are not penalised for living and working in London, and to improve recruitment into the health service, London schools and the Metropolitan police.

Liberal Democrats have undertaken research into the public sector recruitment crisis in London. Pay and conditions are so poor that people are turning their backs on the public services in London, and the Government is doing nothing to tackle the problem.

Susan Kramer said:

"We are faced with a situation whereby hospitals are recruiting nurses from overseas, where more and more supply teachers are being employed from agencies to teach in our schools, and where the Metropolitan Police is left with a budget surplus from its staff allocation budget because it cannot recruit enough people.

"Staff shortages are being bridged by the use of agency staff at huge cost to the taxpayer. Something has to be done.

"In 1982, the then Conservative Government abolished the London Weighting Index and since then, no official measure of the cost of living and working in London has been collected and published. Because the Government doesn't have any evidence, it is more difficult to find a solution.

"We are calling for a new London cost of living index to be established. That way we can identify the problems and tackle them to stop the recruitment crisis.

"As an immediate measure, the Government should identify the cost to taxpayers of agency and supply staff, the extra cost of training and recruitment, and the cost of high staff turnover. The money identified can then be reallocated to increase the London Allowance for public sector workers where appropriate."



ENDS

CCTV  

Issued by: Edward Davey
Embargo: Immediate, 10/12/99

Davey backs CCTV bids for Hook Parade and Cambridge Road Estate


Local MP, Edward Davey, has written to Jack Straw to back a Kingston Council bid for funding towards new CCTV equipment for the Hook Parade in Chessington and for the Cambridge Road Estate in Kingston. In his letter, Edward Davey argues that the
"need for both these projects cannot be stressed too highly".

Arguing for the CCTV bid on the Hook Parade, Mr. Davey wrote how his constituency work had convinced him of the urgent need for the project, to tackle the vandalism and intimidation that residents often have to endure.

He told the Home Secretary that:

"There is a real community resolve to tackle the problem, with local councillors, local businesses and the police working together, but they need external support.

"There is no doubt that CCTV will not only reduce crime statistics, but it will reduce many more crimes that aren’t reported. It will help reduce the fear of crime, which is very genuinely felt especially by our senior citizens, other young teenagers and women in this area.


Arguing for the CCTV bid for the Cambridge Road Estate, Mr. Davey wrote:

"For the first time in years, a number of grassroots projects are beginning to flower on the Estate. I think this CCTV project could be one more ingredient to give the residents greater confidence in their community, and play a role in helping these other efforts really take off.

Commenting on this important campaign, Edward Davey said:

"Local people are fed up of police cuts and fed up of seeing vandalism and graffiti. If we can win these CCTV bids, they will help local police, council and communities to start fighting back. I will do all I can to back the Council in this important initiative, and will follow up this letter by raising it with Ministers face to face. This bid will back up the work of the Safer Stations Initiative I launched last year and the new CCTV cameras on train platforms and in Kingston town centre. "

ENDS

Issued by: Edward Davey
Embargo: Immediate, 12/1/2000

"Kingston's NHS short-changed again!" - Davey

Local MP launches the 'Kingston NHS Challenge'

Following the recent announcement of next years budget for Kingston and Richmond Health Authority, Kingston & Surbiton's MP has uncovered that this is one of the lowest allocation rises in the country.  The final national rankings, put Kingston at 86 out of a total of 100 local health authorities.  As a result, Edward Davey has launched the 'Kingston NHS Challenge' calling for local residents' help, in his efforts to convince the Secretary of State for Health of the need for proper funding for Kingston's health services.

Commenting on the allocation figures, Edward Davey said;

"This latest insult to the Borough's residents comes unfortunately as no surprise.  Successive Governments have cut Kingston's share of public funds for schools, the police and the NHS. This abysmal Labour allocation just compounds previous Tory cuts.

"Kingston's NHS desperately needs more funding. Even the new accident and emergency department will be of no use if we don't have the numbers of qualified staff needed to run it.

"I am determined to change the way Ministers and Whitehall see Kingston. We do have our own real problems, so we shouldn't always be bottom of the pile.

"I hope local residents can help me change Ministerial minds"

"If they write to me with their experience of the consequences of NHS under funding then I will personally make sure that their cases are placed on the Secretary of State for Health's desk.  If we create such a large pile of cases for him to see, then it will become impossible for him to deny the fact that Kingston's health service needs further funding just to meet the basic needs of its residents."

ENDS.

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