Britainmore secretive, less effective and
not on the side of ordinary
26 January 2011
Public Bodies bill rally and lobby
Wednesday 9 February 2011
Demo
from 12.30: Old Palace Yard, Westminster, SW1P
3JY
Lobby 14.00 – 16.00: Committee Room 6,
House of Commons
Britain will become a less transparent country and less able to
stand up to powerful lobby interests if the government gets its way
on the Public Bodies bill, the country's biggest union, Unite, is
warning.
Ahead of a rally on 9 February to defend the hundreds of
publicly accountable bodies in the government's firing line, Unite
says that bodies as diverse as the Agricultural Wages Board,
British Waterways, the Forestry Commission and advice services have
a vital role in underpinning public life. Unite adds that sweeping
the bodies away is an act of political vandalism which will shut
ordinary people out of the decision-making process. The
government's proposals for the sell-off of Forestry Commission land
have already sparked a massive wave of protest, and this is just
one small part of the Public Bodies bill.
Workers representing the thousands of public servants set to
lose their jobs when the government pushes through its reforms,
along with community groups, service users and agricultural
workers, will come to on Westminster on Wednesday 9 February, to
urge MPs to stand up against the coalition government’s so-called
‘public service reform’ in the bill.
Unite is calling for the coalition to press ‘pause’, after
criticism from the cross-party commons public administration
committee which said that the coalition had ‘poorly managed’ its
cull of these public bodies.
Unite is concerned at the rush to dismantle the bodies - with
next to nothing in the way of prior consultation - suspecting this
has more to do with silencing critics than improving the operation
of government.
A photocall of workers will take place at 12.30pm on Old Palace
Yard/College Green, opposite the House of Lords. There will be a
marquee where workers from Unite, PCS and Prospect will look to
press their cases to MPs. The waiting workers will be entertained
by a cider band singing songs about the need to stop cuts hurting
rural communities in particular.
The Public Bodies bill is currently wending its way through the
House of Lords. It has proposed to reform 481 bodies, of which, 192
will cease to be public bodies and their functions will either be
brought back into government, devolved, or abolished altogether.
Vital organisations from every sector are being abolished ranging
from the UK Film Council to the Forestry Commission, British
Waterways and the Agricultural Wages Board.
ENDS
For further information please contact or Ashraf Choudhury in
the Unite Press Office on 020 7420 8914 or 07980 224761.
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