Showing posts with label Community Wealth Building. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Community Wealth Building. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 12, 2020

"Labour Councils now have an even greater responsibility to defend people’s living standards"


Hat tip Labour Outlook

"As Labour members continue to take stock, in the wake of the General Election result, it is important to remember that in our Labour local authorities the party is still in power, and that Labour Councils now have an even greater responsibility to defend people’s living standards.

Even if the current Tory leadership’s claim to have departed with the worst excesses of austerity were true, our local councils still have the deal with the consequences of ten years of cuts to the tune of 60 per cent of spending power and more. Promises to put more money in are yet to be seen, and would barely scratch the surface in terms of what is actually needed. Services have been viscerally cut to the bone and we have an unprecedented housing crisis. So Labour leadership at a local level couldn’t be more important.

Even before the recent general election result, a number of leaderships in Labour councils have begun to develop and implement some interesting and radical policy responses, consistent with the needs of people who have suffered years of austerity. Community Wealth Building and a consciously interventionist approach to deal with climate change and develop a more inclusive local economic growth are among the key ideas which have emerged.

In London last week, Newham Mayor Rokhsana Fiaz launched the Borough’s own Community Wealth Building strategy alongside Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell. Indeed, the impetus for these new, progressive localised ideas has emerged in the context of Jeremy Corbyn’s radical policy shift, to reject austerity in favour of a new, green economic approach, focusing on investment to stimulate inclusive economic growth which benefits the many, not the few.

Labour in power in local authorities has a huge responsibility to act with a step change in radicalism, defending our communities and putting forward strategies which will put Labour values into practice.
Newham’s launch event also saw local representatives from businesses, trade unions, and the third sector and community campaigns. Central to Newham’s approach is to take measures which can address inequality and poverty, to use all of the levers available as a local authority to encourage better jobs and higher wages, acknowledging that low paid workers often work very locally and boosting their income boosts the local economy.

Addressing economic and social inequalities and responding to the Climate Emergency are key to the strategy, and it is of course even more crucial to get this right and make a difference in the context of a Tory majority in Westminster.

As Rokhsana Fiaz set out at the launch, Newham’s Community Wealth Building is not just an add-on, or a sub-section of policy, it is the lens through which all of the policies are approached and implemented. The ‘quiet revolution’ that had begun in local authorities across the country is about to get a whole lot louder.

Newham has borne the brunt of the austerity which has decimated of the public sector. It is about as far from the so-called ‘Metropolitan elite’ as one could imagine and some of the starkest inequality and severe deprivation sits in London. For example, in 2018 Newham had up to 36,000 people paid below minimum wage. And after astronomical housing costs, often in the private sector, are taken into account, a shocking 48 per cent of residents live in poverty, many juggling low paid, insecure jobs and vulnerable to employment rights abuses.

Compounding this, is a further need to respond to the public health situation where some of the worst air pollution in the country is literally poisoning people in our streets.

That is why it is so important to put forward an alternative at a local level as well as nationally. We cannot be divided by geography or by racism, as the Tories might want us to be, nor allow the grotesque pretence that they are the new found friends of deprived or ‘left behind’ communities. Whether we are in the north, the Midlands, or in London, we need to be united.

We have a duty to unite, to learn from each other and put forward alternatives. That is what Community Wealth Building is about. Put simply – Newham’s new community wealth building approach is about ensuring a greater share of the money made here stays in the local economy, rather than leaves it, and places a greater value on equality, sustainability and the environment.
Newham will encourage local and mutual ownership of businesses and jobs, rejecting the contention that the market will always provide the best solution.

Newham Council will be using its purchasing power and influence to keep wealth in the borough through leading on progressive procurement and by becoming a living wage employer, promoting workers’ rights and encouraging others to do the same. Alongside this, it is proposed to establish an Employment Rights Hub, to ensure the protections and rights everyone needs.

It intends to nurture the cooperative sector in the borough which is an integral part of a broader movement for economic democracy nationally.

These efforts could allow an economic fightback everywhere, and, as John McDonnell commented at the launch, can be an approach and potentially a model elsewhere.

We must defend the radicalism in Labour’s policies which have developed in recent years. Newham’s community wealthy building shows how Labour in local government can play its part in defending the policy agenda Labour needs to maintain, to resisting the new Tory majority in Westminster from the front line.

Daniel Blaney is a councillor in the London Borough of Newham.

Thursday, January 16, 2020

Community Wealth Building Launch in Newham Council

This morning we finally had the launch of the Newham Council Community Wealth Building (CWB) programme at The Crystal, Royal Docks.  We had to postpone it twice due to Brexit debate clashes and the General election.

Newham directly elected Mayor, Rokhsana Fiaz, opened the launch by promising that by implementing Community Wealth Building, there will be a new inclusive economic approach for a fairer Newham. We need to make sure that our money stays in Newham and is not extracted out.

After her introduction there was a marvellous, simple but clear video on what Community Wealth Building actually means (which I will post when it is made available).

Next was a panel debate with Happy Coman, an apprentice from local construction firm Morrisroe, Frances Jones from CLES ( a Community Wealth Building think tank) and Sam Gurney (London & South East TUC Regional Secretary). There was a wide range of views on CWB in practice.

Our keynote speaker was John McDonnell MP, Shadow Chancellor, who gave an insightful speech about CWB and also linked this to how progressive councils in the East End of London had a proud tradition of paying their workers decent wages and working in partnership with trade unions. He also made it clear that such councils and small, medium and large companies had been working together also in partnership for many decades.

It was nice to get a name check from Rokhsana and John about my personal involvement in the Labour Party Community Wealth Building unit (which I desperately hope will continue no matter who is elected as Labour leader).

After the event I was asked by a participant if I could I give an example of Newham Community Wealth Building in practice and I gave the live example of us bringing back into Newham Council (after 15 years) the privatised borough park keepers and gardeners on Tuesday this week.

Many of these workers enjoyed immediate pay rises, decent sick pay and pension provision as well as proper, secure employment contracts.  No longer will these workers be exploited and profits exported out of the borough to large multi-national outsourcing companies.

Need I say more?

Tuesday, January 14, 2020

Newham Council brings back in-house Privatised Park Keepers and Gardeners

A great picture from yesterday when the Mayor, Rokhsana Fiaz and cabinet lead for Environment, Cllr James Asser met staff who work in Newham Council Parks and Green spaces which have been brought back into public control from private contractors.

Many of the staff received a pay increase since they were now on Council rates (London living wage as a minimum) and get decent sickness protection and pensions. Private firms will no longer be making money from Newham by exploiting these workers.

We not only expect this to improve our parks and green spaces but it is also an example of Newham Council supporting Community Wealth Building (more to follow on this).

Proud to be a Labour Councillor. 

Friday, October 18, 2019

Labour Party Community Wealth Building Website and Newsletter

The Labour Party Community Wealth Building Advisory Board now has its own Labour website (see link) and has sent its first newsletter (see below).

The picture to the left is from the successful CWB launch event at this years Labour Party Conference with Preston Council leader, Cllr Matthew Brown.

This afternoon I attended the latest meeting of the board in the Leaders office, Portcullis House, Westminster. There is a wide range of Party officers, Labour Councillors, trade unions, academics, think tanks, community activists and NGOs who are involved. I hope to take part in a future CWB board work stream on Pension investment.



Friday, September 20, 2019

"Rebuilding Britain – starting with community wealth building in Newham" (Labourlist)

"More than a decade after the financial crisis, and more than nine years of the brutalising Tory austerity agenda, communities across our country are still waiting for the so-called ‘end of austerity’. Despite Brexit being pushed by commentators and politicians on the right as the only antidote for Britain’s ‘left behind’, Boris Johnson’s promise of more tax cuts for the rich and his disastrous no-deal Brexit folly will simply result in all of us being left behind.
However, the government-driven chaos around us hides a quiet revolution that has begun in local authorities across the country. It’s the community wealth building revolution, started in Preston and now spreading across the county, from Newcastle to Newham. It’s what Andrew Gwynne, Shadow Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government, describes as “a renaissance of local government in communities right across Britain”. This approach has rekindled optimism and confidence in local government’s transformative potential, and for the first time in many years we’re not on the back foot.
When I was elected mayor in May 2018, I pledged to make Newham a beacon of community wealth building. I wasn’t joking. Now more than ever, Labour in local government needs to be bold and loud about what we’re doing to tackle the stark inequalities the country suffers from. The current economic model is broken. Nationwide, real terms pay is less than it was in April 2008, and people in Newham are feeling it more than most. Meanwhile, precarious work has proliferated, with our residents disproportionately affected. Newham has the highest percentage of working residents in low-paid work in London. Astonishingly, up to 36,000 people in our borough were paid below the minimum wage in 2018.
The people of Newham are also on the front line of the housing crisis. We have over 27,000 residents on our council house waiting list, and after housing costs, a shocking 48% of our residents live in poverty. All the while central government has hamstrung our ability as a council to tackle these problems. Government funding of councils has fallen 50% in real terms since 2010.
Too many people in Newham – as elsewhere – are stuck in jobs that don’t pay enough to meet the cost of living, powerless to stop abuses such as wage and time theft. Too many of our children are growing up breathing in toxic air. Too many families are living in substandard accommodation. Newham Council is ready to tackle these issues head on, and we are already taking action.
Newham has a proud radical history in the fight for social progress. We are the borough of titans of the early labour movement such as Ellen Wilkinson, Eleanor Marx and Susan Lawrence, who fought passionately to improve the lives of Newham’s residents. Under my leadership, we are determined to continue this tradition as a radical, campaigning council. Recently we took on the banks and saved our residents some £143m in interest payments when we terminated toxic lobo loans with NatWest Bank. We’ve led the way in protesting the Defence and Security Equipment International (DSEI) arms fair, hosting our first ever Peace Exhibition – and we’ve kick-started a massive programme of building more homes at social rent levels, homes that our people can afford. The centrepiece of this new municipal socialism is community wealth building, embracing the principals of the green economy to respond to the climate emergency we all face.
Our new community wealth building approach is about ensuring our residents have the best possible opportunities, encouraging the creation of high skilled jobs and helping support our residents into them. We will aggressively and unapologetically drive up employment standards for our residents. We are now on course to become an accredited living wage employer, having already put aside £3m for our hardworking care workers.
We have been working closely with our local trade unions on sector-specific initiatives to improve the quality of employment in the borough. In this spirit we have signed up to Unite’s Construction Charter, as well as the Unison Ethical Care Charter. Finally, the council has been conducting research with workers in insecure employment, trade unions and third sector organisations so that we can tackle employment rights abuse in the borough.
Our community wealth building approach goes far beyond the labour market. Our strategy, which will be launched later this year, sets out the bold vision with which we will tackle the injustices our residents face. Following the lead of Preston, we will use our purchasing power and influence to keep wealth in our local economy. We will use all the tools available to us to help deliver this ambition. This is about harnessing the resources, talent and potential that already exists in our borough.
Our efforts shape our ambitious housebuilding programme and our response to the climate emergency. We aren’t just creating an economy that works for our residents, but a community where people live in homes at social rent levels that are fit for purpose and a borough that will become a hub for low-carbon innovation and industry.
All of this is just the beginning. We have already started scoping opportunities for cooperatives and community land trust housing, and we are tackling the pay gap in a borough which is the most diverse. We’re also financing a different type of economy as part of our plans to embed Newham’s local Green New Deal.
The opportunities and challenges faced by Newham requires an approach that genuinely transforms lives. That approach is community wealth building and now is the time to unleash its transformative potential in towns and cities across the country. This is all part of Labour’s agenda to reverse the devastating impact of Tory-led austerity that has wreaked havoc on so many communities and lives.
Rokhsana Fiaz will speak at our flagship rally ‘Rebuilding Britain’, at Labour conference. She will be joined by John McDonnell MP, Diane Abbott MP, Emily Thornberry MP, Jon Ashworth MP, Danielle Rowley MP, Stephen Kinnock MP, Lloyd Russell-Moyle MP, Lara McNeill and Miriam Mirwitch. Hosted by LabourList in partnership with Unite, the rally will take place on Saturday 21st September, 5.30-7pm in the Charlotte Room, The Grand.

Wednesday, September 04, 2019

Newham Council Cabinet gets welcome back gift from PEACH of Peaches

Yesterday's cabinet meeting at East Ham Town started off with a lively and good natured "action" by residents, children and activists from PEACH (The People's Empowerment Alliance for Custom House) with lots of singing, dancing and laughter.

A lovely change from the dire politics nationally.

They presented the Newham Executive Mayor, Rokhsana Fiaz and her cabinet with boxes of fresh peaches. Each peach had a name attached of an actual member of PEACH.

Activists said it was a welcome back gift to the Mayor after the summer break but also residents thanked her for the Council renegotiating rent levels for those in temporary decants. Some residents have experienced significant cuts in rent with one resident saying her rent had been reduced by £2400 per year.

PEACH being PEACH did not miss the opportunity of reminding the Cabinet that they still have further demands pending for better and more secure housing and they will be back.

The fruit was delicious and has been given out to Newham staff and family members.

There were a number of important items discussed and agreed at the meeting including Community Wealth Building and Climate Emergency/Improving air quality measures. 

Thursday, July 11, 2019

A day with a Community Wealth Builder

I have finally got around to posting on a great "fact finding" visit I had recently with Leader of Preston Council, Cllr Matthew Brown, showing me and a Newham Council officer Community Wealth Building (CWB) initiatives in and around his City centre.

Our aim was to learn from lessons from Matthew and the "Preston Model" for Newham. Matthew took us around a number of CWB related developments starting with lunch at a new co-operative cafe opposite the town hall.  Next was a walkabout around the excellent new market that has been rebuilt offering opportunities to new startups and existing stall holders as well as encouraging locals to shop locally. 

A Preston Cooperative Network has been set up proving advice, informaton, consultancy, training, facilities, finance and access to suppliers.

Reduced rent can be provided for by the Council for cooperatives provided staff are paid a living wage and recognise trade unions.

Matthew also took us to visit a housing coop building new homes and also new build student accommodation built with the help of pension fund investment.

We also had a frank discussion with Matthew and a Preston Council regeneration officer about how difficult the CWB journey has been at times. Dealing with public procurement and partnership arrangements with anchor institutions was never going to be easy or straightforward.  Getting support and close collaboration with the University of Central Lancaster, CLES (economic think tank), Mondragon Corporation (Basque federation of worker cooperatives) and the Open society was important but political buy in from Councillors and officers is key.

Matthew was very interested in what we are doing in Newham, in particular our proposed pension fund investment in social housing.

Many thanks to Matthew and Preston officers for taking the time to welcome and inform us. 

Thursday, May 30, 2019

UNISON Notice Board - Preston City Hall

I do like a good trade union notice board. Today I went on a visit to Preston to meet the Labour Council Leader Matthew Brown regarding Community Wealth Building (The Preston Model). I will write more about this visit later. Congratulations to the local branch for a prominent and up-to-date UNISON  Notice board. 

Tuesday, February 19, 2019

Labour's Community Wealth Building Unit - new website

This is what we want to do in Newham!

"With Tory austerity blighting our communities and forcing councils to cut and privatise many local services, there is an urgent need for Labour councils to come together to develop and share ways to bring services back in house, stimulate local economies to provide decent jobs,  and strengthen local democracy.
There are many creative solutions being used already, and we have set up the Community Wealth Building Unit to spread this inspiring work through online resources, regular workshops and training sessions for Labour councillors, and bespoke advice and practical support.
The Unit brings together councillors, unions, think tanks, and independent experts with experience of delivering frontline change and adopting creative methods to secure and provide vital services and stimulate sustainable economic development for communities in the face of austerity.

Wednesday, December 26, 2018

‘Heart Unions Week’ 2019 - Banning Zero Hours Contracts

Friday, December 14, 2018

Showing solidarity at UNISON stall Newham Council Dockside Building

I stopped yesterday at the UNISON stall at Newham Dockside building to chat with colleagues and especially our top UNISON Branch Chair, Kim Silver. UNISON is by far the largest trade union in Newham (and of course the best) and is also now the biggest union in the country with some 1.3 million members.

We discussed the exciting news that after so many years of UNISON campaigning and also thanks to the commitment of our new Mayor, Rokhsana Fiaz, Newham will finally become not only a London Living Wage employer but also sign the UNISON Ethical Care Charter.

Up to 1000 Newham care workers, mostly female and black residents, who are currently suffering poverty pay will have a pay rise of up to £100 per week, proper training and occupational sick pay. All new Newham Council contracts will require a London Living wage. Newham will become a Community Wealth Building Council and campaign for all employers in Newham to stop paying poverty wages.

Kim is Newham Custom House born and bred. As well as being a UNISON branch officer, anti-poverty and disability advocate she is also a local magistrate! She is your genuine grassroots Labour movement activist.

I am so proud to call her my comrade, even though in our new respective roles, we will not always agree and no doubt she will give me a severe ear bashing (or far worse) from time to time. 

Thursday, November 01, 2018

Child Poverty in London

This is from a hard hitting report by the Child Poverty Action Group. 37% of children in London (700,000 kids) live in poverty. It is projected to rise 2019-2021 to 41.5%. What a shameful statistic for one of the richest cities in the world. 2/3rds of such children live in families where at least one parent works#.

You can download a London borough specific report here.

Newham has the highest child poverty numbers in London at 36,780 affecting 43% of all our children.

The reasons for this must be linked to fact we have the highest level of low paid residents at 36% (London average is 21%) as well as exorbitant housing costs. The average rent of the bottom 25% of Newham properties is a staggering £1200 per month and the lowest paid 25% of Newham residents spend 72% of their gross income on rent.

All this is a major reason why we in Newham have (arguably) the worst homelessness crisis in England.

#"A child is living in relative poverty if living in a household with below 60 per cent of contemporary median income, according to government measurements".

While I am convinced that the new Labour administration in Newham (I declare an interest) can make a huge transformational difference to many people's lives.  For example by building a 1000 Council homes at a social rent, community wealth building or tackling violence amongst young people by increasing the number of youth hubs. The sheer numbers mean that we will only be able to defeat child poverty in London by a change in Government.

We need a government in power that will tax those who can afford it to really provide for all our children in need. 

Tuesday, July 31, 2018

Community Wealth Building Seminar for Labour Councillors 21 July 2018

This well attended seminar sponsored by APSE (Association for Public Sector Excellence) of was excellent. Held in the UNISON centre (HQ) in Euston Road, London.

Speakers Paul O’Brien and Mo Baines, APSE; Neil McInroy CLES, Cllr Matthew Brown, Leader of Preston City Council and Cllr Asima Shaikh, Executive Member for Economic and Community Development, Islington Council.

Chair was Mo Baines who works for APSE but is also a UNISON branch President and member nominated representative on the Greater Manchester Local Government Pension Fund.

Paul O'Brien warned us that the "Barnet Map of Doom" could still happen - social care budgets will rise and rise and soak up all Council budgets! London local authorities depends at the moment on Council Tax for 40% of its income. In 2020 that will be 51%! (a huge problem for Councils who have failed to increase Council tax in the past even by inflation and therefore decimated their tax base)

While Neil McInroy reminded that we live a world were 5 super rich men control 50% of its wealth while workers suffer wage contraction, how we must build wealth locally and stop global capitalism from extracting wealth for the super rich.

Cllr Matthew Brown described the "Preston Model" and long, hard, slog to bring about changes following the destruction of traditional local industries and the failure of private led regeneration schemes to develop the city centre.

Cllr Asima Shaikh explained how Islington Council had won court battles over private developers who had overpaid for land and therefore claimed that they could not provide 50% social housing.

A really positive event. At the end I had a number of very constructive conversations with London Councillors about the possible role of local government pensions funds investing in social housing. Watch this space.

(Hat tip pictures Cllr Sakina Sheikh)

Saturday, March 17, 2018

The role of pensions in building Community Wealth

Professional Pensions: John Gray says we should think about investing more locally, but there are a number of serious practical investment problems to overcome

As austerity bites and local authorities up and down the country struggle to provide services following cuts in central government expenditure and grants, communities are looking for alternative sources of investment.
The £250bn Local Government Pension Scheme (LGPS) is being eyed as one possible source. In the recent past it was the Conservative chancellor, George Osborne, who wanted to turn the LGPS into a "British sovereign wealth fund" and direct it to invest in local infrastructure projects. That big idea fell away due to opposition from councils, which dislike being told what to do and also demanded that the government guarantee the money if it all goes horribly wrong.
This time, the interest in the LGPS (and other pension funds) is from the Left. The community wealth movement championed in the UK by Preston City Council wants the LGPS and banks to provide local financing for investment. The idea that workers should invest their savings to not only secure their retirement but also to improve their local economy is on the face of things attractive. Who wouldn't want to help provide jobs for their children and better local infrastructure?
On a wider point, finance activist Joel Benjamin has noted that 30 years ago 60% of the LGPS was invested in the UK while now it is only 30%. He argues that this makes pension funds vulnerable to currency speculation and political risk.
However, there is the inevitable 'but'. The primary purpose of all pension funds is to pay pensions and by law a pension fund must be run solely in the interests of its beneficiaries. The LGPS is a statutory scheme but there is no Crown Promise and no Pension Protection Fund. While on one level it is unthinkable that pensions would not be paid, we now have a number of large councils showing signs of financial stress, and in February Northamptonshire County Council declared effective bankruptcy. The history of direct council investment in local projects has not been great, with too much money wasted on ill-thought-out 'vanity' projects.
The Carillion and Capita private finance initiative disasters also remind us that it is far cheaper and safer in the long run for government to borrow money and invest, but all this doesn't mean  there is no role for pension funds to invest locally.
On the positive side, the LGPS is being effectively merged and scaled up in size into large £25bn plus 'pools'. This should mean  they can widen their asset allocation, spread risk and acquire greater investment expertise.
There is also a possible window of opportunity with the growth of the campaign to divest in fossil fuels and reinvest in new 'low carbon' green industries. There is currently around £14bn in the LGPS invested in fossil fuels. Some councils have already decided to disinvest within five years.
So we should be thinking about investing more 'locally' as long as we deal with a number of serious practical investment problems to overcome such as the lack of accountability to beneficiaries (hardly any of the pools have employee representation) costs, risk, volatility, conflicts etc.
Meanwhile, there is nothing stopping pension funds actively engaging with the companies they own and getting them to support other community wealth building measures, such as making sure  they are responsible lenders or pay all their workers (including agency) the real national living wage, decent sickness and pension benefits; insource services; use local suppliers (especially mutual and other co-operatives); train and upskill their workers. In a landmark report by the Law Commission last year, it said: "There are no legal or regulatory barriers to pension schemes making social investments." Hopefully the time has come for pensions to play its part in community wealth building. 
John Gray is a member of the London Borough of Tower Hamlets Pension Board, and is speaking in a personal capacity

Sunday, February 04, 2018

Conference on Community Wealth Building.

It seems that the event on Thursday may be full. I am speaking at a seminar below. 

15.05: Levering local finance

Chair: Councillor Martyn Rawlinson, Preston City Council
Marianne Sensier, University of Manchester (10 mins) 
Councillor John Gray, Newham and Unison NEC (10 mins) 
Catherine Howarth, Share Action (10 mins) 

The focus is on local finance, so will focus on using pension funds and local banks to provide local financing for investment. The overarching theme of the conference is on what Labour can do now – i.e. where we are in power already – to overcome austerity and strengthen local economies

Thursday, January 25, 2018

Conference on Community Wealth Building. 8 February 2018. Preston

I am due to speak at this seminar about work done in promoting more creative and sustainable use of local government pension funds in the session "Leveraging Local Finance"

"Shadow Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government, Andrew Gwynne MP, and Shadow Chancellor, John McDonnell MP, will host this conference for activists, academics and Labour councillors.

In a series of sessions, we will explore how to use levers such as procurement, insourcing, setting up local banks, and energy generation to revitalise local economies and strengthen economic democracy. It will be a great opportunity to learn from each other about how we can boost our local economies to overcome austerity and transform the lives of those who are suffering every day because of the policies of the current Conservative Government. 

Speakers include: Ted Howard - Social entrepreneur, author and Executive Director of The Democracy Collaborative. Hilary Wainwright - Editor of Red Pepper magazine, Aditya Chakraborrty - Senior economics commentator for the Guardian. 

Cllr Matthew Brown - Preston City Council, Cabinet Member for Social Justice, Inclusion and Policy Initiatives. 

Location – Harris Museum and Art Gallery, Market Square, Preston, PR1 2PP"