Showing posts with label barnet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label barnet. Show all posts

Saturday, September 30, 2023

The 6 million Brits who are members of the Local Government Pensions scheme should read this...

 

Hat tip to Chair of Barnet LGPS committee Simon Radford and the Fabian Society.

A little Dry - Local government pension fund reform may not be exciting, but the consequences of failure could be significant, argues Simon Radford

In the mid-1980s, The New Republic, an American magazine of politics and culture, hosted a readers’ competition: Could anyone nominate a more boring headline than that which had recently been published in the New York Times: “Worthwhile Canadian Initiative”? No one could.

Similarly, the publication of the government’s new local government pension scheme consultation might seem to be of interest only to the incurably geeky or as an aid to the hopelessly sleep-deprived. This stance is understandable but in error: because buried in the consultation launched this month are proposals that make for bold, election-ready messaging, even if their practical merits are far more dubious.

The government’s consultation proposes passing new rules to severely constrain the discretion of local council pension funds, like the one I chair in Barnet. First, more of our investments would be ‘pooled’ into ‘Collective Investment Vehicles (CIVs)’, which would be valued at at least £50bn, rivalling the large and influential Canadian and Australian government pension schemes. Secondly, funds would be required to invest up to 5 per cent of their assets to support levelling up in the UK. Finally, along with some less significant technical changes, the consultation outlines an ambition for 10 per cent of our investment allocations to be made to private equity.

The problem? It seems unlikely that these measures will have any practical effect beyond providing ammunition for political slogans at the next election. Worse, without more thought, they risk being actively harmful to those who rely on local services who would ultimately have to fund any shortfall in retirement income for the pension fund.

Let’s start with the idea likely to get the widest support within the local government pensions community: greater pooling is a divisive topic, but seen as desirable by most and inevitable by practically all. However, further progress on fees, fund choices and investment performance is needed to make pooling live up to its promise, made more pointed by shrinking from the current eight regional pools to five ‘super-pools’ as the smaller pools unable to meet the minimum £50bn size requirement are swallowed up. Canadian pension funds get access to top quartile fund managers, often at bottom-quartile fees. The challenge for the new UK pools will be to do the same.

The two less attractive government suggestions are the more specific constraints around levelling up and private equity, despite, or because of, their ambition. The problem is not their end goal, but that the proposed means are unlikely to achieve them, while creating new problems to solve.

Bemoaning a lack of investment in the UK from capital allocators is not new. For nearly 20 years, from the early 80s to the late 90s, UK pension funds accounted for over a quarter of the total market value of UK-listed shares. However, this declined to under 13 per cent at the time of the financial crisis to under 3 per cent now. A lack of investment into UK plc meant flat productivity and wages for British workers, and an economy where a third of Brits have either no savings or under £1000 in a savings account. This lack of savings meant less money in banks or pensions which could flow into greater investment back in the UK. And so the doom loop fed upon itself.

Reversing this vicious cycle into a virtuous circle might seem a master key to unleashing our island’s entrepreneurial spirit. Indeed, it is. The problem is that Jeremy Hunt, while identifying the problem, has misunderstood correlation for causation in proposing a solution.

The issue is not that the UK’s pension wealth does not want to invest in amazing British companies. It is that Britain has become a global centre for allocating capital rather than creating the brilliant companies fighting to receive a share of the bounty. If a myriad of brilliant, cheap, innovative British companies were open to investment, pension funds would be queuing to participate financially in funding their growth. Being forced to invest in less profitable opportunities is less likely to grow new businesses in the UK’s left-behind communities than generate lower returns, leaving local council taxpayers to make up the difference to fund local government pension schemes.

So much for pension funds unleashing billions to solve the levelling up policy challenge. What about the promise of private equity to create a pipeline of new British companies to build the next Google here in the UK?

The era of cheap money, thanks to quantitative easing and low interest rates, gave governments a golden window to invest in a potential pipeline of new business creation. Beyond growing London’s fintech sector, however, too much venture capital money chased either dubious business-model-led ‘innovation’ (another scooter startup with the promise of eventual local monopolies and higher prices!) or subsidised consumers favouring a more convenient delivery of a traditional service. Rather than buying pasta in the supermarket, you could get it delivered to your door… on subscription!

The consultation does not, in fact, restrict proposed private equity investment requirements to funds that invest solely in the UK. This likely represents a tacit acknowledgement of the fact that capital follows production, not the other way around. Again, the problem is not that great companies are struggling to acquire funding, but a lack of great companies. The hard work of tech transfer rules, subsidising higher infrastructure and prototyping costs for building hardware, and changing government procurement rules—all vital for helping climate tech, for example, to go from aspiration to reality—deserves more attention than strong-arming public pension funds to throw money at a problem that they alone cannot solve.

The government is right to envy Canadian pension funds: their size helps make them desirable partners for the best venture capital managers and institutional investors. They, in turn, benefit from both access to these top managers and discounts on fees. Pools, given a wide enough range of products and effective use of their scale, could well deliver similar advantages.

But just as the Government is correct to identify this particular worthwhile Canadian initiative to copy, perhaps it might too embrace the wider lesson of worthwhile Canadian initiatives: the hard, unflashy work of diagnosing problems and putting in place several detailed steps to try and start to solve them. When it comes to government policy pronouncements, rather than the headlines that report them, boring can be a virtue.

Image credit: Number 10, CC BY 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons

Wednesday, April 06, 2022

UNISON Labour Link Supporting Val Shawcross and Croydon Labour


Tonight a canvass team from UNISON Greater London Labour Link joined local activists in Croydon to campaign for a Labour Mayor, Val Shawcross and local Councillors. 

It was at times very wet but it was great to get out of local comfort zones and go on the campaign trail somewhere different. I had a positive response with all my contacts. 

Many thanks to local members for looking after us during and after the canvass.

London UNISON Labour Link will also be running a telecanvass (dialogue) session for Wandsworth and canvass in Barnet. 

Friday, April 18, 2014

A tale of Bob in Barnet


A modern day Morality tale about the fate of wicked and evil Privateer Councillors (with a very catchy tune). Hat tip Barnet UNISON. 

Sunday, May 19, 2013

Barnet Casino - the video


Watch this clever YouTube cartoon video on the consequences of the privatisation of Council services in Barnet, London.

Sunday, November 18, 2012

London Councils Summit 2012

On Saturday I went to the London Councils Summit at the medieval Guildhall in the City of London. I had my ward surgery at 10am so I missed the morning session and opening keynote speech by London Mayor, Boris Johnson. I gather it was as silly and superficial as usual.

I stopped off at a lunchtime London Councils "micro-surgery" on "Social Media" and came away convinced that I should try a "Tweet up" Councillor Surgery. Tell everyone I will be available on twitter on such and such date and time for 1 hour for West Ham ward matters. Watch this space.

After lunch I went to the breakout session "Mind the funding gap" with  Cllr Richard Cornelius, leader of LB Barnet, Cllr Catherine West leader of LB Islington, Chair John O'Brien and LSE director, Tony Travers.

We all live in our own political comfort zones and bubbles. So it is rewarding to come out and meet the enemy, and find they are as convinced and comfortable with their own political prejudices as you are with yours. Catherine and Richard are chalk and cheese. Yet they were both polite and humorous in their attempts to convince us of the merits of their very different approaches to the dire and desperate financial situation we are in.

In the Q&A Richard was not impressed with my comment about the report last week by PWC that London Councils pension funds could have been £1.6 billion better off if they had merged. Nor that the outsourcing of all Barnet Council back office services will result in his pension scheme going belly up and this will completely wreak their finances.

You can check out my twitter account of the debate here 17 November 2012.

The final session "taking the temperature - London's Political Landscape" by Robert Gordon Clark and Tony Travers was so interesting that I stopped tweeting in case I missed anything. You can check out what people did tweet about at #lcSummit. 

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Barnet Strike Action today (with Charity twist)

Good luck to Barnet UNISON who are taking strike action today. Picture is of Regional Secretary Linda Perks addressing last months rally outside Hendon Town Hall. I'm off to Herts today so cannot make it.

"300 UNISON members will be taking one day strike action On Tuesday 18 October as part of a Trades Dispute which concerns the identity of the employer. 

Unlike other strike action there is a twist. 

On the picket line outside the headquarters of Barnet Council (north London business park) UNISON members will stage a short piece of street theatre to demonstrate the dangers of One Barnet Programme to residents, services and staff. There will be two performances at 9am and 9.30 am. 

At 10.30 am a number of strikers will be taking a coach trip across the borough in order to provide help and assistance to a local charity which is desperate need of help. The strikers will spend the rest of the day carrying a number of tasks for the charity. 

UNISON members are calling on the Leader of Barnet Council not to pocket the money he has saved from the strikers and instead donate that money to the Mayor’s Charity

Barnet Young Carers And Siblings 'BYCAS'; The Outward Bound Trust; The Alzheimer's Society 

The day’s activity will end with a Candlelight Vigil outside Hendon Town Hall from 6.30 pm before the Planning Committee begins.  Check out rest of press release here

Saturday, October 15, 2011

Escape from One Barnet


"On Tuesday 13 September UNISON members who have been balloted on Trade Dispute against the One Barnet programme took strike action

The Council took a decision that if staff refused to sign a register to say they would work a full day they would be asked to leave. in effect the Council imposed a 'lock out!'

Our members are committed public servants and who believe in the public sector ethos, wanted to find a way to educate and inform work colleagues and more importantly residents who use public services in Barnet"

Next Strike Tuesday 18 October 2011. Check out Barnet UNISON LG branch site here.

Wednesday, January 06, 2010

Tory “No Frill” Councils offer green, portable snow ploughs to clear our Streets!


Wannabe Tory “Easy Jet” Councils are reacting to massive public criticism of their failure to adequately grit and clear their roads by trying to empower the elderly, disabled and poor by offering them what they describe as cut price and Cameron green house gas lite portable snow ploughs (aka shovels) at only £50 per time for them to clear their own streets of snow and ice.

The Tory Council's now of course only want to offer services to the rich who can afford to pay extra for luxuries such as clear roads, regular rubbish clearance, home care and sheltered housing for the sick and elderly.

The rich will be able to pay for their roads to be gritted and sweep while the poor and vunerable will just have to get on and do it themselves.

Tories...

Hat-tip Col. Roi

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Housing Matters 25 October 2009

Big Failure over Fire Safety results in Tiny fine?
Inside Housing has a Crazy story about an utterly inadequate sentance given out for serious safety failures – “two residents escaped and another was rescued uninjured from flats in a three-storey building in the Morecambe area in March last year. Fire crews investigating the blaze found a fire alarm system was not working, fire doors were not self-closing or fitted with smoke seals, a fire exit door was not fitted with an appropriate lock and no FRA had been carried out under the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005".

This block was owned by Lancaster Council who were fined just £3000 and “managed” by Adactus Housing Group who were only fined £2000 (plus costs). What sort of message or deterrence does such a tiny fine send out to Landlords about the importance of ensuring basic fire safety?

Easy Jet Council Sheltered set back
Roof reports here on another London Tory Council Barnet and its plans for an “Easy Jet” style service plan. Residents will be able to pay extra to jump the queue for services. It also reports that the Council’s plans to get rid of residential wardens in its sheltered blocks have now been put on hold due to a pending judicial review that the Council failed to properly assess the impact of such cuts on disabled and elderly residents.

“They also have a reputation for being chummy with investors and developers...”
In another report here Inside Housing goes amongst the “slums” and the “barracks of the poor” in Hammersmith and Fulham (H&F) to meet Stephen Greenhalgh right wing leader of its Conservative Council. Greenhalgh was the co-author of a recent pamphlet called Principles for social housing reform published by the think tank Localis. In which he clearly calls for the ending of security of tenure and the introduction of market rent levels. He and the Tory Party are now busy trying to distant themselves from the report. Even though Conservative shadow minister for housing Grant Shapps was at a meeting to welcome it. Local tenants point to new H&F Council developments where there is no public housing included and of course the local Tory Politian’s have “a reputation for being chummy with investors and developers” and enjoy regular visits to developer conferences in the south of France.

Sanctuary at home from DV & Hate
The LGA report on a scheme (it’s not a new idea but is being reported as one) to encourage building “panic rooms” within homes for victims of domestic violence and hate crime. “The rooms have solid core doors, reversed to open outwards with two mortice bolts fitted to the inside of the door along with three large steel hinges and a 180 degree door viewer. An emergency telephone is also provided under the scheme – 999 only – and will be wall mounted”. This is an excellent initiative since many at risk do not want to “go homeless” and flee their home but they must have protection if attacked at home and before the Police arrive.

The first Election manifesto
The FED launched their manifesto last week and had 30 MP’s in attendance (including 3 former housing ministers). Some of things I found interesting that they called are:- £11.7 billion investment to build 150,000 homes 2011-14; manage unsold private sector new build at market or sub market rents until recovery; allow more public housing to be made available to those who are not the most vulnerable but cannot afford homes; compel the nationalised banks to give mortgages for shared ownership and stopping pre-payment rip offs for domestic fuel.

(this is my weekly round up of Public Housing news - picture is of a East London Estate taken at dusk last week which I just happen to like)

Saturday, September 08, 2007

Slash wages, Provoke Strikes, Sack Stewards & Sue: Fremantle – The Third Sector Nightmare?


In March this year I put up a post supporting Barnet UNISON over their campaign to stop vulnerable ex-local authority care workers, having their wages and working conditions slashed by this so called caring “not for profit” company, Fremantle. Not only are their basic wages being cut by about 30% but their sickness pay, holidays and overtime rates have been cut. See also the UNISON web site.

Since then there has been strike action by workers opposed to the cuts. That was hardly surprising. These workers were already low paid. What has been surprising is the appalling campaign of intimidation being waged against the strikers and their supporters.

Using tactics reminiscent of the most violent “union busters” in the United States, Fremantle have sacked one of the striking stewards (Andrew Rogers) and have even launched legal action and shut down the campaign page (not yet the site) of the well respected international trade union web site “Labourstart” . Labourstart have been able to relaunch this campaign on a new server. Check out “We will not be Silenced

Fremantle’s web site claims they operate In 50 locations across Buckinghamshire, Milton Keynes, Maidenhead, Barnet, Harrow and employ 1,500 staff. I’m not sure where or how Fremantle get their money from, however, it is absolutely clear that there are serious problems with the way that it treats its employees and uses what must be at source, public money, to launch what appears to be vindictive legal action against critics. I’ll have to do some digging about who provides contracts and funding.

Fremantle is in danger of discrediting the entire “not for profit” Voluntary sector. The Trustees need to take control of their senior management team and sort this out.

Saturday, March 24, 2007

Support Fremantle workers!


It seems only yesterday that I blogged here about support for the Central Foundation School strike next week and mentioned that we needed to do more than petitioning and lobbying.
Well, last week, Barnet UNISON circulated the latest information about the dispute between Fremantle, the outfit who run care homes in that borough, and UNISON and the GMB, representing the staff. This “not for profit” “third sector” provider is about to sack any staff who won’t accept cuts in pay and conditions (note the Fremantle "Head of Development" above left, clearly expressing what she thinks of Barnet UNISON).

The unions are balloting for strike action. The strike action would have commenced but for a legal challenge from the employer under the anti-union laws. Keep checking the Barnet UNISON blog to be kept up to date with this important dispute.

Blogging is useful only insofar as it helps us to undertake worthwhile activity for our unions and our beliefs.

I sometimes post stories about political disagreements and disputes within the union and labour movement (and these are not unimportant) – but it is most important not to lose our focus as socialists and trade unionists.

Our enemies are not each other (not even those who themselves seem to lose sight of this). Our enemies are bad employers who attack our members’ conditions and politicians who would allow these scoundrels to run all our public services. I hope everyone reading this blog – and every trade unionist blogger – will publicise this important dispute and take some action to support the Fremantle workers.

Email the Fremantle Chief Executive Carol Sawyer at carole.sawyers@fremantletrust.org and Catalyst (who are also involved) Chief Executive Rod Cahill at rod.cahill@chg.org.uk.
Also I have emailed Barnet UNISON this proposed petition which could be submitted to the Number 10 web site http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/new

"UNISON the biggest trade union in the UK has members who are home care workers in Barnet, London who were transferred to the company “Fremantle” under the Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment) Regulations five years ago. Fremantle have now threatened to sack these employees on 1st April 2007 unless they sign new contracts worth 35 per cent less in pay, with reduced sick pay and holiday entitlement. We ask the Prime Minister to note the distress caused to residents who live in the care homes by the potential loss of trained and known staff; and to support the campaign being waged by Barnet UNISON against this appalling attack on already low paid workers; and calls on the Government to review employment law to prevent such abuses of public service workers in the future".
Posted by John Gray at 9:10 AM 0 comments
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