This is a press release from Camden Unison
“While not surprised our members are still shocked as details emerge of the Con-Dem coalition’s Emergency Budget,” said Camden UNISON Branch Secretary George Binette. He added, “The Cabinet of millionaires seems determined to have a showdown with the public sector workforce and those who rely on the services we provide. The combination of VAT rising to 20% and pay cuts is toxic.”
Scores of UNISON members across the borough took part in lunch-time and early evening protests on 22 June at the Town Hall, Crowndale Centre and local schools in response to Chancellor George Osborne’s proposals to slash public spending.
The expenditure cuts are vast and wide-ranging, but taken together give the lie to the Government’s claim that we are somehow all in this together:
- The vast majority of Camden employees will face a two-year pay freeze, which amounts to a substantial real pay cut. For the lowest paid increases of £250 a year come to just 1%-2% at a time when the Retail Price Index (the most accurate measure of inflation) is running at more than 5%;
- Thousands of local authority and other public sector jobs in the borough are under threat with the prospect of generating any additional revenue through Council Tax now blocked for at least another year;
- Spending on education may be chopped in real terms by as much as 25% over the next four years;
- Caps on housing benefit levels will make Camden and much of inner London a ‘no-go’ area for many private sector tenants at a time when the prospects for social housing are bleak;
- Changes in welfare benefits and tax credits will supposedly yield savings of £11 billion to the Treasury, five and a half times the revenue generated by an annual levy on the major banks and building societies – the very institutions rescued by the previous Government to the tune of more than £1 trillion, and
- Corporation tax – already among the lowest in Europe – will fall from the current 28% by a percentage point each year for the next four years.
George Binette expressed the hope that the recently elected Labour council will be an ally in resisting the “Con-Dem age of austerity”, but concluded, “We will ultimately have to rely on our strength as a trade union, working alongside other public sector unions, tenants’ associations and other service user groups in developing a movement that is both able to wage a battle of ideas and mobilise on the streets and in the workplaces, not only in Camden but across Britain as a whole from 22 June onwards”.





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