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Posted: 24 October 2002 | Subscribe Online


Party conferences are over for another year. A large number of fringe meetings looked at the crisis in pensions and explored when or whether the NHS will deliver the goods.

The Liberal Democrats morning on older people was consigned to the graveyard slot, but it was time well spent. Two motions were passed:one looking at women's pensions and the plight of those who only paid the "married woman's stamp"; and the other calling for better measures to combat elder abuse.

At Labour's conference Alan Milburn arrived late and left early from dozens of fringe meetings. He came with a single message, which he bluntly drove home. The money is in place, the strategy is in place, so wait for the results, but remember Rome wasn't built in a day.
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The same was true of Liam Fox's contribution to the Conservative conference - community care was scarcely showcased. Pensions were discussed by David Willetts, who acknowledged the poverty of the over-75s and pledged an improvement in their incomes. The interesting thing about the Conservatives was their explicit goal to reach out to and re-engage with the voluntary and community sector, and to use its local government base to drive that idea forward.

So how to weigh up the conference season? There is a consensual position emerging from the Liberal Democrats and the Conservatives on pensions. Nearly every pension lobby group is bemoaning the complexity of the state system. If Andrew Smith, secretary of state for work and pensions, fails to reflect this in his forthcoming green paper, it is likely to be coolly received. But, of course, much of the complexity has emanated from Gordon Brown, and been sold as central to Labour's anti-poverty strategy. Yet even the government has begun to describe the minimum income guarantee as the first step, and the pension credit as the next step, thus leaving open the option to take yet another step.
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On the evidence of the past three weeks, all the energies of health spokespersons are being devoted to the state of the hospitals and the treatment of patients; all the language is about the medical model, with varying degrees of emphasis on the ways of providing more choice and delivering higher standards. As lobbyists, we have so far failed to make community care a high-profile issue.

Ironically, the Blackpool tram system is one of the best examples of community care. The conductors banter cheerfully with their largely elderly passengers, help them to negotiate the steep steps and other awkward features of the 70-year-old vehicles, support people with sticks and shopping bags, and ensure that everyone is safely seated before the tram moves off. I don't suppose Alan Milburn had time to take the tram. Pity.

Mervyn Kohler is head of public affairs, Help the Aged.


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