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Round up of the week

Posted: 15 April 2005 | Subscribe Online


Round up of the week

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Tory leader Michael Howard

Monday 11 April

Michael Howard launched the Conservative party’s election manifesto pledging discipline in schools, controlled immigration and more police on the streets

A study by the charity the Institute of Race Relations claimed that the government is violating the Geneva Convention by deporting asylum seekers whose claims have failed to warring and dangerous countries. It highlights how in recent years the government has carried out forced deportations to Southern Somalia, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Zimbabwe, despite them being unsafe.

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Tuesday 12 April

A newly-uncovered report from the Department for Work and Pensions found that staff at the Child Support Agency deliberately entered false information onto the IT system and stockpiled claims resulting in them not being dealt with for years. Staff passed work to people who were on long-term sick leave and others did not answer their phones.


Wednesday 13 April

 
Labour leader Tony Blair

The Labour Party has pledged to overhaul the youth justice system and improve conditions in Young Offender Institutions in its election manifesto.  The party also outlined a further crackdown on the asylum system but insisted that education is still Labour’s main priority. Blair also pledged that every older person receiving support would be offered “transparent, individual budgets which bring funding for a range of services, including social care, care homes, and housing support…in one place”.

An exclusive pre-election poll for Community Care found that more than half of social care professionals believe the government has performed poorly on children’s policies for young offenders, children in poverty and young asylum seekers. A staggering 65 per cent of professionals rated the government’s policy on prevention of youth offending as poor, while 56 per cent gave a similarly low rating to the treatment of young offenders. Almost half also ranked the government’s flagship antisocial behaviour policy as poor.

John Ransford told the ADSS Spring Seminar in Harrogate that local government could be further weakened after the election because of the hostility of the two government departments dealing with social care to councils. The Local Government Association director of education and social policy said that the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister’s 10-year vision for local government, which promised to enhance councils’ role, was not shared across Whitehall.

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Thursday 14 April

An exclusive poll for Community Care found that an estimated 20,000 local authority social services staff were signed off work for a period of two months or more last year. The figure, extrapolated from responses from 100 of the 149 top-tier councils in England for 2004, has raised questions about working conditions within councils and the success of the government’s efforts to boost social care recruitment.

 
Lib Dem leader Charles Kennedy

The Liberal Democrats reiterated their pledge to introduce free personal care if they were elected into government. The other priorities for the Liberal Democrats for the next parliament would be ending unfairness in the NHS, ending student tuition fees, better pensions for older people, an end to unfair council tax and more police on the streets.


Friday 15 April

The Commission for Social Care Inspection chief executive David Behan told the ADSS Spring Seminar that it would be seeking immediate post-election talks with the new government over Labour’s plans to dismantle the organisation.

 



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