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The Big Question

Posted: 12 May 2005 | Subscribe Online



Kierra Box
Young people's activist

No. The private sector is concerned with profit, not the well-being of the young. No matter what the economic or bureaucratic benefits, these schemes will never benefit the young people who have lost the care of their local authority in their development and become part of a private money-making machine.

Len Smith
Gypsy activist

This type of intervention is simply an extension of "best man for the job", in my opinion. If private sector management can offer a better outcome, as well as value, then that must present a case for its involvement. That is not to say that local authority providers should not be constantly looking to improve their own services.

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Shaun Webster
Change self-advocacy group

If the public sector isn't working for some reason, then all the options should be open: private, voluntary or public. It does not matter which sector is brought into help, as long as it is effective. Quite often councils do not fund services well enough - eventually things become so bad they start to panic.

Jean Stogdon

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Chair of Grandparents Plus

It is never right to bring in the private sector to do this kind of work. It's an issue of accountability. In the public sector you have a direct line of accountability from the front line to elected members and from elected members to their communities. That is not the case with the private sector.

 



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