Associations are the ideal way to
empower residents, says BRA
There is no need for any more officials to carry out a government agenda.
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Labour is planning to go far with
the idea of empowering communities (the name used this time is
"public realm"). The controversial principle of foundation
hospitals would be applied to key parts of the public sector.
Mutual organisations elected and controlled by the local community
would run schools, libraries, parks, social services, leisure
facilities and so on. The proposals are part of the new Pamphlet
produced by the Fabian Society, Labour-affiliated think-tank,
and are set to be at the heart of Labour third term. What BRA says: We do not need any more elected or appointed officials, especially those chosen to carry out a government agenda. We would need convincing that representatives would not end up doing the council's administration. Any scheme is highly likely to
be directed towards certain goals by the government. Unless a
scheme was genuinely decentralist, it would only serve the
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When the local reality spoke louder A commission made up of 19 tenants, 4 leaseholders, a councillor and an independent chair, challenged central government rules. In April, after six months of consultation, the borough's tenant-led independent Housing Commission has recommended unanimously that the council should retain its homes under the council's management. This is instead of setting up an arms-length company or transferring homes to a housing association, the two options preferred by Government. Councils must show how they will bring homes up to a decent standard by 2010 and have to look at options for the future ownership and management of council homes. The borough's investment gap, between estimated available resources and the cost of bring homes up to the decent homes standard by 2010, is around £70 million. The government has
given three options for raising the cash needed for repair: selling
off their homes to a housing association; raising money under
the private finance initiative; or extra government subsidies
if they run their homes separately from council control under
an arm's length management organisation (Almo). But the Commission
concluded that the council's housing department should be given
the extra resources.
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