Friday, October 14, 2011

Childcare money

: Rob Paul to pay Paul


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. Southampton social workers strike in pay dispute long term

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Coalition to boost child care pot of 300 million pounds to the objective of low-income women


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. Children and young people today: The service plans from school to work services with the dump children

. Community Care: Social worker suspended after the failures of child protection

. Independent: Call for the legalization of home test kits

. Inside the house: the reform of the Council of Finance under threat

. Localgov.co.uk

: Growth in public sector wages remain low "

. Public Finance: The staff of the Scottish Government cut by 2.7% last year


. Telegraph: NHS Hospital asking staff to give up vacation or unpaid work " / aa>

. Third Sector: Charities need to build better relationships with donors, said Minister of Culture


on my radar ...

. The problem of the coalition of women. The government announced an additional £ 300 to help with childcare costs is charged as a response to bad marks for voters. Iain Duncan Smith, the work and pensions secretary, wrote in The Guardian today that the reforms "which means that more women will be able to take steps to employment, most parents can work on time part or full time, and their children grow up in families where parents are to contribute positively to society and economic growth. "

In his latest blog post in the New Statesman, Gavin Kelly, of the Foundation of the resolution states that "the evils of the coalition of women working in low and middle income began to grow not diminish." He adds:


Change

today to the care of the child ... important because it represents a clear decision to reverse what was going to cut incredibly regressive aimed directly at working women. It also reveals some ongoing internal discussions within the coalition.

above all, confirms that they have been shaken by recent polls that show falling support among women voters C2, and other work of campaign groups showing the severity of charges Child care is hitting families living standards. Given these concerns, an apology to David Cameron abstract Women Voters would not suffice.

also reflects the fact that Nick Clegg, who was absent from the debate on welfare and work for a long time, he has awakened to the fact that what was happening in the care of children was Total a mockery of his claim that the champion "alarm Britain."

On closer inspection of his team realized that further reductions would have risked death to work full-time or something close to full-time work for women of low income families rely on tax credits to pay for the care they need to keep a job This is obviously an important economic issue but -. c is a massive electoral and sex too.

... less easy to discern are the other changes in this new found concern with working women could lead

Many commentators

noted that 300 pounds is not new money, and as the Social Market Foundation said:

The

300 pounds to finance the expansion has been found in other parts of the pot-purpose credit, then it will take funds from the same group of people - families with low and middle income. Supportive care is necessary and allows a good policy, but instead of robbing Peter to pay Paul, DWP is essentially steal Paul to pay Paul - albeit in a politically attractive incarnation

. A must-read blog post by Kaizen Johnny Zander, the curious case of the expansion of the National Citizens:

Something very strange is really happening. In the middle of the most severe cuts in budgets are remembered youth services are being decimated, the government announced a huge and very expensive, the expansion of a program without evaluating it still has to prove that it works at all. And to make things even stranger, has so far been almost no protests in the area.

'talks about the National Citizen Service (NCS) and the fact that the Prime Minister announced he would increase by 900% to 2014.

. A surprising assertion on the blog of Dr Eoin green banks Clarke: In the upcoming elections in the public sector employed only 15% of the workforce in the UK. Clarke writes:

The reduction of public sector negatively affects women and the poorest regions of the northwest as the United Kingdom. About 60% of job losses are women, and the rate of redundancies in the north of England is twice that in the south. It is very difficult not to regard this as an ideological assault on the public sector. The public sector accounts for 20% of the workforce in the UK, but at the time the next elections to all employees in the public sector only 15% of the workforce in the UK, 8% of population of the UK.

(thank you @ KrustyAllslopp for the link)

. Rumor of the Day: Eric Pickles at the Department of Justice? Local Government Network tweets Guardian editor Richard Vize

If you have a God, pray for Eric Pickles is not the Attorney General

While the Local Government Chronicle chief reporter Allister Hayman said he is skeptical about the rumors.

Speaking of pickles, Daria Kuznetsova has compiled a list of all Community Services £ 250 for the secretary cats for weeks bin collections could have funded new blog for the local network government.

. Liz Jones. Mail columnist, who wrote the famous phrase about his dissatisfaction with not being able to obtain vaccines at one time in your local NHS clinic (where not stated), wrote about his deafness. Despite their disability, complained that receives absolutely no benefit at all. Charlie Swinbourne journalist wrote an excellent response to the Jones piece, including an open letter to the columnist:


You said: "I'll tell you why not deafness truck, without any special treatment is not courtesy, it is considered as the disease of aging?".

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