Sleepless nights await and slashed services won't be able to help - reader letter

Back in 2013/14, the austerity programme was already well under way.
Watch more of our videos on Shots! 
and live on Freeview channel 276
Visit Shots! now

Chancellor Osborne’s cuts were in their third and fourth years and, as they were ‘front loaded’ for local authorities, meant annual savings of around £70-80m.

Read More
Gipton? It’s more like Dodge City here - reader letter

As the then deputy leader of Leeds City Council, I can say we had some sleepless nights of how on earth we were going to bring in yet another balanced budget.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad
Former deputy council leader Peter Gruen. Picture: Mark BickerdikeFormer deputy council leader Peter Gruen. Picture: Mark Bickerdike
Former deputy council leader Peter Gruen. Picture: Mark Bickerdike

We sustained ourselves in just trying to get over the line to the General Election in 2015 in the hope that a Labour government would stop the worst excesses of austerity and bring council finances back on a somewhat even keel.

That, of course, never happened – and the rest, as they say, is history.

However, that was a very long seven years ago and the dramatic cuts have continued year on year.

Most councils in the land now have much less than 50 per cent of the grant funding they were allocated in 2010.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Senior colleagues in the council have written to all members to advise of lengthy delays in day-to-day business right across the board; in almost every department some 60-80 frontline staff have left in the past few months and because of factors such as Covid, the pressures have actually increased. Look around you and you will see.

Nearly every park bench – certainly in Roundhay Park – needs a total refurb.

The potholes saga continues and with winter coming, the repair costs will spiral exponentially.

Schools are asking parents to chip in more and more, and staff shortages across all sectors are adding to delay and neglect.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

The city has felt the strain for years, but the whole public and voluntary sectors are near to a catastrophic and chaotic point, where core services are irreparably damaged. And these, of course, affect everyone in the city.

We know the charges are higher for less and with the burden for social care being put squarely on council finance, council tax will increase more than it could.

Most people will be massively anxious about the next few months – inflation up and away, heating costs at record levels, food shortages as well as more costly, dire warnings about energy and other companies collapsing.

And yet business assistance has diminished and Universal Credit has been slashed back.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

There are many elderly people, often isolated and alone, and yes, also normal working households where ends will not meet.

And those agencies, like councils and voluntary groups, who often come to the rescue, will not be able to do so.

More sleepless nights for many, I fear!

Peter Gruen, Shadwell

Got something to say on this topic or another issue? Send your letters to [email protected] or write to The Editor, Readers' Letters, Yorkshire Evening Post, No 1 Leeds, 26 Whitehall Road, Leeds, LS12 1BE.

Please keep letters to a maximum of 300 words. Letters cannot be published without a name and postal address. We also ask letter writers to include a daytime phone number if possible. We reserve the right to edit any letter prior to publication.