Category Archives: Social care

Woodbridge: What’s been happening in Suffolk, Jan and Feb

End of Ipswich Northern Route project?  County Council  Leader, Matthew Hicks,  has announced that he will be recommending to  Cabinet that the Ipswich Northern Route should not proceed to the next phase  when it meets to decide the future of the project on 25th February. He had a very uncomfortable time at  February full council when  his plans  (Interim Study, and a Strategic Outline Business Case) and the public  consultation were publicly and comprehensively roasted by Nick Green of the Stop campaign.

To remind you – because so many county councillors seem very keen to forget –  Suffolk’s Conservative and Labour County Councillors spoke in favour of the route, and voted  en masse against my group’s motion (last July  -click for my seconder’s speech)  to abandon thoughts and costs of this route in favour of a sustainable transport strategy. However the public consultation found that over 70% of respondents were  also against the route. The sums just didn’t add up.  Continue reading Woodbridge: What’s been happening in Suffolk, Jan and Feb

No rights, on Carers Rights Day

No, being a carer is NOT a matter of patting a hand and making a cuppa. It is vital, stressful and done for love. It can involve skills as varied as advocacy, heavy lifting and divergent thinking

Okay, folks, it’s another Carers Rights day. Yet another. And I want to ask one simple question:

In reality, what  human rights do our country’s unpaid family carers actually have?

Right to equality? Try it. Next time someone asks what you do, say you are a family carer, watch how your status slips. Your  work is not even worthy of pay. Your conversation, contacts, experience not worth their time.

Freedom from discrimination? In law maybe, but in real life? How many carers suffer constructive dismissal? How many never get employment? And how many find their onetime friends ‘forgetting ‘them?  Carers are not cool.

Freedom from slavery? Many carers work around the clock 24/7 without a break, without pay, without consideration. And I do mean work.

Right to remedy by a competent tribunal/ right to fair public hearing/ right to be considered innocent until proven guilty. No way. We carers know we are the punchballs. We are relied on as workhorses by professionals who are paid, supported and unionised, to do unstinting work on their behalf, and yet we  are all too often ignored, demonised, blamed. We are Schroedingers carers:  ignorant but know-all, arrogant but timid, overprotective yet uncaring,  in the narrative of social care and NHS provision. Cinderellas who can be blamed without redress.

Right to Rest and Leisure. When a carer works 24/7, this is laughable.

Right to Adequate Living Standard? Look at all of the above.   Again, don’t make me laugh.

I am offended by the whole concept of a Carers Rights Day – a day when well-paid professionals and media pundits gather together to pat each other on the backs and moo “Ooooo – we care: we reeeelly care for your plight

Actions speak louder than words.

The truth is that they don’t.  Society doesn’t. Successive governments don’t.   And when I once asked Unison strikers why they were not striking for family carers they memorably replied “Because you don’t work!”  (That is, because we Family Carers don’t have paid hours, overtime, sick pay, holiday pay etc etc, we don’t work. I have never forgotten. Or forgiven.)

Carers wouldn’t need a Carers Rights Day if the state had ever given Family Carers any meaningful rights.  And the right to be accepted as a worker rather than patronised as a rather dim and unworldly saint  comes top of MY list.

If carers were seen as the workers they are, the real cost of that care: the working hours, the loss of careers, the impact of poverty and poor health, the absence of employment-related pensions – all these might be factored into the support offered to them.

As it is, people suggest they may like a session of aromatherapy!

Why not give CARERS a (Tax) Break, Boris!

Another Carers Week. Another pretence we care for CarersToday marks the start of National Carers’ Week.  Cynically,  this the one week of the year when non-carers remember that unpaid family Carers exist and make encouraging noises.  Yet 96% of UK care is provided in the community by unpaid carers. 96%!!!! 1 of every 2 women in their 50s is an unpaid family carer, with all the impact this has on pay, career and occupational pension. Flip a coin, is it you or me? (Men do not achieve this statistic until age 74. *) Coincidentally, this week aspirant PM Boris Johnson has promised an extra £120pw for those earning £80k. As a tax break. Or bribe. Continue reading Why not give CARERS a (Tax) Break, Boris!