Wednesday 30 September 2009

Maybe Alan Johnson has other things on his mind...

Some Are More Equal Than Others
My friend Sean Dilley, political correspondent for TalkSport reckons Labour have a bit of work to do on equalities issues. Sean is blind and operates with the assistance of a wonderful labrador guide dog called Chipp. Chipp is very popular in the Palace of Westminster.

This morning at the conference he was talking to one of Alan Johnson's special advisers who, mid conversation, walked off leaving Sean talking to thin air. How very rude.

Nice to see Alan Johnson representing the good manners and consideration for others we've come to expect from Labour ministers. Surely it's not that hard to realise that the blind guy is going to have trouble spotting when you've walked away and therefore it's only polite to make your excuses rather than sneaking off!

Monday 28 September 2009

The wheels of decision making (slowly) turn

Breathing Life into Hull's Fruit Market

More than 150 people attended a fact-finding event staged in a fruit warehouse aimed at promoting the area as a new business quarter.
With long-term regeneration plans for the area currently on hold, new temporary uses for the buildings they will leave behind are now being explored.

So let me get this straight, you have people who want to start developing existing properties right now, who are willing to begin the regeneration process, and instead we're looking at using it as free exhibition space? Wow, it's almost like there's no recession and Hull doesn't need the jobs created by the redevelopment work and the new business opportunities that the Fruit Market site will one day offer (if anyone is ever allowed to get on with developing it!) While it's admirable for people to want a single, grand vision for the redevelopment, it's clear that the scheme could be some time in coming if ever, meanwhile leaving an undeveloped site costing the council money rather than generating it. But hey, as long as someone has a grand vision, that's all that matters I guess!

Sunday 27 September 2009

Wonder why this wasn't the case already...

Cheap drugs to save NHS millions

Health bosses in East Riding have revealed plans to save money by prescribing cheaper, non-branded drugs.

The region's primary care trust (PCT) believes the move will slash £3.5m from its budget.

NHS East Riding of Yorkshire aims to achieve the saving across its 39 GP practices by March next year.

The question I have to ask, and excuse me for being a little dim, is why the PCT weren't already using generics where possible in a bid to save money for the taxpayer. The issue of Statins aside (because I don't claim to have the medical knowledge to comment on the appropriateness of their use), if a generic drug is confirmed to be as effective as the branded one, then what's the point of paying the mark-up simply because the pharmaceutical company used to hold a patent on the drug.

"Ah", you may say, "those nasty cheap generic drugs just aren't as good", well there is a case for double-blind testing if ever I saw it. With finite resources (something that people often forget when saying "everyone should only get the best"), decisions need to be made about what can and can't be afforded by the NHS.

And now, if you will excuse me, I would like to offer a slightly different idea for you to consider. Currently, the government has the monopoly on healthcare, both in terms of supply (NHS) and payment (central government payments to NHS). So if you want to get treatment for something, you go to a doctor (employed by the NHS) and he treats you (by the government supplying the money to him). If you have no money, society says "that's ok, we believe that everyone should have access to healthcare, so we'll pay for it", which I hope is accepted as the right and proper thing for a developed country to do. The government having a role in the supply of resources is clearly a vital part of this equation, but what that role is and where there is a necessity for them to also be effectively the sole supplier of care is more questionable. What about the Singapore system where people have individual healthcare bank accounts which they pay into every month (and which the government will top up for those unable to pay in, for instance those out of work) which can then be spent on whatever healthcare they desire? If the government owned hospital says "we will provide that treatment for £100" then why shouldn't a patient be able to look at other private hospitals who will also offer the service for £100 but which will provide a service more suited to them. What about if the person thinks "actually, I'm willing to pay a little more for that treatment to get my own room for my stay" or "I don't think it's worth £100 paying for some of the extras I won't use, I'll use this private hospital who will do it for £75"? It's cost the government (and therefore the taxpayer) nothing extra to do this, universal free healthcare is still firmly in place, but suddenly the motivation to cut costs isn't coming from above (central government) but from below (patients being able to go elsewhere if the price offered for a treatment isn't competitive with what the market offers). If this all sounds a little far fetched and out there, might I suggest reading "The Plan: Twelve Months to Renew Britain" by Douglas Carswell and Daniel Hannan, or at the very least the chapter where they discuss how healthcare could be both less costly and provide better results at the same time. Oh, and if you feel tempted to Google for Daniel's name, don't overlook his blog since a lot of the invective directed at him is answered there.

Making them feel a little less "Special"

Police Specials Lose £1500 Annual Payment

VOLUNTEER police officers are set to lose a £1,500 annual payment in a move by chief officers to cut costs across the force.

Currently, the 353 special constables working for Humberside Police are given the "bounty" every year as a goodwill gesture for their services.

The question that nobody seems to be asking is whether the "Specials" have been consulted before this decision was made. If the announcement had been "having discussed this matter with the existing Special Constables, it has been agreed that they will voluntarily forego this payment to help maintain existing levels of front line policing in these financially challenging times" then maybe there wouldn't be such an outcry.

Frankly this is a good example of where an elected "sheriff" (which at least one major party has as one of their policies) would make sense, having someone elected on the mandate of ensuring effective use of resources (£40K cars, police officers, etc) would make those making decisions directly accountable to the public who will be affected by them. But no, that would be asking people how their public services should be run, and we wouldn't want to do too much of that in case they give the wrong answers...

Saturday 26 September 2009

Hello World

For some time I have dismissed political blogging as something done by other people, something done by those with something to say that everyone wants to hear, the Iain Dales and Tory Bears of this world. And then I discovered that it doesn't matter whether you've got your finger on the pulse of Westminster, because talking about local issues and what's going on around you is as important as holding our MPs to account.

So there we are, a local blog for local issues as well as my thoughts on the national political landscape, and if anyone else wants to read it (and slate me if they so wish) then so be it.