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9:00am Saturday 26th January 2008
A SAVAGE hit list of cuts and savings worth more than £8m has been unveiled by Southampton's ruling Tories to balance next year's council budget.
One leading opposition politician accused the Conservative of launching a "massive attack" on families leaving some services "stripped back to the bone".
The budget package would result in a 2.99 per cent council tax rise next year - the lowest in the history of the unitary authority.
The bill for an average B and D household would increase by about £34 from £1,135 to £1,169.
A total of 99 jobs, including 33 vacancies, would be axed alongside £2.7m of service cuts.
The schools budget will be slashed the most with a cull of 48 jobs.
Funding will be withdrawn from play services and those to tackle badly behaved children.
The city's 14 secondary schools will lose £580,000 of "social inclusion" grants while a residential unit for the most troublesome youngsters will be shut down.
Tories claim schools should make up the cutbacks from direct Government grants.
Family centres will be effectively merged into Sure Start children's centres.
Leisure and cultural services also take a heavy hit.
Tories plan to go ahead with a proposal to axe free swimming for under-sevens. It will affect almost 5,000 children who signed up to the popular scheme, launched in 2006.
Oaklands Leisure Centre will close at weekends, from 11.30am on Saturday, while St Mary's Leisure Centre hours will be reduced.
Three cricket pitches and four football pitches will also be closed.
The Turner Sims concert hall, Nuffield Theatre, Art Asia and City Eye, will all see their grants slashed.
Only the council reliant Mount Pleasant Media Workshop will survive art grants cuts.
Elsewhere neighbourhood partnerships, seen as an ineffective "talking shop" by Tory chiefs will be scrapped and more cash and support given to residents' associations.
The £173m budget - which will need the backing of opposition councillors to pass - would also bring in a controversial and costly ten per cent council tax discount for over 65s households.
Council tax for special constables would be scrapped.
Tory Cabinet member for resources, Councillor Jeremy Moulton, said: "Despite the chronic underfunding of Southampton by the government the Conservatives are keeping our promise to deliver a real terms reduction in council tax.
"This is the lowest council tax increase ever, we are delivering real value for money for the taxpayer and we have shown that we have listened carefully to the views of residents.
"We have undergone the most wide-ranging and comprehensive consultation ever and taken on board the vast majority of things that residents have told us are important."
But Labour group leader Councillor June Bridle said: "Their proposals give a small handout to few pensioners at the expense of massive attack on families."
She added: "Some services are being stripped back to the bone. They are leaving some small amounts of money which means services are almost unviable."
Liberal Democrat group leader Councillor Adrian Vinson said: "It's a bad budget A budget of gimmicks and stunts which hits key services.
"It's poor value for money and will adversely effect every citizen of Southampton."
Unison branch secretary Mike Tucker added: "It's the highest ever number of people in post threatened with redundancy. They are making political choices to sacrifice jobs and services to buy the votes of over 65s."
Residents will face an extra £1m of charges for council services.
Charges will be introduced for replacement bins and fridge/freezer collections, while those for museums and car parking go up. The renowned oral history unit will be axed.
Little used bus routes will be axed as the council withdraws subsidies from operators. About half the total savings will come from efficiencies.
Some U-turns were made to proposals in a draft budget published in October. They followed meetings with affected groups and organisations.
Cllr Bridle accused the Tories of causing unnecessary stress.
She said: "People who use these services have been put through hell. It's a disgrace all the pressure that has been put on people just to play political games."
The popular Ropewalk Neighbourhood Advice Centre, which gives help relating to housing, landlords and tenants and welfare benefits, was spared any cut.
The Cobbett Road library survives another round of cuts after more protests and petitions although four others - Burgess Road, Woolston, Thornhill and Weston libraries - will face closures at quieter times.
A ten per cent hike in charges for non-residential care was scrapped following a billing fiasco that meant about 1,400 disabled and elderly didn't get their bills for up to four months.
A community language service which teaches ethnic minorities their native language and lets them get a GCSE in it will see its budget trimmed rather than axed.
The proposed cut attracted the most objections, more than one third made to the council.
The council received 1,035 responses to the Conservative's draft budget.
Unions will face a less harsh reductions in funding.
A U-turn on cuts to the hours of free bus travel for over 60s had already been announced with extra funding to retain full eligibility in the city for disabled passengers and their companions.
Cuts at a glance
| Efficiencies | £4.4m |
| Income | £1.03m |
| Cuts | £2.75m |
| Total Savings | £8.17m |
Click the links below to see the full list of cuts, broken down by directorate
Lonestar, Southampton says...
9:44am Sat 26 Jan 08
alpine_saint, Soton says...
9:55am Sat 26 Jan 08
Mills, southampton says...
9:56am Sat 26 Jan 08
Daz, Southampton says...
10:06am Sat 26 Jan 08
alpine_saint wrote:Even when there facilities for the "youth" of the city, they still prefer to raom the streets causing vandalism and problems. Well done Tories a step in the right direction ! However, i fear it'll take a while to put right what the other loonies have undone
Great plans. Let's cut services for the youth of this city so they are more bored and have more time to go on vandalism sprees that cost a fortune to repair, simply to bribe the blue-rinse brigade into voting Conservative. Sweet...
concerned, soton says...
10:14am Sat 26 Jan 08
Observer, says...
10:14am Sat 26 Jan 08
601, London says...
10:39am Sat 26 Jan 08
Andy, Locks Heath says...
10:51am Sat 26 Jan 08
alpine_saint wrote:What a stupid post from Alpine Saint. We've seen these feral gangs of "bored" kids and this "boredom" is the excuse they put up when questioned about anti their social behaviour. Clearly it fools some people though. The truth is that thanks to the attitudes of their parents they are thick and uninspired not bored, and because they can't think of anything more imaginative or constructive to do it doesn't matter what the council put in front of them - their first instinct will be to trash it. There is already plenty to do but it all involves putting a little effort in. If you do want to blame anyone else blame their parents not the council for Gods sake. What facility do you envisage the council providing anyway that by itself would suddenly turn them into excited, inclusive contributing young adults? Organised Sports? Theatre? Youth Club? Scouts? No me neither. (Riding aimlessly round a skatepark is not sport by the way) Antisocial yobs hang around street corners because it's what they like doing and where they like being, and because they are lazy, sullen and uncommunicative they can't even think of anywhere better anyway. Causing trouble is an amusing little diversion if the opportunity for vandalism comes along. But people like you have to completely absolve them of any responsibility in order to seek some blame far away. Great idea, that's been proved to work well eh? And as for that stupid blue rinse crack, even your prejudice is 30 years out of date. You don;t have a single solution other than to blame a tiny section of society that if anything is the major victim of the problem you describe.
Great plans. Let\\\'s cut services for the youth of this city so they are more bored and have more time to go on vandalism sprees that cost a fortune to repair, simply to bribe the blue-rinse brigade into voting Conservative. Sweet...
Sam, Bury says...
10:52am Sat 26 Jan 08
Observer, says...
11:11am Sat 26 Jan 08
Andy wrote:Agree with all your points here. Well put.
alpine_saint wrote: Great plans. Let\\\'s cut services for the youth of this city so they are more bored and have more time to go on vandalism sprees that cost a fortune to repair, simply to bribe the blue-rinse brigade into voting Conservative. Sweet...What a stupid post from Alpine Saint. We've seen these feral gangs of "bored" kids and this "boredom" is the excuse they put up when questioned about anti their social behaviour. Clearly it fools some people though. The truth is that thanks to the attitudes of their parents they are thick and uninspired not bored, and because they can't think of anything more imaginative or constructive to do it doesn't matter what the council put in front of them - their first instinct will be to trash it. There is already plenty to do but it all involves putting a little effort in. If you do want to blame anyone else blame their parents not the council for Gods sake. What facility do you envisage the council providing anyway that by itself would suddenly turn them into excited, inclusive contributing young adults? Organised Sports? Theatre? Youth Club? Scouts? No me neither. (Riding aimlessly round a skatepark is not sport by the way) Antisocial yobs hang around street corners because it's what they like doing and where they like being, and because they are lazy, sullen and uncommunicative they can't even think of anywhere better anyway. Causing trouble is an amusing little diversion if the opportunity for vandalism comes along. But people like you have to completely absolve them of any responsibility in order to seek some blame far away. Great idea, that's been proved to work well eh? And as for that stupid blue rinse crack, even your prejudice is 30 years out of date. You don;t have a single solution other than to blame a tiny section of society that if anything is the major victim of the problem you describe.
Jeanne, Southampton says...
12:32pm Sat 26 Jan 08
Observer wrote:
Andy wrote:Agree with all your points here. Well put.
alpine_saint wrote: Great plans. Let\\\'s cut services for the youth of this city so they are more bored and have more time to go on vandalism sprees that cost a fortune to repair, simply to bribe the blue-rinse brigade into voting Conservative. Sweet...What a stupid post from Alpine Saint. We've seen these feral gangs of "bored" kids and this "boredom" is the excuse they put up when questioned about anti their social behaviour. Clearly it fools some people though. The truth is that thanks to the attitudes of their parents they are thick and uninspired not bored, and because they can't think of anything more imaginative or constructive to do it doesn't matter what the council put in front of them - their first instinct will be to trash it. There is already plenty to do but it all involves putting a little effort in. If you do want to blame anyone else blame their parents not the council for Gods sake. What facility do you envisage the council providing anyway that by itself would suddenly turn them into excited, inclusive contributing young adults? Organised Sports? Theatre? Youth Club? Scouts? No me neither. (Riding aimlessly round a skatepark is not sport by the way) Antisocial yobs hang around street corners because it's what they like doing and where they like being, and because they are lazy, sullen and uncommunicative they can't even think of anywhere better anyway. Causing trouble is an amusing little diversion if the opportunity for vandalism comes along. But people like you have to completely absolve them of any responsibility in order to seek some blame far away. Great idea, that's been proved to work well eh? And as for that stupid blue rinse crack, even your prejudice is 30 years out of date. You don;t have a single solution other than to blame a tiny section of society that if anything is the major victim of the problem you describe.
quote
Jeanne, Southampton says...
12:35pm Sat 26 Jan 08
Jeanne wrote:Couldn't have put it better myself - the parents need re-educating then hopefully everything else will follow.
Observer wrote:
Andy wrote:Agree with all your points here. Well put.
alpine_saint wrote: Great plans. Let\\\\\\\'s cut services for the youth of this city so they are more bored and have more time to go on vandalism sprees that cost a fortune to repair, simply to bribe the blue-rinse brigade into voting Conservative. Sweet...What a stupid post from Alpine Saint. We\'ve seen these feral gangs of \"bored\" kids and this \"boredom\" is the excuse they put up when questioned about anti their social behaviour. Clearly it fools some people though. The truth is that thanks to the attitudes of their parents they are thick and uninspired not bored, and because they can\'t think of anything more imaginative or constructive to do it doesn\'t matter what the council put in front of them - their first instinct will be to trash it. There is already plenty to do but it all involves putting a little effort in. If you do want to blame anyone else blame their parents not the council for Gods sake. What facility do you envisage the council providing anyway that by itself would suddenly turn them into excited, inclusive contributing young adults? Organised Sports? Theatre? Youth Club? Scouts? No me neither. (Riding aimlessly round a skatepark is not sport by the way) Antisocial yobs hang around street corners because it\'s what they like doing and where they like being, and because they are lazy, sullen and uncommunicative they can\'t even think of anywhere better anyway. Causing trouble is an amusing little diversion if the opportunity for vandalism comes along. But people like you have to completely absolve them of any responsibility in order to seek some blame far away. Great idea, that\'s been proved to work well eh? And as for that stupid blue rinse crack, even your prejudice is 30 years out of date. You don;t have a single solution other than to blame a tiny section of society that if anything is the major victim of the problem you describe.
quote
alf tupper, southampton says...
12:35pm Sat 26 Jan 08
foodog, soton says...
12:53pm Sat 26 Jan 08
Derek, Dibden Purlieu says...
1:40pm Sat 26 Jan 08
Andy, Locks Heath says...
1:47pm Sat 26 Jan 08
Sensible Resident, says...
2:02pm Sat 26 Jan 08
concerned wrote:Concerned,
wake up southamptn people the reason we got these cuts coming in is because the councillors gave themselfs a massive 12% pay raise.as usaul its the weakest person who gets hit next time in election dont vote cons
Paramjit Bahia, Southampton says...
2:07pm Sat 26 Jan 08
foodog wrote:You are absolutely right. Sadly it was the failure of New Labour's leadership to stick with good old Labour values that provided first the Lib-Dems and then the Tories the opportunity to get into power and start swinging the Thatcherite axe again.
What the conservatives are doing is what they do best attacking those least able to defend themselves. They did it in the 80's and they are doing it now. Exclusion has never solved social problem it alienates and causes resentment. How is ending free swimming for under sevens a good thing. Throwing children on the scrap heap is not the answer. It make me ashamed to be an adult reading these posts.
Paramjit Bahia, Southampton says...
2:18pm Sat 26 Jan 08
Sheitma Pance, Soton says...
2:45pm Sat 26 Jan 08
mr.southampton, Southampton says...
4:20pm Sat 26 Jan 08
Wronged for years, Shirley, Southampton says...
4:35pm Sat 26 Jan 08
Mark Humphries, Southampton says...
4:50pm Sat 26 Jan 08
mr.southampton, Southampton says...
4:52pm Sat 26 Jan 08
Wronged for years wrote:The problem is that in an unequal society hard work isn't rewarded, how many Nurses out there work harder than Wayne Rooney?
"the chances are that as you are walking down the street at one point the inequality and alienation in the city will smack you in the face." No, I will likely be smacked in the face by someone who has benefited from a system that promotes inequality and doing nothing to help yourself! The only society that can work is one that rewards hard work, maintains a sense of discipline among its population and supports efforts made by people to make their lives better. And that isnt't what we have now in what is an increasingly ugly country!
her indoors, eastleigh says...
5:17pm Sat 26 Jan 08
alf tupper wrote:couldnt have put it better myself i dont think they would come back for a second time if they were given the birch but its never going to happen too many softees and do gooders they were the cause of all these morons ie dont smack your child or they will call the police what utter rubbish theres a old saying spare the rod and spoil the child
this social inclusion policy has produced a army of morons,well done,now for the birch for the untold cost and misery they,ve caused others.
Manimal, Southampton says...
7:02pm Sat 26 Jan 08
Charles Darwin, Seven Oaks says...
7:28pm Sat 26 Jan 08
mr.southampton wrote:Oh, you must be a namby-pamby liberal. Ha! Ha-ha! My great-great-great grandchildren have one thing to say to you, your like and the tow-rags you defend: FOAD!
I can't believe most of the comments on here in support of the budget. Blaming 'liberal' policies for the problems our society and our city face whilst completley ignoring the fact that since 1979 neo-conservatives have dictated the political agenda in the UK, and as for the Labour Government, many of Blair's policies were a continuation of thatchers legacy with an ever so slightly more human face. Their tax cut for pensioners is as has been mentioned by others a despicable ploy to bribe traditional Tory voters and the biggest winners in financial terms will be those with the biggest homes i.e the richest. Most poorer pensioners already receive a reduction in their tax bill so won't be eligible for the cut. To take away services aimed at the young and the most vulnerable only compounds the problems. We can all sit smugly in our comfortable homes and say that people should take responsibility for themselves and their children, but at some point we all have to deal with the consequences of inequality, poor education resulting in poor parenting, no job prospects resulting in alienation and rejection of the values of mainstream society leading to the embracing of alternative values such as violence. Unless you are fortunate enough to have the resources to move to a middle-class suburb like Grange Park the chances are that as you are walking down the street at one point the inequality and alienation in the city will smack you in the face.
Dorothy, Kansas says...
7:52pm Sat 26 Jan 08
Charles Darwin wrote:What I fine example you set young man, are you a feral street urchin by any chance or just a weasel, I'm guessing the latter rather than the former, drinks on me Mr Souhampton
mr.southampton wrote:Oh, you must be a namby-pamby liberal. Ha! Ha-ha! My great-great-great grandchildren have one thing to say to you, your like and the tow-rags you defend: FOAD!
I can't believe most of the comments on here in support of the budget. Blaming 'liberal' policies for the problems our society and our city face whilst completley ignoring the fact that since 1979 neo-conservatives have dictated the political agenda in the UK, and as for the Labour Government, many of Blair's policies were a continuation of thatchers legacy with an ever so slightly more human face. Their tax cut for pensioners is as has been mentioned by others a despicable ploy to bribe traditional Tory voters and the biggest winners in financial terms will be those with the biggest homes i.e the richest. Most poorer pensioners already receive a reduction in their tax bill so won't be eligible for the cut. To take away services aimed at the young and the most vulnerable only compounds the problems. We can all sit smugly in our comfortable homes and say that people should take responsibility for themselves and their children, but at some point we all have to deal with the consequences of inequality, poor education resulting in poor parenting, no job prospects resulting in alienation and rejection of the values of mainstream society leading to the embracing of alternative values such as violence. Unless you are fortunate enough to have the resources to move to a middle-class suburb like Grange Park the chances are that as you are walking down the street at one point the inequality and alienation in the city will smack you in the face.
Dorothy, Kansas says...
8:03pm Sat 26 Jan 08
Dorothy wrote:Do forgive should have said A rather than I.
Charles Darwin wrote:What I fine example you set young man, are you a feral street urchin by any chance or just a weasel, I'm guessing the latter rather than the former, drinks on me Mr Souhampton
mr.southampton wrote:Oh, you must be a namby-pamby liberal. Ha! Ha-ha! My great-great-great grandchildren have one thing to say to you, your like and the tow-rags you defend: FOAD!
I can't believe most of the comments on here in support of the budget. Blaming 'liberal' policies for the problems our society and our city face whilst completley ignoring the fact that since 1979 neo-conservatives have dictated the political agenda in the UK, and as for the Labour Government, many of Blair's policies were a continuation of thatchers legacy with an ever so slightly more human face. Their tax cut for pensioners is as has been mentioned by others a despicable ploy to bribe traditional Tory voters and the biggest winners in financial terms will be those with the biggest homes i.e the richest. Most poorer pensioners already receive a reduction in their tax bill so won't be eligible for the cut. To take away services aimed at the young and the most vulnerable only compounds the problems. We can all sit smugly in our comfortable homes and say that people should take responsibility for themselves and their children, but at some point we all have to deal with the consequences of inequality, poor education resulting in poor parenting, no job prospects resulting in alienation and rejection of the values of mainstream society leading to the embracing of alternative values such as violence. Unless you are fortunate enough to have the resources to move to a middle-class suburb like Grange Park the chances are that as you are walking down the street at one point the inequality and alienation in the city will smack you in the face.
anita bush, southampton says...
8:30pm Sat 26 Jan 08
Lee Whitbread, Labour Party candidate for Bassett says...
8:42pm Sat 26 Jan 08
hohum, Southampton says...
9:10pm Sat 26 Jan 08
anita bush wrote:what are you talking about simpleton. Have you accidentally logged onto a grown ups story by mistake.
you have to giggle at that labour bint, she would just have put the tax up 15% if she had her way!
we pay a fortune now because of years of her huge increases!
she did'nt complain about the huge pay rise she just took in expenses etc!
Mister Probiotic, Hedge End says...
9:19pm Sat 26 Jan 08
Dorothy, Kansas says...
9:22pm Sat 26 Jan 08
Mister Probiotic wrote:Tesco's will still be open
I'm completely out of cheese biscuits.
Charles Darwin, Seven Oaks says...
9:36pm Sat 26 Jan 08
Dorothy wrote:Ha! Ha! Ha! Were I unfortunate enough to be a so-called feral street urchin, it would have been someone like you who put and kept me there, by justifying my existence with some perverse statement of political correctness. Were I a weasel, well, Id be a member of the Mustelidae and Id have a biological function in this world, wouldnt I? And Id have to work hard at it to be successful, wouldnt I? Because there arent any handouts in the real world, are there? You have to work at it to become successful. Theres a struggle for existence and you, your like and those you defend will lose the struggle, politically and socially speaking. As a descent, hard-working family man, I dont appreciate any of the taxes I pay being squandered on politically-correct excuses of any kind. Thank you!
Charles Darwin wrote:What I fine example you set young man, are you a feral street urchin by any chance or just a weasel, I'm guessing the latter rather than the former, drinks on me Mr Souhamptonmr.southampton wrote: I can't believe most of the comments on here in support of the budget. Blaming 'liberal' policies for the problems our society and our city face whilst completley ignoring the fact that since 1979 neo-conservatives have dictated the political agenda in the UK, and as for the Labour Government, many of Blair's policies were a continuation of thatchers legacy with an ever so slightly more human face. Their tax cut for pensioners is as has been mentioned by others a despicable ploy to bribe traditional Tory voters and the biggest winners in financial terms will be those with the biggest homes i.e the richest. Most poorer pensioners already receive a reduction in their tax bill so won't be eligible for the cut. To take away services aimed at the young and the most vulnerable only compounds the problems. We can all sit smugly in our comfortable homes and say that people should take responsibility for themselves and their children, but at some point we all have to deal with the consequences of inequality, poor education resulting in poor parenting, no job prospects resulting in alienation and rejection of the values of mainstream society leading to the embracing of alternative values such as violence. Unless you are fortunate enough to have the resources to move to a middle-class suburb like Grange Park the chances are that as you are walking down the street at one point the inequality and alienation in the city will smack you in the face.Oh, you must be a namby-pamby liberal. Ha! Ha-ha! My great-great-great grandchildren have one thing to say to you, your like and the tow-rags you defend: FOAD!
Dorothy, kansas says...
9:53pm Sat 26 Jan 08
Daz, Southampton says...
10:05pm Sat 26 Jan 08
Lee Whitbread wrote:Isnt the main reason for these cuts because of the overspending and money wasting by the liberals that were supported by the labourites in exchange committee seats ???
It seems to me that we have a proposed budget which will hit hard working families and young children. Taking away free swimming for under sevens, closing football pitches and cricket grounds would be a huge mistake at a time when we should be encouraging our children to lead healthy lives.
Paramjit Bahia, Southampton says...
10:35pm Sat 26 Jan 08
Lee Whitbread wrote:Lee you have summed it up very well.
It seems to me that we have a proposed budget which will hit hard working families and young children. Taking away free swimming for under sevens, closing football pitches and cricket grounds would be a huge mistake at a time when we should be encouraging our children to lead healthy lives.
Lee Whitbread, Labour Party candidate for Bassett says...
10:37pm Sat 26 Jan 08
Daz wrote:Daz - Sadly, the reason for these cuts is because we in Southampton have a Conservative run council which is committed to slashing services which people depend on.
Lee Whitbread wrote: It seems to me that we have a proposed budget which will hit hard working families and young children. Taking away free swimming for under sevens, closing football pitches and cricket grounds would be a huge mistake at a time when we should be encouraging our children to lead healthy lives.Isnt the main reason for these cuts because of the overspending and money wasting by the liberals that were supported by the labourites in exchange committee seats ???
Charles Darwin, Seven Oaks says...
10:52pm Sat 26 Jan 08
Dorothy wrote:Ha! Ha! Ha! Apologies for the delay, I have a life. I support fully working tax credits. Unfortunately, our household income is over £60k, which means were not eligible for any. But we dont have an issue with that. I think youll find you have lost; and clearly you were educated under the labour government, if at all. Sleep well, I hope your little street urchin friends dont vandalise your property or keep you awake. If they do, I guess youll blame society, thats easiest, isnt it? But you cant take action against society, can you? Whos actually responsible, again? Dont think too hard, we dont expect you or your kind to solve this problem. The rest of us have a workable solution.
Oh dear what an angry little poppet, but I have to say I'm impressed with you vocabulary, only took you an hour and a half to respond couldn't find the dictionary I suppose. There are hand outs all around us dear if you look have you never claimed a tax credit. I can't loose because I have hope and I can forgive the unforgiving, sleep tight and don't get so angry it will give you wrinkles.
a baastaard, says...
11:14pm Sat 26 Jan 08
Charles Darwin, Seven Oaks says...
11:45pm Sat 26 Jan 08
a baastaard wrote:No, youre wrong. It doesnt matter which party is in power; theyre all politicians (i.e. complete t*ssers) and become increasingly arrogant the longer theyre kept in power. Society must change the situation by shifting their overall vote as often as they change their underwear, preferably. Admittedly, this might not be that often for some, but the consequence is that our elected political party becomes nothing more than an elongated stain in the rear of one's underwear after about five years. Surely we must change them more often than we do? Keep 'em clean!
what a depressing story, thought we had seen the end of the i am alright stuff the rest of you attitude when the last conservative government was given the boot - looks like its alive and well in deepest bluest hampshire...
Ayn, says...
11:48pm Sat 26 Jan 08
Southampton Resident, Soton says...
1:50am Sun 27 Jan 08
Polish Teacher, Southampton says...
2:18am Sun 27 Jan 08
Southampton Resident wrote:If you are literate, your views will be considered; if not, fuckoff!
If you live in Southampton your views will be taken into account. If not fcuk off.
dorothy, kansas says...
8:23am Sun 27 Jan 08
Charles Darwin wrote:I forgive you sad one.
Dorothy wrote:Ha! Ha! Ha! Apologies for the delay, I have a life. I support fully working tax credits. Unfortunately, our household income is over £60k, which means were not eligible for any. But we dont have an issue with that. I think youll find you have lost; and clearly you were educated under the labour government, if at all. Sleep well, I hope your little street urchin friends dont vandalise your property or keep you awake. If they do, I guess youll blame society, thats easiest, isnt it? But you cant take action against society, can you? Whos actually responsible, again? Dont think too hard, we dont expect you or your kind to solve this problem. The rest of us have a workable solution.
Oh dear what an angry little poppet, but I have to say I'm impressed with you vocabulary, only took you an hour and a half to respond couldn't find the dictionary I suppose. There are hand outs all around us dear if you look have you never claimed a tax credit. I can't loose because I have hope and I can forgive the unforgiving, sleep tight and don't get so angry it will give you wrinkles.
PS Please Google FOAD, it doesnt take a genius!
Manimal, Southampton says...
8:28am Sun 27 Jan 08
mandrake, round the corner says...
9:09am Sun 27 Jan 08
Manimal wrote:Thats funny 1.2m is being given to pensioners and police support officers do they get the council to wipe their arses. It's so easy to play hard done by and its even easier to blame every one else for it.I'm hard working and I've got kids I get on with it and vent my spleen at the ballot box. If you are that concerned stop posting and get active in local politics otherwise stop being a bully.
Yet again Messrs Bahia and Whitbread are failing to see that HARD WORKING FAMILIES ARE NOT BENEFITTING FROM ANY OF THE CURRENT COUNCIL INITIATIVES AND WILL BENEFIT MORE FROM PAYING LESS TAX. the only people who benefit are benefit scroungers on the estates who get the council to wipe their arses for them whilst wasting all our tax money on flashy clothes, fags, booze, massive TV's and lottery tickets. It's time to face facts, it's not fair on low income workers to subsidise lay abouts. Children of working families rarely qualify for any grants so why shouldn't they pay less tax? I'm sick of all these lefties, who encouraged the promiscuous society of the 60's, attacking people for wanting to pay less tax. Role on 2010 when we can vote out this lame duck government.
gorf, soton says...
11:11am Sun 27 Jan 08
NT, soton says...
11:14am Sun 27 Jan 08
Hasmukh Patel, Bassett says...
12:18pm Sun 27 Jan 08
G Brown, southampton says...
2:12pm Sun 27 Jan 08
mandrake wrote:As I understand tax, you pay it to the state, thus if the state does not charge you tax, it is not the state giving people money but rather not taking it. So by not charging them tax how can the state be giving it to them. This is the sort of new labour crap to think that they have to right to tax people to the hilt so everyone lives in poverty
Manimal wrote: Yet again Messrs Bahia and Whitbread are failing to see that HARD WORKING FAMILIES ARE NOT BENEFITTING FROM ANY OF THE CURRENT COUNCIL INITIATIVES AND WILL BENEFIT MORE FROM PAYING LESS TAX. the only people who benefit are benefit scroungers on the estates who get the council to wipe their arses for them whilst wasting all our tax money on flashy clothes, fags, booze, massive TV's and lottery tickets. It's time to face facts, it's not fair on low income workers to subsidise lay abouts. Children of working families rarely qualify for any grants so why shouldn't they pay less tax? I'm sick of all these lefties, who encouraged the promiscuous society of the 60's, attacking people for wanting to pay less tax. Role on 2010 when we can vote out this lame duck government.Thats funny 1.2m is being given to pensioners and police support officers do they get the council to wipe their arses. It's so easy to play hard done by and its even easier to blame every one else for it.I'm hard working and I've got kids I get on with it and vent my spleen at the ballot box. If you are that concerned stop posting and get active in local politics otherwise stop being a bully.
G Browns Headteacher, southampton says...
2:18pm Sun 27 Jan 08
G Brown wrote:Talk about confusing both in style and content. We live in the 5th largest economy in the world, you have no conception of poverty Mr Brown. Think about what you want to say before posting and try to make it relevant to the story
mandrake wrote:As I understand tax, you pay it to the state, thus if the state does not charge you tax, it is not the state giving people money but rather not taking it. So by not charging them tax how can the state be giving it to them. This is the sort of new labour crap to think that they have to right to tax people to the hilt so everyone lives in poverty
Manimal wrote: Yet again Messrs Bahia and Whitbread are failing to see that HARD WORKING FAMILIES ARE NOT BENEFITTING FROM ANY OF THE CURRENT COUNCIL INITIATIVES AND WILL BENEFIT MORE FROM PAYING LESS TAX. the only people who benefit are benefit scroungers on the estates who get the council to wipe their arses for them whilst wasting all our tax money on flashy clothes, fags, booze, massive TV's and lottery tickets. It's time to face facts, it's not fair on low income workers to subsidise lay abouts. Children of working families rarely qualify for any grants so why shouldn't they pay less tax? I'm sick of all these lefties, who encouraged the promiscuous society of the 60's, attacking people for wanting to pay less tax. Role on 2010 when we can vote out this lame duck government.Thats funny 1.2m is being given to pensioners and police support officers do they get the council to wipe their arses. It's so easy to play hard done by and its even easier to blame every one else for it.I'm hard working and I've got kids I get on with it and vent my spleen at the ballot box. If you are that concerned stop posting and get active in local politics otherwise stop being a bully.
Gone to the dogs, England says...
5:01pm Sun 27 Jan 08
Lee Whitbread wrote:Shame we can't cut more. I don't use a single one of the services they are considering cutting, hell, i didn't even know they exisited! Probably because i work for a living!
Daz wrote:Daz - Sadly, the reason for these cuts is because we in Southampton have a Conservative run council which is committed to slashing services which people depend on.
Lee Whitbread wrote: It seems to me that we have a proposed budget which will hit hard working families and young children. Taking away free swimming for under sevens, closing football pitches and cricket grounds would be a huge mistake at a time when we should be encouraging our children to lead healthy lives.Isnt the main reason for these cuts because of the overspending and money wasting by the liberals that were supported by the labourites in exchange committee seats ???
anita bush, southampton says...
6:51pm Sun 27 Jan 08
hohum wrote:This should be good, where am i wrong then???
anita bush wrote: you have to giggle at that labour bint, she would just have put the tax up 15% if she had her way! we pay a fortune now because of years of her huge increases! she did'nt complain about the huge pay rise she just took in expenses etc!what are you talking about simpleton. Have you accidentally logged onto a grown ups story by mistake.
hohum, soton says...
7:03pm Sun 27 Jan 08
anita bush wrote:I rest my case
hohum wrote:This should be good, where am i wrong then???
anita bush wrote: you have to giggle at that labour bint, she would just have put the tax up 15% if she had her way! we pay a fortune now because of years of her huge increases! she did'nt complain about the huge pay rise she just took in expenses etc!what are you talking about simpleton. Have you accidentally logged onto a grown ups story by mistake.
attack is not always the best form of defence, dopey!
Terry Hope, Southampton says...
7:14pm Sun 27 Jan 08
Manimal, Southampton says...
7:35pm Sun 27 Jan 08
Blow these cuts, Soton says...
8:19pm Sun 27 Jan 08
anita bush, southampton says...
9:56pm Sun 27 Jan 08
hohum wrote:was that it? not worth the wait!
anita bush wrote:I rest my casehohum wrote:This should be good, where am i wrong then??? attack is not always the best form of defence, dopey!anita bush wrote: you have to giggle at that labour bint, she would just have put the tax up 15% if she had her way! we pay a fortune now because of years of her huge increases! she did'nt complain about the huge pay rise she just took in expenses etc!what are you talking about simpleton. Have you accidentally logged onto a grown ups story by mistake.
Manimal, Southampton says...
10:37pm Sun 27 Jan 08
Paramjit Bahia, Southampton says...
1:09am Mon 28 Jan 08
Manimal wrote:It is unfair to tarnish people living in council estates with the same brush of scroungers. Having represented them in the past I can only say that most of them are decent hard working families, who contribute to national and local governments coffers like everybody else. I have also dealt with cases from Bassett and Chilworth, unfortunately I am duty bound to maintain confidentiality, so all I can say is that I refused to help because ripping off the system going on was disturbing. But we have all read about what one rich UKIP MEP was doing and has been found guilty.
Yet again Messrs Bahia and Whitbread are failing to see that HARD WORKING FAMILIES ARE NOT BENEFITTING FROM ANY OF THE CURRENT COUNCIL INITIATIVES AND WILL BENEFIT MORE FROM PAYING LESS TAX. the only people who benefit are benefit scroungers on the estates who get the council to wipe their arses for them whilst wasting all our tax money on flashy clothes, fags, booze, massive TV's and lottery tickets. It's time to face facts, it's not fair on low income workers to subsidise lay abouts. Children of working families rarely qualify for any grants so why shouldn't they pay less tax? I'm sick of all these lefties, who encouraged the promiscuous society of the 60's, attacking people for wanting to pay less tax. Role on 2010 when we can vote out this lame duck government.
Paramjit Bahia, Southampton says...
1:20am Mon 28 Jan 08
Hasmukh Patel wrote:Mr Patel, Southampton Labour Council used to subsidise meals on wheels for vulnerable people although it was the responsibility of Tory run Hampshire and also provided facilities for the children. If we did it then with far lower tax then why cant your Tory darlings do it now?
I agree with the sentiment of Lee Whitbread's post about sport for children, but what would this be at the expense of, since funds are finite? Some of the left wing views posted on here are of such limited intelligence that such people would be dangerous if let loose with taxpayer's money. I do not want councillors who wasting money on things like making Southampton a "Nuclear Free Zone" or twinning us with Somalia. Local politics always attracts these envious wannabees whose only plan for funding their bizarre schemes is to keep taking it off the middle classes. Local Politics should be about making hard local choices with finite budgets - and if a hard choice has to be made between - say between Meals on Wheels for the old and free swimming for under 7s then it's obvious the swimming has to go, yet trying to get some of the deluded "real socialists" on here to face up to that and make the choice is impossible - no, they'll just keep blaming Margaret Thatcher for the next 50 years while bankrupting the city. You cannot have both, so make the choice. Under 7 swimming is desirable but it is not a life and death matter, and what is to stop parents teaching their own children to swim anyway? I worked hard all my life and every penny I have I have earned. I also had no privileges but worked bloody hard to get where I am. Why would I let someone of the limited calibre of (say) Perry McMillan take what I have worked for and splash it out on creating more dreamt up political posts for labour cronies rather than getting the bins emptied? As far as I can see his "qualification" is that he failed his formal education, and didn;t show shown any ability since. It takes more than a big mouth, a CSE in woodwork, a few memorised slogans and a hatred of the middle classes to run a complex system like a balanced budget.
Paramjit Bahia, Southampton says...
2:12am Mon 28 Jan 08
Manimal wrote:Minimal, I only believe in humanity not any religion. But by the look of it you are follower of Jesus Christ I was recently told by a priest that he sacrificed his life for the poor and vulnerable. If that is the case I fail to understand your prejudices against decent people living in Council estates and supporting the nasty political set up that wants to take away enjoyment of swimming from small children and sports grounds from the youngsters. How can you square these contradictions with 'Love Thy Neighbour' stuff?
The role of the council is to provide services like streetlights, rubbish collection, libraries, planning and lettings etc. It is not there to do things that should be done in the community in the first place. If you want to see true community work look at what The Community Church are doing in Bassett. Out of their own pockets they are funding youth work, paying for food and utility bills for needy families and offering the sort of support most people need. What do the council run schemes do? they offer quick fixes which rarely work and employ graduates who have no idea how their audience live. Jesus challenged people who took the ****, like the money lenders in the temple. He also showed love and compassion for others. It\'s a pity the churches in Southampton can\'t mobilise to tackle the massive social ills that blight this place. Many may not believe it but only Jesus can turn lives around, not cheap swimming or after school football on a Tuesday night. Perhaps if we all loved others as we love ourselves the city would be a better place.
Manimal, Southampton says...
7:15am Mon 28 Jan 08
Hasmukh Patel, bassett says...
9:15am Mon 28 Jan 08
Happy®, A.B.C. says...
10:52am Mon 28 Jan 08
aram, southampton says...
1:03pm Mon 28 Jan 08
Lee Whitbread wrote:No just the feral children and by the looks of it the scroungers of my tax
It seems to me that we have a proposed budget which will hit hard working families and young children. Taking away free swimming for under sevens, closing football pitches and cricket grounds would be a huge mistake at a time when we should be encouraging our children to lead healthy lives.
Paramjit Bahia, Southampton says...
1:09pm Mon 28 Jan 08
Hasmukh Patel wrote:Balancing the books of local Council? Main cause of the problem is the financing policies introduced by Thatcher Govt and continued more or less by the current people in power. So local councils have been forced into making some hard decisions. For me destroying the services for keeping tax levels down is not an option. It may attract votes of people who think like you but it most certainly will never be my cup of tea. Unlike you I am not a rich man, but I do not mind contributing my share if it is used for maintaining decent services especially for children youth disabled and the elderly.
If Jesus Christ or Lord Krishna stand as candidates in Basset Ward we\'ll have to ask how they intend to balance the books too, otherwise it doesn;t matter what their qualifications are. When I came to this country from Uganda many of these so called \"essential services\" did not exist, so no, I did not take advantage of them. Now, we have 13 year old mothers just assuming the state (ie my council taxes) will give them a flat, and worse still, we get well meaning but foolish councilors who address the problem but do not eradicate the cause. Being a good person is not the same as being a good or a brave or a visionary politician. I accept that most labour councillors are good people motivated by a desire to help, but sadly that is not the kind of person who makes a good leader. That requires detachment, courage, strategy and sometimes a very thick skin
Paramjit Bahia, Southampton says...
1:14pm Mon 28 Jan 08
Manimal wrote:Definition of morality can be subjective.
I have nothing against anyone who lives with any sort of morality but I think it's time that people who don't are brought to account. Sadly the Labour government have bought middle-class votes but pushing the tax burden onto lower paid workers through increases in council tax, fuel duty and other stealth taxes. At the same time they have screwed around with the education system to a point where it's virtually impossible for a young person in Millbrook or Thornhill to achieve anything. Is that fair or just? If we restored the link between work and achievement rather than expecting handouts a right we'd be in a much better state- and help could be given to people in genuine need like the disabled and the elderly. If you've ever worked with some of the people who are killing this city you'd appreciate my point of view.
Hasmukh Patel, Bassett says...
2:12pm Mon 28 Jan 08
Paramjit Bahia, Soton says...
5:29am Wed 30 Jan 08
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Manimal, Southampton says...
9:16am Sat 26 Jan 08
I work hard to bring my kids up and so should those who take the easy option and let the authorities do it for them. Let's not forget it was Cllr Bridle who introduced Inclusion into our schools, and look at the results!
If people have any sense they'll endorse these proposals as a victory for working people (real Working Class people). The Tories are the party for the 'working' man, not the striking man Mr Tucker.