WHO CARES FOR THE CARERS? COUNCIL REFUSES TO STEP FORWARD

Yesterday the carers gathered outside the Burgh Hall and waved flag and banners and blew whistles to attract attention to their situation, which is the introduction of a new schedule that will impact the hours they work and the pay they receive. Some of them will have to go out earlier in the morning (before 8am) and be paid less than they are now.
Meanwhile the councillors, one of whom’s mother receives help from four carers a day, seven days a week, have received a 23 per cent pay increase for turning up at meetings where some of them hardly ever even speak. 

David Scott, GMB convener, Cllr Jim Bollan, Community Party and Cllr David McBride, deputy leader of the Labour Group on West Dunbartonshire Council.

“The new schedule for carers is not fair and it’s not just and as for the police turning up at our rally that is a disgrace beyond words,” said David Scott, the GMB trade union convener.
“We didn’t ask for them to come today so we take it that it was the Council chief executive Peter Hessett or a member of his staff who made the request. That is ridiculous. Some of our members were concerned about this.”
GMB union members pictured outside West Dunbartonshire council headquarters in Dumbarton. 

Insside the hall where, as per usual, it was almost impossible to hear what was going on at what is supposed to be a public meeting, Councillor Jim Bollan made the salient point that carers could not in just seven minutes be expected to wash, dress, feed, medicate, comfort and somehow still care for frail, vulnerable people.

He accused Cllr David McBride, deputy leader of the Labour Group, who said he had never insisted on the seven minute rule, of having “lost his bottle” and not having the courage to stand up to the Health and Social Care Partnership or the SNP government and take the fight for justice further than they had so far.

It wasn’t right that the carers’ representatives had not been granted their request for meaningful talks about their wages and conditions of work.

Cllr McBride made a personal plea that while he supported the carers case, the Labour administration, whose numbers have been reduced markedly through resignations over this issue, had not been behind the cuts in the Carers’ Service.

Labour, whose numbers which gave them charge of the council administration had been reduced and through resignations left them without the necessary majority to form the administration, were prepared to resign and allow the SNP and new Independents to take over, but they were not prepared to do that.

After the meeting, carers who had turned up to demonstrate and to listen from the public gallery said: “The council have lost the plot. We couldn’t hear a word of what was said and we have got nowhere with these people who are determined to implement their new schedules no matter what we ask them to do for us”.

The Council, which sees itself as part of the HSCP set up when it suits them, will make no comment on this to The Dumbarton Democrat. We are banned from speaking to them and asking them questions about their questionable and unpopular decisions with council taxpayers such as this one.

Although this contentious issue will most probably end up in the Scottish Parliament after the election on May 7, none of the MPS or candidates for West Dunbartonshire, Dame Jackie Baillie, MSP for Dumbarton, Helensburgh and Lomond, or Marie McNair, MSP for Clydebank and Milngavie, turned up for the rally. They were otherwise engaged at Holyrood.

The average number of visitors and views on The Dumbarton Democrat recorded today (Thursday) at 4.10pm is 5.9K.

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