Social workers from the Hospital Team, the Community Mental Health Teams and the Child and Family Teams recently met in Swansea University with staff from the Social Work Department to launch a local SWAN group. Swansea City and County have just launched a personalisation programme. The first task for Swansea SWAN is to try and make sure that this does not become a Trojan horse for cuts and to ensure that it really does promote the needs and views of service users. Swansea SWAN are now organising a one-day conference in April 2010 to look at issues around Personalisation.
Year: 2011
SWAN members protest against treatment of asylum seekers following the Glasgow deaths
The Serykh family, who had claimed asylum in the UK, fell to their deaths from the tower block in which they lived on Sunday 7th March. Their asylum application to remain in the UK had recently been refused and they had been told to leave their flat. SWAN members joined residents, community and faith groups and trade unions in marching from the spot where the family died in Springburn, Glasgow to a rally in George Square on March 13th 2010.
The march, organised by Red Road Residents, the Glasgow Campaign to Welcome Refugees, Positive Action in Housing and the Unity Centre, had two main aims. The first was to remember the Serykh family and call for an immediate end to any further enforced removals of refugee families by the UK Borders Agency. The second was for the immediate return of Stephanie Ovranah and her twin six year old sons, Joshua and Joel, to their friends, neighbours and local church in Glasgow’s Cranhill where they have lived for past five years. The family were detained at Brand Street Reporting Centre without warning last Friday with the children still in their school uniforms. They are currently held in Yarl’s Wood Detention Centre. For more information and to support these campaigns contact elaine.mckenna3@ntlworld.com
We didn’t come into social work for this!
A major theme of our conference was resisting managerialism, an ideology that claims that the same set of management techniques can be applied to any ‘business’, whether it’s distributing frozen food or providing services for homeless people. Showing a total contempt and disregard for the skills that workers in the social care sector have, managers use performance management systems to drive down working conditions whilst at the same time promising to measure the un-measurable and ‘scientifically’ show that the very services they are cutting are actually improving.
Speaking at the conference Roger Kline of the ASPECT union and author of What If? pointed out that the Centre for Excellence and Outcomes in Children and Young People’s Services trains senior managers to “translate ‘soft outcomes,’ such as happiness, healthiness or well-being, into a solid performance measurement”. Continuous recording of these ‘outcomes’ dramatically changes how we work. For example, while computers could be a tool to improve practice, stress about cumbersome systems and targets means that instead they contribute to an already high level of work related sickness and burn out amongst workers.
Social workers talked about the battle to stay mentally well and the failure of their employers to make any consideration or allowances for workers’ needs. UNISON steward Maureen Wade talked about the importance of organising in the workplace so that a collective response can be made to attacks on services.
Mental health social work: ‘Computer says no’
Mental health workers discussed the requirement to use the Health of the Nation Outcome Scales (HONOS), a means of recording progress towards the target ‘to improve significantly the health and social functioning of mentally ill people’. They subjectively score 12 items measuring behaviour, impairment, symptoms and social functioning, feed these into a computer and then the computer generates a ‘care pathway’ for that person, which outlines the support they will receive.
Social workers talked about how they find themselves left with no time to visit service users and their approaches such as crisis intervention and systems theory are not valued leading to a reductionism in practice. Dr Mike Smith, a mental health professional with over 26 years experience and co-author of The THRIVE Approach to Mental Wellness, said that depression and hearing voices are part of the human condition. Social workers try to understand the social context of these human characteristics, the circumstances that can really “drive people mad”, however this expertise is devalued or missed when the focus is on medical models. Delegates pointed out that the tasks overwhelming us are usually not those that drove us to become social workers. It is the administrative work, the resource allocation, and the guarding and rationing of services that is seen as the priority.
Personalisation: ‘They’ll buy you a bike’
The conference was critical of the government’s personalisation agenda, which means service users receive individual budgets to purchase their own care. This can be used as an excuse to get rid of existing council provision such as day care. One example given was that it is easy for a services user to get something simple like a bike, but as soon as more complex demands are raised it becomes impossible to pay for the care needed just using one individual budget. It was noted that once collective services have been cut it would not be easy to get them back.
Social Work Practices
Simon Cardy, a children’s social worker led a briefing on Independent Social Work Practices. Two of the six pilots are in the West Midlands. Whilst these practices promise a reduction in bureaucracy they are tied into performance contracts and performance-related pay. A statement was unanimously agreed opposing social work practices.
Support, debate and action
‘I’m fed up of being a nodding dog, I came into social work to be radical’ said one long standing social worker, whilst a student out on placement remarked ‘I’m glad to have found a group of people who want to challenge what’s happening, to know there’s somewhere we can go and that we’ll be backed up.’
Another social worker who attended, Clare Hill commented “my experience at the conference has prompted me to write to encourage others to raise awareness of SWAN as not only a ‘defender’ of the social work profession, but also as a source of immense support, encouragement and optimism in an increasingly challenging climate.
The diversity of delegates undoubtedly enhanced the lively and informative discussions and despite holding preconceived notions that the day might stir up feelings of increased frustration, I actually came away feeling more positive, having learnt a great deal and with a renewed commitment towards my work and the values which underpin it.”
For more info on the West Midlands SWAN group email by clicking here.
Youth Work in crisis
Just over 50 years ago the Albemarle Report brought into being the modern Youth Service. Its raison d’etre was educational. Through an open, voluntary, young person-centred relationship it sought to contribute towards the creation of active, critical participants in a democratic society. Of course this aspiration has been riddled with contradiction. Yet it has been the fixative holding together a diversity of ideology and practice, ranging, to take but one example, from the Girl Guides to radical feminist projects.
Under New Labour this ethos was insidiously undermined. Funding was linked increasingly to targeted groups of ‘dubious and demonised’ youth and the illusory imposition of prescribed behavioural outcomes – the very antithesis of the youth work process. Under the Coalition the assault has escalated. The very existence of provision in the service of young people is under threat. Across the country local authorities are abandoning wholesale their commitment to youth work, hiding behind the notion of ‘commissioning’ to the lowest bidder from the private or Third Sector. Or they are shifting the reduced resources available into Early Intervention programmes aimed at ‘problematic’ families, whereby youth workers without negotiation or agreed in-service training become quasi-social workers with identified case-loads.
Resistance to this onslaught has been uneven. Impressive campaigns have been mounted in some authorities, whilst in others workers seem paralysed by the sheer scale of the attack. To its credit the Community and Youth Workers section of UNITE the union took the lead in bringing together a CHOOSE YOUTH alliance of thirty partners, which organised a thousand-strong rally of young people and workers in Solihull, attracting significant media coverage. Meanwhile, seemingly impervious to such happenings in the real world, a Parliamentary Select Education Committee claims to be inquiring into services for youth, even as they fast disappear.
Inspiring everyone are young people themselves. A number of Save our Youth Service groups, for example, in Oxfordshire and Haringey, have illustrated courage and creativity in standing up against attempts to silence their voices. Despite their imaginative efforts the cuts are being forced through, but they are vowing to fight on. A distinct section of young people, youth workers and supporters, banners aloft, music blazing was part of the TUC March. In the words of Alex from Leeds, taken from her combative, yet humorous speech at the rally, ‘ it is time for us to walk like Egyptians!’
More information: http://www.indefenceofyouthwork.org.uk/wordpress/
SWAN Marches for the alternative
It’s worth reminding ourselves of the scale of the march. The demonstration started at 11am and people were still leaving the Embankment at 3pm! Estimating numbers is never easy, but 500,000 is not excessive. My transport dropped me at Hyde Park and I had to walk the route to join the demo. I met the march at Trafalgar Square – with the Unison block leading the way. I waited at the square to see if I would recognise anyone to march with (some hope!) two hours later the Unison block was still filtering past.
I thought about some of the other demonstrations I had been on – and which are recognised as being significant protest events. In the early 1980s the Labour Party and TUC put on three massive demonstrations (in Birmingham, Glasgow and Liverpool) against unemployment. The combined total from those protests was less than those who marched today. In 1990 there were two massive demonstrations against the poll tax (one in London and one in Glasgow). Again the combined total was about half the size of the 26th March. In fact it was only the 15th February 2003 demonstration against war in Iraq that was bigger than this.
The second thing to mention is its composition. There are a lot of myths – in sociological circles – about the ‘end of the working class’. But this was an overwhelmingly working class protest. There were close to 2,000 trade union banners, there were banners from community groups, disability rights groups, service user organisations – and even the Liverpool football supporters group ‘The Spirit of Shankley’. There were hundreds of home made banners as well – including my favourite, the one that seemed to sum up all the class anger on display during the day: “Cameron, Clegg: Why don’t you just fuck off back to Eton”!!
The speeches that went down best in Hyde Park were those from people like Mark Serwotka and Len McCluskey that spoke about the need for co-ordinated joint strike action to defend jobs and services – not the usual fare at TUC events.
The day emphasised something that SWAN has been saying for some time: service users and workers together, in joint action and in common cause, can defeat the cuts onslaught.
The march emphasised the possibilities – now its time to turn it into action. SWAN supporters must throw themselves into every campaign against every cut.
We have an ‘ideological’ role to play, emphasising that the cuts were caused by the financial system and asking why vulnerable communities should pay the price. We also need to argue for alternatives (increase top tax rates, take the bankers bonuses, scrap Trident missiles, create 1 million green jobs).
But we also have to combine this with our actions as activists. Standing with those who face cuts, or privatisation of services, or job losses. Going to their picket lines, marches, demonstrations and meetings. And we also have to start putting forward social work alternatives.
In this regard I’m delighted that SWAN has started a new series of Practice Notes (see details here). Our first draws on the experience of SWAN activists in the Midlands and offers some ideas about what social workers can do when faced with cuts to services for refugee children and young people. Practice Notes can be accessed on our website and will be – we hope – the first of many. To coincide with the launch of Practice Notes, SWAN and Unison called a successful joint demonstration outside the UK border Agency in Solihull. This fine example is one that I hope we can replicate across the country in the coming months.
Quotes from the day:
‘I was one of the young people from Oxfordshire on the march. We were amazed by the size of it and the diversity of people there. All the different views and actions we heard about and saw were great. Bankers – Wankers caught my eye as a cheeky but true slogan. We had a good day and found out loads about the anti cuts campaign. It’s great to be part of something so BIG. We are the MASSIVE society!’ Pippa, young person, anti cuts campaigner
‘Brilliant! – the biggest Trade Union demonstration in living memory; so big we couldn’t find our delegation! Coming to London on the STUC ‘big red train’ from Glasgow was a long journey, but really worthwhile – half a million on the streets shows the potential strength for a concerted fight back against the cuts – let’s organise coordinated strike action across the Unions to defend the welfare state.’ Barrie, Glasgow SWAN
‘Saturday’s TUC demo was a shot in the arm for us all. In the space of two hours, I went from being among a gathering of about 1,000 people in Kennington Park, to a river of people of perhaps 5-6k as we multiplied on the way to Waterloo Station, and ultimately into the sheer delight of the multitude of hundreds of thousands of people cramming the Embankment as far as the eye could see. Yes, it reminded me of what I’d hoped for: 2003! We bottlenecked at Big Ben, snaked round into Parliament Street, and roared with anger as we passed Downing Street. I bumped into several of the lecturers from my University who our student group had been picketing with two days previously – they were checking the internet on phones and picking up stories of numbers: 200,000? 250,000? Half a million!? That is what you call a social movement.
The biggest demonstration in Britain for years collectively told the government that we demand an economic alternative. In Hyde Park we heard the call for what we need next: coordinated industrial action. It reverberated along Oxford Street, into Trafalgar Square, through television sets in pubs and into newspapers across the land.’
Dan, social work student
Sulaiman Must Stay!
Sulaiman Mohammed is a 17-year-old young person from Iraq who is being denied asylum, despite desperately needing it, and after serious malpractice within the UK social services. In post-invasion Iraq, 2004, Sulaiman’s father, who worked for the Iraqi security services, was kidnapped and murdered by a terrorist group. The murderers have never been prosecuted, and Sulaiman’s family ties place him in ongoing danger from the same group.
In June 2005, Sulaiman was the victim of a car bomb attack, in which he lost a leg, and three months later his mother passed away, leaving the 13-year-old Sulaiman an orphan. He went to live with his uncle, but the danger posed by Sulaiman’s father’s killers led his uncle to make arrangements for Sulaiman to flee Iraq.
After a period of destitution, Sulaiman claimed asylum in the UK, and was placed in foster care in Greater Manchester. He lived with his foster family for over a year, attending Stockport College. However, a social worker conducted a ‘Merton-compliant’ age assessment and incorrectly claimed that Sulaiman was over 18. (He was 15, as was later, eventually found by the UKBA) As a result, Sulaiman was taken away from his foster family. Appallingly, Sulaiman was never consulted over this; he was simply moved from the foster home to live alone without legal or emotional support.
Eventually Sulaiman came to RAPAR, the Manchester-based human rights organisation. Sophie, a social work student based at RAPAR, comments: “For me, social work is about supporting vulnerable people in a way which respects human rights and promotes social justice. In contrast, the asylum system operates in such a way that oppression is compounded, human rights are violated and social workers are expected to work as quasi immigration officials. This is not what I, perhaps quite naively, expected social work to be about”.
The UKBA is still planning to proceed with the enforced removal of Sulaiman back to Iraq to face his father’s killers even though the country is deemed too dangerous for able-bodied British adults not specifically at threat from terrorists to visit. After illegally invading Iraq, wrongly removing the care services Sulaiman was entitled to, falsely accusing him of lying about his own age, and now threatening him with deportation, it is about time this country started showing some semblance of fairness and compassion towards Sulaiman.
RAPAR has organised a campaign to support Sulaiman. Please demand an immediate halt to the deportation in letters to your MP and to Home Secretary Theresa May, and sign the petition at: http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/sulaimanmohammed
More information about the campaign and RAPAR: http://www.rapar.org.uk/
SWAN leads campaign against racist cuts
Local Authorities including Solihull and Croydon have seen significant cuts in the UK Borders Agency (UKBA) grant for the costs of care and aftercare for unaccompanied asylum seeking children (UASC). This has led to a significant shortfall in council funding for existing statutory services for child asylum seekers.
The Comprehensive Spending Review brought a 23% real terms reduction to Home Office spending over the next four years. The Home Office has confirmed that cuts to support for asylum seekers are disproportionately greater than to other Departmental areas. These cuts have been handed on to Local Authorities by the UKBA through changes in the grant structure for funding care services.
The UASC service in Solihull was subject to the largest single cut of £1.2m or 15%. A review of the service was undertaken in anticipation of this funding black hole. Proposed changes include a reduction in the level of service provided to child asylum seekers. The review accepts that the ‘revised service model will result in differential and less favourable treatment for unaccompanied children in care and care leavers compared to local citizen children’. This is an open acknowledgement that these cuts are discriminatory and racist.
The revised levels of service include the goals of moving child asylum seekers from foster care into independent accommodation at 16, reducing the staffing level of the UASC team, and replacing the social workers with support workers holding higher caseloads. Solihull Council accepts these revised levels of services will lead to a two-tier and discriminatory service for child asylum seekers.
Management have defended their proposals by suggesting that many child asylum seekers are more resilient than other locally born ‘looked after children’ and therefore require less intensive support. There is questionable evidence for this and the needs of child asylum seekers are affected by their experiences of migration.
The local UNISON Branch has raised concerns with Solihull’s Chief Executive expressing concern that resource management may ‘interfere in professional social work decision-making in regard to the assessment of need’ and seeking safeguards to prevent this. The move to a two-tier service poses significant professional challenges to social workers, IRO’s and social work managers.
In response West Midlands SWAN alongside Solihull UNISON and Birmingham based Asylum Support & Immigration Resource Team (ASIRT) organised a small but noisy protest outside the UKBA on 8th April attended by social workers, students, UNISON members and voluntary sector workers. This had three objectives – to publically expose these racist cuts; to publicise SWAN’s new series of campaigning advice leaflets ‘Practice Notes’ which provide guidance on using the new Regulations and strategies for challenging such cuts (available online: http://issuu.com/solihullunison/docs/solihul_practice_notesv8); and to grab attention in the social work press – achieved when Community Care magazine carried the story online. We aim to continue building the campaign. If this is an issue in your area we would like to hear from you, email West Midlands SWAN by clicking here.
Lifting the Lid on Disabled People Against Cuts
From Newsletter #2 Spring 2011
Bob Williams-Findlay from DPAC discusses disability and the struggle for a just and inclusive society
Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) isn’t an organisation and nor does it claim to represent all disabled people; it is however part of a growing social movement. DPAC was created by the coming together of disabled people in opposition to policies designed to reduce public expenditure and alter the relationship between the state and society. Formed in the aftermath of the first mass protest against the austerity cuts and their potential impact on disabled people held on the 3rd October in Birmingham, DPAC sees itself as a rallying point for everyone who believes that disabled people should have full human rights and equality. It is exists for everyone who refuses to stay silent about the injustices delivered by wealthy politicians on ordinary people and their lives.
The austerity measures however need to be seen in a wider historical context. What “disability” is and how it impacts upon people with impairments’ lives is still being contested. Disabled people are an easy target because the dominant views associated with defining “disability” within society has socially constructed them as being ‘dependent’ and unable to fully participate within society due solely to their impairments. This view, supported through negative and pejorative stereotyping, distorts who we are and the causes of the disabling barriers we face. Inappropriate and misleading labels such as “the disabled” or “vulnerable adults or children” reinforce prejudices and discrimination.
Many people with impairments refuse to accept this view of themselves. Some distance themselves altogether from a ‘disabled identity’ whilst others like the co-founders of DPAC embrace it as a political identity. DPAC argues disabled people are not “the disabled”, but are a diverse social group of people with a variety of impairments who continue to face unequal and differential treatment resulting from systems, structures and cultures which fail to take disabled people into account. Disability is a political question requiring political and social answers.
Let’s be clear: DPAC doesn’t simply want to “protect” existing services from the axe – too often public and third sector services merely reinforce disabled people’s oppression and experiences of inequality – what we want are inclusive policies and practices. Although we are Disabled People against Cuts our focus is not exclusively on avoiding the negative impact of cuts upon benefits and services directly affecting disabled people it includes the opposition of all measures that will undermine disabled and non-disabled people’s ability to create a just and inclusive society.
More information: http://www.dpac.uk.net/
Report: SWAN in Hong Kong
Given that capitalism is a global system, it’s perhaps not surprising that the many of the problems that social workers face in Britain – managerialism, the erosion of relationship-based work, excessive workloads and so on – are also shared by workers in other countries. The fact that the SWAN Social Work Manifesto, for example, was translated into several other languages including Greek, Japanese, Mandarin and Spanish following its publication in 2005 was an early indication that the analysis and the conclusions of the Manifesto resonated with groups of workers in these countries.
Continuing proof of that international interest in the ideas and activities of SWAN came in the form of an official invitation to organise three symposia at the International Association of Schools of Social Work’s (IASSW) biennial conference in Hong Kong in June 2010. The themes of our symposia were Neoliberalism and Social Work, Social Work, War and Resistance and Towards a Social Work of Resistance. Each of these attracted around 70/80 people and involved speakers from a wide range of countries including South Africa, Nigeria, Belgium, the USA, Greece and the UK. In addition, as the conference was taking place only weeks after the Israeli army’s attack on the Gaza Freedom Flotilla, an additional SWAN meeting was organised to denounce their illegal actions and to demand an end to the blockade of Gaza. More than 60 people attended and listened to speakers from Israel, Lebanon and Greece, followed by an excellent discussion. On the following day, a motion calling for an end to the blockade was also passed (by 94 votes to 1) at the IASSW AGM, a significant breakthrough since while the organisation has spoken out on a wide range of international issues in the past, it has been largely silent on the issue of Palestine.
As well as the official conference, the visit also provided an opportunity to meet a brilliant group of radical social workers in Hong Kong with whom we had previously only had e-mail contact. The group is active in defending democratic rights in Hong Kong and in promoting a vision of social work very similar to SWAN’s. As well as hosting an informal meeting of more than twenty social workers to discuss radical/Marxist ideas of welfare, the group was also involved in organising a conference on progressive social work in which we were invited to participate (see photograph). All in all, then, a successful trip, and hopefully we will see some of the Hong Kong colleagues at our conferences in the near future.
Private Social Work Practices
A key problem for looked after children is the lack of continuity in their relationship with the local authority social worker… This lack of a continuous personal relationship also creates problems for social workers themselves… [who] enter their work with a strong moral purpose, idealism, energy and enthusiasm. However, once into the job, they often feel de-motivated, overwhelmed by bureaucracy and deprived of autonomy… Current organizational structures also have other problems, especially a lack of incentives for efficiency and innovation.
SWPs were proposed as the solution to these challenges, and the Children and Young Person’s Act 2008 provided the new legal framework, enabling local authorities in England and Wales to discharge (i.e. privatize) the ‘corporate parenting’ function of social work services for children in their care. The case for SWPs rests on three key arguments advanced by Professor Julian Le Grand, an education advisor to the Conservative Party. First, he argues, SWPs will provide a level of consistent corporate parenting expressed in the personal relationship between the child and their social worker. Second, workers demoralised by bureaucracy would be attracted to a ‘professional partnership’ governance model akin to a General Medical Practice or small firm of lawyers. Third, social workers would be motivated by a sense of professional autonomy and owner control of their partnership organisation. Three models for SWPs are suggested: a ‘professional practice’ (social enterprise) run by a partnership of social workers legally independent of the local authority, a ‘third sector’ (not for profit) model run by a voluntary organisation and a private sector (for profit) model.
Six pilot SWP schemes were due to be in place by the end 2009 — although one of these was put on hold as the local authority felt there were too many financial risks. The intention was a three-year period to test the various SWP models and, depending on the outcome, the preferred model would be pushed out across England and Wales from 2012 onwards.
Here in the West Midlands two councils, Staffordshire and Sandwell, signed up to the pilot scheme. In the latter, the Sandwell Child Care Co-operative (SCCC) won the contract to take over social work services for 100 children in 2009. This organisation claimed to be a ‘non profit making company… that would ensure common ownership between directors and staff, with social worker employees having a numerical dominance on the Board’. This cooperative is a pioneer of the Con-Dem Coalition’s ‘small state/big society’ social enterprise adventure. It is also an example of how oppositional ideas such as common ownership and the cooperative movement can be incorporated in a neo-liberal project. As theorist Raymond Williams wrote in the late 1960s in his brilliant analysis of the role of culture and hegemony, ‘the decisive hegemonic function is to control or transform or even incorporate alternatives and opposition’. Williams’ ideas can be applied to many of the events now taking place around the development of the SWP pilots.
A regional SWAN conference held in March 2010 agreed to campaign against private social work practices. Following this, the regional steering group issued a challenge to SCCC in the form of an open letter. Our statement argued ‘there is no evidence that social workers are frustrated entrepreneurs who need a profit motive or a bonus to do their best for children’ and that social work practices are a sort of ‘human asset stripping’ from local authorities. We called on social workers not to volunteer if given the option of whether to work for SCCC. We copied our statement to over 300 email contacts, regional SWAN members, local trade union branches, and the social work print media as part of our modest but very public attempt to confront SCCC.
The founder of SCCC Laurie Gregory responded by issuing his own statement. Gregory said: ‘I actually believe the Co-operative approach is an imaginative socialist one for the purposes of social care provision and feel much regret that the Co-operative movement has been asleep for the last 20 years during which billions of pounds have been outsourced, mostly to “profit making” organisations’. He added ‘early in negotiations, it became apparent that no social workers were transferring from Sandwell MBC to the pilot because of the very high proportion of unqualified staff and the level of agency staff [there] who would not have rights to transfer with TUPE protection. All posts within the project were geared to Local Government levels of pay with an emphasis on seeking qualified and experienced social workers who would be paid at a Senior Practitioner rate. It did not appear to us that we were “human asset stripping” from Sandwell MBC for the reasons mentioned above, but appealing for staff across the West Midlands Region to join the pilot for a period of 3-4 years’.
As part of our regional SWAN strategy we also issued several press statements in support of the local UNISON branch that had vowed to boycott the scheme. These were carried by publications such as Children and Young People Now. The local UNISON branch also distributed the union’s national leaflet to social work teams in Sandwell. UNISON activists reported that many social workers saw straight away that SWPs were nothing but a privatisation scam. Furthermore, contrary to the claims made by SCCC, social work teams in Sandwell were not made up of agency staff. The Council and SCCC did not anticipate such resistance and, against their expectations, failed to persuade any of Sandwell’s social workers to join the cooperative.
The council’s plans were then dealt a decisive blow when a disastrous OFSTED inspection of children’s services in Sandwell in February found that the children affected by the SWP had not been consulted about the sell-off. UNISON told us that foster carers were also angry that they had been given no notice that the transfer was going to happen. The SWP pilot was put on hold and abandoned altogether in August 2010. A small victory!
Whilst SWAN cannot claim credit for the collapse of the pilot- which was down to the UNISON branch and Sandwell social workers with a little unexpected help from OFSTED – SWAN certainly played a part in the war of position that developed on the web and in the national media coverage of the issue. This shows that, despite our modest resources, SWAN can and should play a key role in the ideological battle against privatisation and neo-liberalism at local and regional level. Of the 6 pilots originally planned across the country, only 4 now remain.
SWAN West Midlands have produced a pamphlet ‘Independent Social Work Practices: A Midlands Social Work Action Network briefing’ containing background history and further resources. Download a copy from the bottom of this page.
Gaza: Resilience, resistance, rights, freedoms and humanitarian help
As we travelled through the Mediterranean on the 30th May there was a sense of optimism and determination onboard. This sense turned to foreboding when vessels were detected approaching rapidly and I feared ending up in the water. I did not have a concept that live ammunition might be used against the participants. I was aware that an interception might involve crowd control techniques but during the attack the sheer number of heavily bleeding volunteers, pale-faced and terrified, followed by the appearance of the dead and critically injured around us as we sat in surrender made it clear this was no crowd control operation. The subsequent kidnapping of all participants, ransacking of the ship and theft of technology, money and documents turned it into a full-scale militarised incident of state piracy. In this one day we found out what it means to be occupied by a military force with leadership that has no self-awareness or restraint – an experience Palestinians have lived under for 60 years. If the aim was to deter the human rights movement for Palestine the outcome was way off the mark, now the group of 700 participants will bear witness wherever they go.
My role as a youth worker in London is about helping to build resilience factors into the lives of vulnerable young people and their families: secure accommodation, stable attachments and relationships, health, educational and lifestyle-related achievement, safe choices and positive identities. This work not only aims to improve outcomes for service users in their individual lives but works to improve the resilience of whole communities to be better able to withstand economic stresses, job losses, policy changes and cuts in services. In the context of Israel and Palestine it appears that Israel’s explicit strategy of attempting to destroy the resilience of Palestinian communities, committing human rights abuses and ignoring international law is risky not only to Palestinians but also to Israelis both on a micro level on a macro level as Israel is besieged by growing criticism. Brutal occupation policies and systematic inequities within Israel, the Occupied Territories and Gaza increase risks to both Palestinians and Israelis when the only choices afforded young Palestinians are unsafe ones.
In Gaza extremes of vulnerability and resilience are witnessed where despite almost four years of crippling economic blockade and military attack, with two thirds of the population dependent on United Nations food aid, a group of Gaza’s children recently broke the world record for the number of basketballs bounced simultaneously. An achievement such as this may sound relatively unimportant in an environment where power outages are regular, sewage flows untreated and livelihoods at a standstill. However with children for whom victim-hood and revenge could be their only narratives this plays an important psychological role. The achievement is a sign of resistance and resilience – at the simplest level a happy memory for the 7000+ children involved.
The Freedom Flotilla is another example of how resilience can be built. Not only are people from all over the world concerned enough to challenge the conditions forced upon Gaza by Israel but they are doing so loudly and publicly. This gives those living under illegal military occupation the encouragement to survive and resist. This was not simply a demonstration at sea. Projects on board included a Qatar-based foundation that provides scholarships for students, an Indonesian hospital-building delegation, a Turkish-based orphan sponsorship scheme, a number of children’s playgrounds for installation, a music studio initiative – real resilience-building work. In respecting the rights and freedoms of the people of Gaza by attempting direct delivery of aid in defiance of the illegal blockade the flotilla coalition were saying human rights and freedoms need to be recognised first and foremost but we will also continue the work sustainably to relieve humanitarian needs.
With success our mission could have worked to provide more chances for happy memories and reduce risk factors for Israel, but through their bloody attack the latter chose to reduce resilience and increase resistance instead.
For more info read Lorty’s blog http://www.convoytogaza.blogspot.com/
From Cradle to Grave – the cuts affect us all
The attack on child benefits is important because it breached the state’s commitment to universal benefits. Osborne then went on to announce a £7 billion cut in welfare – on top of the £11bn announced in June and £6bn in May – £24bn taken from the poorest and most vulnerable people in society.
The government are slashing a third of council spending by 2015. That means a third of council jobs to go, a third of crucial services axed. It will mean social work and social care services reduced and outsourced. It will mean a poorer service for users, worse pay and working conditions for the remaining workers and a less safe service.
The increase in the state pension age has been rushed forward four years to 2018 for men and 2020 for women. The government want £1.8bn savings a year from public sector pensions. That will mean an average increase in contributions of £450 extra per year, on top of a freeze on pension rates for up to three years.
Money for social housing projects is being slashed by 60 percent. New council tenants will be forced to pay ‘market rents’ and will not have secure tenancies on their home. The University teaching budget has been cut by 40 percent from £7.1bn to £4.2bn. Student fees will rise to almost £7,000 per year. Students will be saddled with huge debts on graduation. Osborne claimed that the NHS and education had been ‘saved’ from the cuts. But this is a myth. NHS spending has been cut by over £20bn.
These draconian cuts are not about addressing the deficit. The crisis is being used as a cover for the wholesale privatisation of welfare services by a government committed to a ‘small state’. This is an ideologically driven agenda that will leave the poor poorer, that will create unemployment, that will abolish vital services and leave working people – those in work and those who are unemployed; those who use services and those who work in service provision – facing a much bleaker future.
The present crisis was caused by the failure of the banking system and by the madness of market driven forms of delivery – yet there is nothing in the ‘Osborne axe’ to tax the banks and their billionaire bosses.
But there is an alternative. In France, in Greece and across the globe there are growing movements against austerity. In Britain we are starting to see the beginnings of such a movement. On 3rd October SWAN was proud to be a sponsor of the Right To Work demonstration in Birmingham where we marched alongside 7,000 others to protest at the Tory conference. In the days, weeks and months ahead there will be more protests – at local, regional and national level.
SWAN is urging all its supporters to throw themselves into anti-cuts protests and movements. As workers, service users and carers we need to stand together: to strike, protest, march and campaign against the cuts and their effects, to stand together and shout that ‘there is an alternative’ – to the brutality of these cuts and to the madness of the market.
Challenging The Not So ‘Comprehensive Spending Review’
The people who will be most hit by massive cuts are those with least money and resources, least advantage and least power – poor parents, older people, women workers, disabled people, mental health service users, carers, poor people on benefits, black and minority ethnic communities, social housing tenants and those studying. The people and institutions most to blame for the financial mess we are in; banks, private sector and business leaders are largely left untouched. Instead they are likely to benefit ultimately from the regressive financial redistribution resulting from public service cuts.
It’s all a stark reminder of the failure of the Blair and Brown governments. They left us this inheritance by perpetuating new right economic policies and freeing the market. With a landslide election victory in 1997, Blair did nothing to challenge the powers that be. Meanwhile the Tories now with no political mandate and no majority of any kind, are forcing through the most radical reactionary political agenda for almost a century, foisting on the rest of us the most destructive and anti-social policies in living memory.
But faced with a reform programme that makes Margaret Thatcher’s policies seem tame, we will do well to take some deep breaths and not panic. These cuts and the policies they presage may truly contain the seeds of their own destruction. Admittedly we have a weak and complaisant media. Undoubtedly democratic safeguards have been weakened. Admittedly much has happened to de-politicise and disempower people. Divisions will be encouraged and increased. We are already seeing it happen.
There is no question that the lives of many service users will be made more difficult and miserable. Some will undoubtedly have their lives cut short or die because of the loss of essential support. Social workers and other public service workers can look forward to even more insecurity, loss of jobs and greater difficulty doing their jobs well. Supporting people to deal with the benefits system, for example, can only be expected to be a bigger nightmare than it now is. All can expect greater hardship, difficulties and uncertainty.
But the divisions between and narrow self-interest of the ruling politicians and policymakers also make them weak and vulnerable. Their ideologically driven, poorly thought through policies will be costly, create all kinds of unintended consequences and won’t work. They will generate their own opposition. None of us should act or think as though we believe they have the five years in power that they repeatedly tell us we should judge them by. They talk ‘big society’ and corrupt the meaning of ‘self-help’ and ‘mutuality’. Instead we, through rebuilding community and grassroots action, local campaigns, new alliances, inclusive and original forms of campaigning, will not only develop resistance, but also demonstrate that there truly are alternatives to the bureaucratized consumerist models of state and private sector which recent governments have sought to impose on us.
Each supportive social work relationship with a service user is a demonstration of the enduring value and power of this democratizing, equality based impulse. Each will have a value, influence and power way beyond those directly, personally involved. Couple this with collective action and alliances between our organisations, interest and identity groups and we have the chance to build a new reality, a different politics that will fill the vacuum left by the arid years of bureaucratizing managerialism of the new political right, New Labour and now Coalition politics. This isn’t just a fight back. It is a fight for!