Public Policy Media
Richard Vize
LATEST
ARTICLES
Rough sleepers are dying
decades early
6 March 2020
People living on the streets are dying three decades early, but
NHS intransigence is undermining attempts to improve
services.
Official statistics reveal a shocking story of early, avoidable
death. In 2018 the average age of people who died while
homeless in England and Wales was around 44. In other
words, these 726 souls typically died more than three decades
too soon, losing 22,000 years of life between them.
A third of these deaths were caused by treatable conditions
such as respiratory illnesses and HIV. Homeless people are 14
times more likely to die by suicide compared with the general
population, 20 times more as a result of drug use and seven
times more from falls. Hospital admissions in England relating
to homelessness, meanwhile, leapt 130% in the five years to
2018-19.
To understand why healthcare is failing people who sleep
rough on this industrial scale, the government commissioned
independent research from the King’s Fund. The results reveal
services are too inflexible to meet their needs, and are so rigid
they thwart attempts by committed staff to make improvements.
Bearing in mind that even people who work for the NHS often
find it difficult to navigate as a patient, it is no surprise that
homeless people find multiple barriers getting into and around
the health service.
Read the full article at Guardian Society
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Don’t give planning power to
developers
21 February 2020
Boris Johnson’s “smash the system” approach to public policy
is about to reach every street, town, village and field in the
country. The government is preparing to dynamite development
controls and unleash market forces on our physical world,
moving power from councils to developers and inflicting great
harm on the built and natural environments.
While No 10 adviser Dominic Cummings and eugenics
aficionado Andrew Sabisky grab the headlines, it is Jack Airey
who may well have the more lasting impact on our lives. As
Johnson’s new adviser on housing and planning, Airey is
leading the charge to strip local councils of meaningful control
over local development. Just last month, in his role as head of
housing at influential right-wing thinktank Policy Exchange, he
published his manifesto, Rethinking the planning system for the
21st century.
Airey is undoubtedly right that the planning system is not fit for
modern times. Fertile land is being gobbled up for ugly,
sprawling, car-dependent, amenity-free housing developments.
Poorly planned building is exacerbating the menace of floods.
Too few new buildings minimise their carbon footprint.
Developers constantly dodge their obligations to build social
housing.
Read the full article at Guardian Society
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Terror medics should not be held
back
7 February 2020
The Streatham terrorist attack has again highlighted one of the
most difficult decisions the emergency services face – deciding
when it is safe to treat wounded people.
In the aftermath of the stabbings by Sudesh Amman, a passer-
by who helped a man lying on the pavement bleeding claimed
ambulance crews took 30 minutes to arrive. The London
Ambulance Service (LAS) said the first medics arrived in four
minutes, but waited at the assigned rendezvous point until the
Metropolitan police confirmed it was safe to move in.
Like the perpetrators of the London Bridge attacks in both 2017
and 2019, Amman was wearing a hoax suicide vest.
There is a long, brutal history, from Baghdad to the
Warrenpoint ambush in 1979 , of using secondary attacks to
slay those who rush to terror scenes. The inevitable chaos of a
bomb or an attack by several people, such as the 2017 attacks
in London Bridge and Borough market, means it can take a
long time to be sure all the perpetrators are accounted for.
But last summer, the London Bridge inquest heard it took three
hours for paramedics to reach some of the wounded.
Read the full article at Guardian Society
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Ministers threaten our right to
know
24 January 2020
Freedom of information and scrutiny of government decisions
are under attack. Through obstruction and neglect, ministers
and civil servants are choking off our right to know what they
are doing and how they spend our money.
Meanwhile Boris Johnson and his cabinet are replacing
rigorous journalistic questioning with shallow social media
stunts, creating a mirage of openness and accountability while
hiding away from any real interrogation.
The Freedom of Information Act 2000 gave UK citizens the
right to request data from public authorities, and obliged them
to publish financial and other routine reports. It transformed the
relationship between the public and the state, with
campaigners and journalists soon pushing its boundaries.
Since 2005 the number of Freedom of Information (FoI)
requests to government has doubled but, as the Institute for
Government revealed this week in its Whitehall Monitor 2020
report, adherence to the act is on the verge of collapse, with
departments ignoring their legal duties to supply information.
The report points out that in the early years of the act,
departments were routinely approving more than half of FoI
requests (although the Foreign Office and Cabinet Office have
almost always refused 60% or more).
Read the full article at Guardian Society
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Cummings plan will fail deprived
areas
10 January 2020
The obsessive focus of Boris Johnson’s advisers on shaking up
Whitehall reinforces the failed belief that all the answers lie in
better central government. If they really want the UK to be the
most dynamic state in the world and to “level up” the most
deprived areas, they need to devolve power away from
London.
There is good evidence that decentralised countries have
stronger growth and better public services – and even the
Treasury recognises that the UK is one of the most centralised
states in the world.
Instead of poking at the problem with a few grudging
concessions negotiated through city deals, ministers need to
give local government the decision-making and tax-raising
powers it needs to make a difference. That would be the fastest
route to “levelling up” and beginning to tackle endemic
problems such as skills shortages, low productivity and poor
public transport.
The signals about how Whitehall will be reformed have been
mixed. The growing expectation that the cabinet secretary, Sir
Mark Sedwill, will be staying for the foreseeable future rather
than becoming ambassador to Washington provides
experience and continuity at the top.
Read the full article at Guardian Society
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