editor
hiraethified
I'll be there. Anyone else coming down for this?
Please come and support Lambeth Libraries at Lambeth Town Hall, Monday 11 April, 6:30pm.
Tomorrow evening Lambeth Council cabinet are meeting to set up a Libraries Commission to push through cuts of £750,000 by 2014. This is the figure set out in the summary document published prior to tomorrow's meeting.
Lambeth Libraries are already understaffed, underfunded and undervalued by both senior management and councillors alike. The repairs backlog alone is estimated at £4m.
Steve Reed, leader of Lambeth Council, has stated that he thinks libraries will close.
Lambeth Libraries remain without clear leadership since the recently appointed new Head of Service resigned after one day. A day when he realised that under his leadership libraries would be closed, all librarians fired and vital services slashed.
The Director of Cultural Services' proposed restructure is foundering. Plans were launched on March 7 yet over a month later consultation has yet to begin as he and his HR "change management" team have yet to meet the legal requirements for a meaningful consultation period to start. This has left staff and service users in limbo, stressed and worried over the future of their jobs and services.
Management are obstinately pushing forward with their plans to provide services by Councillor Reed's approach - The Co-operative Council - basically a pipe dream vanity project. One of the first areas to be subjected to this ill thought through approach to delivering services is The Nettlefold Hall, the borough's theatre, meeting rooms, space available to groups for everything from dance and keep-fit sessions, funeral and wedding receptions and a long running pensioners' luncheon club. The Nettlefold is to be transferred over to a group of trustees over the next three years, trustees who have already shown signs that they would be happy to cancel usage of the facilities for all existing groups in favour of their friends - although I'm sure that if Mike Leigh knew that local community groups were to be ousted so that he could have the a space to workshop and rehearse a new production for three months he may not be too happy about the situation.
The other aim of the commission is to establish working partnerships with other borough's in SE London. The first experiment, part of Ed Vaizey's Future Libraries Programme, goes live tomorrow and aims to unite the reservation systems of Lambeth and it's neighbouring boroughs. The idea is that customers in Lewisham can place a reservation for an item which may be held in a different borough, for example Lambeth, and that item will be sent to their local Lewisham library. The scheme, which Councillor Florence Nosegbe signed up to, is failing before it has started due to the fact the the other boroughs' systems and Lambeth's are unable to communicate. So staff in other borough's will still need to process these 'inter-library loans' by email, fax or phone call to a member of staff in Lambeth - no savings there then.
As we all know, setting up and running effective commission processes cost money. Where is this money coming from? The summary document provided in advance of Monday's meeting states that "Costs of the Commission will be contained within existing budgets". By existing budgets are we to assume that this means the Libraries and Archives budget? I'm sure that local residents would not appreciate money set aside for their library service being syphoned off to fund a group of councillors and unelected flunkies as they examine the best, most pain-free and PR friendly way to cut Lambeth Libraries and Archives.
So, please if you are free tomorrow evening, come to Brixton and join the lobby to Save Lambeth Libraries.