Saturday 20 May 2017

A Modern Plague

Image Source: Independent Liverpool
Written By: Scott Gunnion

Take a stroll up Lord Street in the city centre, and you'll be greeted with an all too familiar scene. Several homeless people scattered erratically on the landscape, inhabiting shop doorways, begging at the fringes.

Homelessness is a swelling epidemic that, in these economically challenging times, visibly plagues the streets of Liverpool, most notably the city centre where the number of people sleeping rough would appear to have multiplied substantially in recent times and, it would appear, continues to rise.

It's hard to imagine that, in these enlightened times, anybody should want for shelter.

Homelessness is a modern crisis that blights the city's image both in the eyes of residents; reactions ranging from concern to despair, and from the perspective of tourists and critical outsiders.

You can scarcely walk 50 yards in the city centre without happening upon one of society's dispossessed curled up in a shop door-way in a vain attempt to seek shelter.  Walk another hundred yards and you'll see another.

We have a moral responsibility to care for the disadvantaged in society. Liverpool must be seen to be tackling the problem head on.

Continued inaction, be it through inertia or ineptitude, will only cease to deflate and diminish our collective conscience as a community, tarnishing our reputation for being a compassionate people with a strong sense of social justice and basic human decency.

The strength of our commitment to social justice will dictate the size and scale of our response to this grim affliction. Nothing less than a full and far-reaching assault will suffice.

There's no fix to be found in indifference. The problem isn't going to retreat and disappear. Nor is this the time for gimmicks. Clearing the shop doorways and moving people on is a quick fix and a purely artificial one at that.

There needs to be more high quality hostels staffed by well-trained and sympathetic staff well-versed in the issues facing homeless people such as mental health, drug and alcohol dependency and chronic unemployment.

This will require an investment, the commitment of public funds.

I've heard anecdotal reports of hostels operated by the YMCA and Salvation Army imposing what amounts to punitive service charges on its residents. That's right, inflicting further hardship on the already destitute.

The picture painted by word-of-mouth is nothing less than bleak. A passive layer of organisations staffed by detached officials completely barren of any concept of duty of care.

Far from Christian, it seems the YMCA can be a deeply unfeeling beast.

The charitable sector is failing the homeless.

That is why the public sector has to step in and step up to the mark. That will require investment.

To clean the streets, not just superficially, we must commit ourselves to expanding access to quality accommodation and to support workers with the skills to rehabilitate and reintegrate those who have fallen on hard times and found themselves consigned to the fringes.

I believe that John and Joan Everyman understands that society has a duty of care to the most vulnerable in society and will be supportive of the expansion of state-provided services and solutions to tackle the homelessness epidemic with which we are faced.

Perhaps it's now time for a full and frank debate about homelessness and the devastation it wreaks both on a forgotten underclass and on wider society.

Friday 5 May 2017

Rotheram Rocks It

Image Source: Twitter
Written By: Scott Gunnion

So, true to what surely must have been almost universally-held expectations, Steve Rotheram has been elected Mayor of the Liverpool City Region. It was a decisive victory for a campaign that was never ever really in doubt.

And splat goes Anderson, diminished and dethroned. Egg on face in place of his usual morning fry-up. And though he never could seem to fit into those pinstriped parachutes he wore as suits, it was the local Labour electorate that decided he was ultimately too big for his boots.

His very political survival is now entirely dependant on being adopted as the Labour candidate for Liverpool Walton, though there are rumblings that Corbyn's son has his eyes on the plum seat, plus what's to guarantee they'd have Anderson anyway? After all, he did poll pitifully behind Rotheram in the primary to decide Labour's candidate for the Metro Mayoralty.

What is truly interesting about the result is that the Tory candidate, perennial bridesmaid Tony Caldeira, managed to crack 20%; I expected 10%, at best. And even that would have been impressive. Perhaps that is an omen for things to come in the uber-marginals on Merseyside: Wirral West, Wirral South and Southport seats.

The Lib Dems were decimated, polling a paltry 6%. You have to remember, up until 2010, the Lib Dems ruled supreme on Liverpool City Council. Now they are nothing. They're not invited to the stag night and they're certainly not invited to the hen party.

So what now for Steve? He has a vast budget to preside over. In Parliament, he was Corbyn's bag man (Parliamentary Private Secretary officially), but now he has the chance to be his own man.

He starts at an immediate advantage: he isn't Joe, who seems to me to be widely reviled, discredited, sneered at and dismissed. For some reason, Liverpool Labour just hasn't taken to him.

But this is Rotheram's time to shine. He kicked Caldeira to the kerb and now Joe's a no-show at the table of decision-makers.

The Liverpool region Mayoralty, like its Manchester equivalent, will be the standard by which future guinea pigs in this democratic experiment are judged by.

Get it right, and this could mark a whole new era in devolution and democratic participation. Get it wrong, and power will retreat from the people and land in the safe haven of Parliament's smothering embrace and the covetous hands of the London-centric elites.

We shall wait and see ...