Friday, November 25th, 2011 by aldcadmin
Lib Dem Leader and Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg has outlined a £1 billion pound Youth Contract to tackle youth unemployment. The aim is to ensure that all jobless young people are earning or learning again before long-term damage is done.

- Over three years, the Youth Contract will provide at least 410,000 new work places for 18 to 24 year olds into work. Starting April 2012
- Including 160,000 wage subsidies and 250,000 new work experience placements.
- In addition, there will be at least 20,000 more incentive payments to encourage employers to take on young apprentices.
- A new programme to help the most disengaged 16 and 17 year olds – getting them back to school or college, onto an apprenticeship or into a job with training.
Wednesday, September 21st, 2011 by aldcadmin
Deputy Prime Minister addresses the Party Conference in Birmingham. You can read the full text of the speech here.
Wednesday, September 21st, 2011 by aldcadmin

Thousands of Liberal Democrats gathered for their annual conference in Birmingham this week. They discussed what has been achieved in the first 500 days of Government and policies for the future. Highlights include:
Thursday, September 8th, 2011 by aldcadmin
The Lib Dems are opposing calls for an immediate cut in the 50% tax rate paid by higher rate taxpayers.
Nick Clegg’s party instead wants to give more help to those on middle and low incomes who need it the most.

NIck Clegg: We need fairer taxes to help ordinary people, not tax cuts for the richest
Lib Dem Chief Secretary to the Treasury Danny Alexander said, “At a time when the whole country faces serious financial challenges, the priority needs to be people on low and middle incomes.”
A key part of the coalition agreement was the Lib Dem commitment to making taxes fairer. The Lib Dems are well on their way to delivering on their pledge that no one should pay tax on the first £10,000 they earn.
Nearly a million low paid workers are no longer paying income tax thanks to this. All basic rate tax payers are paying £200 less in income tax.
Each year more and more people on low and middle incomes will gain more thanks to the Lib Dem fairer tax plan.
Danny Alexander said, “Fairer taxes is our goal. I don’t see why, in the next parliament, we shouldn’t be trying to get to a situation where people in a full-time job on the minimum wage are paying no income tax at all.”
This would mean that no one would pay tax on the first £12,500 they earn.
Thursday, September 1st, 2011 by aldcadmin

Nick Clegg: NHS reforms must deliver for patients
The Lib Dems are continuing to work in Parliament to ensure NHS reforms deliver a better deal for patients.
Nick Clegg’s party won major changes to the reforms earlier this summer.
These included measures to ensure there will be no privatisation of the NHS and no special favours for the private sector.
Nick Clegg said, “With the Lib Dems, the NHS will always be free at the point of use and will deliver top quality treatment for patients. We want to deliver a better NHS that can cope with the increasing demand and rising health costs.”
The NHS reforms will cut waste and bureaucracy that costs billions of pounds. They will help the NHS cope with the costs of Britain’s steadily ageing population and the rising cost of many treatments.
By making the NHS more efficient and by protecting the NHS budget from cuts, more money can be spent on improving care for patients.
NHS faced disaster with Labour
Had Labour won the last election, the NHS would have faced deep spending cuts. That along with Labour’s refusal to tackle waste and inefficiency would have been a disaster for our health services.
Labour rigged the market in favour of the private sector by giving contracts that were unfair for the taxpayer and for patients.
Over £250million of taxpayers’ money was handed over by the last Labour government to private providers for operations they didn’t even perform.
The Liberal Democrats have made sure that this kind of favouritism towards the private sector will now be illegal.
August 25th, 2011 by Simon Rayner
Comment?
The No 41 bus service currently runs along Westbury Lane, connecting residents in Coombe Dingle and the north of Sea Mills with Shirehampton and the City Centre. From 4th September First plans to reroute this service via Shirehampton Road and Sylvan Way.
Tim Leaman and I have been contacted by a number of residents concerned about this change, and hundreds of local residents have signed a petition against the change.
The proposed change to the route will leave a large residential area without easy access to a bus service, and will make bus travel considerably less convenient for local people. The change will create particular difficulties for many elderly people, who are reliant on the service, and unable to walk the distance to the new route.
Tim and I have both been in contact with First to express residents’ concerns, and are continuing to put pressure on the company to change its plans.
According to First, the change is necessary as they are introducing longer vehicles, which cannot negotiate the left turn out of Westbury Lane onto Sylvan Way. We have suggested to First that it might be better to design their routes to suit their customers rather than their vehicles.
This service is one of the operator’s wholly commercial operations. Unfortunately, due to the way bus services operate in the UK, neither we nor the Council can oblige First to change their mind, but we are hopeful that the company can be persuaded to see sense.