logo
Post Offices face axe under government shake-up

Post Offices face axe under government shake-up

Telegrapha day ago
Post Offices across the UK are at risk as Labour considers scrapping a rule forcing ministers to protect thousands of branches.
The Government is consulting on whether to axe the requirement to keep at least 11,500 Post Offices open, suggesting that a 'smaller' network could be better suited to meet 'market trends'.
The minimum branch requirement was introduced by the Tory-led coalition in 2010, after Labour oversaw thousands of cuts to the network in the 2000s.
Scrapping the limit is not Labour's preferred course of action, with the Government saying it would rather keep things as they are.
However, it is a 'lower cost option' being considered by ministers to help achieve policy objectives.
Dame Harriett Baldwin, the shadow business minister, said the review would threaten 'the future of branches nationwide', putting vital services for vulnerable people at risk.
Under the proposal, the exact size of the network would become an 'operational decision' for the Post Office.
However, it would still need to ensure that at least 99 per cent of the population stays within three miles of a full service branch.
The Government said the Post Office would have 'more flexibility to adapt to market trends' as its resources would be 'less thinly spread'.
But it acknowledged that a 'modestly smaller network' would likely be a concern to people living nearby.
The consultation document said: 'As set out at the beginning of the chapter, there are already changes happening in the network to allow Post Office to make the most of opportunity in the parcels market.
'Too much change at the same time could lead to instability for Post Office as well as communities and so it might be preferable to wait to see how the network evolves in the short term before reviewing the overall size and for any longer-term changes to be phased in over time.'
Instead, ministers have said they would prefer to maintain all existing requirements, with the Government continuing to subsidise loss-making branches to ensure everyone has access to a Post Office.
At the beginning of the millennium, there were 18,393 Post Offices. By 2023, this had dropped to 11,684. The biggest fall was at the height of the financial crisis, between 2008 and 2009, when the total dropped by 1,615.
Dame Harriett, who has been a vocal campaigner for the Post Office network, said: 'Labour's extensive Post Office review threatens the future of branches nationwide.
'And this will put vital services at risk. Especially for pensioners, rural communities, and small businesses who rely on them most.
'I've been an advocate for Post Offices, those who work there and those who rely on them all my political career. And for the last 15 years the number of Post Offices has been kept stable at 11,500. Labour are now consulting on reducing that number.'
She added: 'The closure of Post Offices could once again leave pensioners, small businesses and rural communities cut off from vital services. With bank branches closing, often it's Post Offices that provide vital banking services.
'I'd encourage all Telegraph readers to respond to the Government's consultation and I've also started a petition which has already attracted 100,000 signatures.'
The petition, called Save Your Post Office, urges people to push back against the potential closures.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Cooper defends live facial recognition expansion amid privacy row
Cooper defends live facial recognition expansion amid privacy row

The Independent

time11 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Cooper defends live facial recognition expansion amid privacy row

The Home Secretary has defended the Government's expansion of live facial recognition technology as a 'targeted' crackdown on high-harm offenders, amid concerns over privacy. Yvette Cooper denied the technology was being used to catch lower-level crimes such as ticket-touting, as it has been previously in Wales, and said 'safeguards and protections' will govern its deployment. Critics including Labour peer Baroness Shami Chakrabarti have attacked new plans to roll out 10 vans equipped with facial recognition technology across seven police forces in England as part of a Government overhaul of neighbourhood policing. The former shadow attorney general said the expansion was a step towards a 'total surveillance society' in the UK. Asked whether the rollout would infringe on people's privacy, Ms Cooper said: 'Well, the way this technology is being used is to identify people who are wanted by the court, who maybe should be returned to prison, or who have failed to appear before the court, or who have breached things like sexual harm prevention orders, so serious criminals. 'And I think being able to identify them, alongside having proper legal safeguards and a legal framework in place because there do have to be safeguards and protections, but we also need to be able to use the technology to catch dangerous criminals and to keep communities safe.' In 2017, South Wales Police said facial recognition was being used to track suspects including ticket touts as the force prepared for the Champions League final in Cardiff. Pressed on whether she was happy for the technology to be deployed in this way, she said: 'No, that's not how they've (police in South Wales) used it. 'They used it for targeting where there's serious organised crime, where there are criminal gangs, but in every case that they do use it, they need to obviously have safeguards in place and we need to make sure that we've got a new legal framework for it to be operating under, and also that it can be used to tackle serious crimes and keep communities safe.' Ministers have said a new legal framework will be drawn up to support use of the technology following a consultation launching this autumn. Checks would only be done against police watchlists of wanted criminals, suspects and those subject to bail or court order conditions such as sex offenders, the Home Office said. The vans would be deployed across seven forces – Greater Manchester, West Yorkshire, Bedfordshire, Surrey, Sussex, Thames Valley and Hampshire – in the coming weeks. They would be manned by trained officers operating within College of Policing guidance. But Lady Chakrabarti said the technology was 'incredibly intrusive' and had been 'developed pretty much completely outside the law'. 'Some would say this is yet another move towards a total surveillance society – challenges to privacy, challenges to freedom of assembly and association, and problems with race and sex discrimination because of the higher likelihood of false matches in the context of certain groups,' she told BBC Radio 4's Today programme. 'It's particularly odd that this has all been developed pretty much completely outside the law.' She welcomed plans to consult ahead of possible new legislation, but warned that to date, 'it's been a bit of a Wild West'. Policing minister Dame Diana Johnson dismissed the claims, telling BBC Breakfast: 'With the greatest of respect, that's not what this is about. 'This is about giving the tools to our police officers to enable them to keep us safe.' Forces already deploying live facial recognition had used it to arrest rape, domestic abuse, knife crime and robbery suspects as well as sex offenders breaching their conditions. Meanwhile, the Home Office said every community across England and Wales had now been assigned a 'named, contactable' officer to handle reports of crimes such as anti-social behaviour. Their details would be made available for residents on their local force's website, it is understood. The pledge was made as part of the Government's previously announced Neighbourhood Policing Guarantee, under which forces have signed up to a commitment to respond to neighbourhood queries within 72 hours. The Government said the move would help ensure 'the public will have consistent direct links to their local force, with dedicated anti-social behaviour leads and new visible patrols in town centres'.

Students urged to ‘take stock' before accepting degree places on lower grades
Students urged to ‘take stock' before accepting degree places on lower grades

The Independent

time11 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Students urged to ‘take stock' before accepting degree places on lower grades

Students should 'take stock' and think carefully before accepting a degree place on lower entry grades, a university sector chief has said. Hundreds of thousands of students in England, Wales and Northern Ireland will receive their A-level results on Thursday, with many finding out whether they have secured a place at their first choice university. Vivienne Stern, chief executive of Universities UK (UUK), said some universities in the country are 'really keen' this year to recruit 'as many students as they can' due to pressures facing the sector. University leaders have been warning of financial pressures due to uncertainty about the recruitment of overseas students as well as years of frozen tuition fees by domestic students. Speaking ahead of A-level results day on Thursday, Ms Stern told the PA news agency: 'We have seen some evidence of universities dropping grades in order to fill places.' She said: '(Students) should take stock of whether what they're being offered is right for them.' It has been suggested that some universities are offering incentives and relaxing offers to fill places. Ms Stern told PA: 'It's a bit of a buyer's market this admissions round.' She said: 'It's been a very competitive admissions cycle from the institutional perspective. 'We know that some universities are offering places to students with lower grades than they might have done in the past. 'From a student point of view that might be really good news. 'Although I would just say think very carefully about what's right for you.' On the day before A-level results day, a PA sample of 129 of the UK's largest higher education providers showed there were 22,518 courses with vacancies for undergraduate students living in England on the Ucas clearing site – which matches applicants to university places yet to be filled. A similar analysis last year – carried out by PA on the day before A-level results day and looking at the same range of institutions – showed there were 22,774 courses with vacancies on the clearing site. Eighteen of the 24 Russell Group universities, which represent some of the most selective UK institutions, had vacancies on courses for English residents – a total of 3,492 courses between them. A similar analysis last year, the day before A-level results day, showed 17 of the 24 Russell Group universities had vacancies on courses for English residents – a total of 3,500 courses between them. Clearing is available to students who do not meet the conditions of their offer on A-level results day, as well as those who did not receive any offers. Students who have changed their mind about what or where they wish to study, and those who have applied outside the normal application window, can also use clearing. Ms Stern advised students waiting for their grades to spend some time familiarising themselves with the Ucas system and to look at the clearing site. She said: 'There are plenty of options available and whatever's happened it's almost certainly not a disaster and it won't be the end of everything. 'So take a big deep breath and don't panic.' Last week, Jo Saxton, head of Ucas, suggested a record number of 18-year-olds are expected to wake up on A-level results day to the news that they have been successful in securing their first-choice university. Ucas figures released last month revealed that the number of offers made to prospective undergraduate students from universities and colleges has reached a record high this year. Lee Elliot Major, professor of social mobility at the University of Exeter, told PA: 'Some universities are now in survival mode — offering incentives, ramping up marketing, and relaxing offers to fill places. 'We must make every effort to ensure that students from all backgrounds are also well prepared and supported to succeed in their degrees.' Nick Hillman, director of the Higher Education Policy Institute (Hepi) think tank, said: 'It is a good year for applicants in the sense that demand is pretty flat so universities are having to fight over themselves to win new students. 'Universities do not want to have to close courses and make staff redundant but they will need to if they cannot fill their places.' Mike Nicholson, director of recruitment, admissions and participation at the University of Cambridge, said there had been a drift for students applying more to the well-known and 'more reputable universities' in recent years. The expert said that he was expecting more students to be looking in clearing for opportunities to do internships or placements as part of their degree. Mr Nicholson told PA: 'I think what we're probably seeing is students looking carefully at what the degree outcomes might be. 'We've seen a shift towards engineering degrees, mathematics degrees, associated degrees in medicine. 'They're all up significantly this year in applications.' Joanna Burton, head of policy (higher education) at the Russell Group, said: 'There is always some flexibility in offer-making decisions, and students may find they are accepted with grades slightly different to the advertised offer. 'However, our universities only admit students who show evidence they can meet the rigour of the course.' She said: 'While there appears to be some flattening out of the application rate among 18-year-olds, our universities are still seeing strong demand for courses that offer high-quality teaching and promising career prospects – and they're working hard to meet this demand.'

Labour councillor ‘horrified' by own cutting throats comment at rally, jury told
Labour councillor ‘horrified' by own cutting throats comment at rally, jury told

The Independent

time11 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Labour councillor ‘horrified' by own cutting throats comment at rally, jury told

A Labour councillor who called at an anti-racism rally for far-right activists' throats to be cut has told a jury he felt 'horrified' after realising what he had said. In the wake of rioting after the Southport murders last summer, Ricky Jones, 58, described far-right activists as 'disgusting Nazi fascists', his trial at Snaresbrook Crown Court heard. He told jurors on Wednesday that his comment did not refer to far-right protesters involved in the riots at the time, but to those who had reportedly left National Front stickers on a train with razor blades hidden behind them. A video showing Jones addressing the crowd in Walthamstow, east London, on August 7 last year, went viral on social media after the protest. Wearing a black polo top and surrounded by cheering supporters, the councillor said: 'You've got women and children using these trains during the summer holidays. 'They don't give a shit about who they hurt. 'They are disgusting Nazi fascists. We need to cut all their throats and get rid of them all.' He also drew his finger across his throat as he spoke to the crowd. Jones, who at the time worked as an official for the Transport Salaried Staff's Association (TSSA) union, later sent an edited version of his speech video to union members, the court heard. Asked by his defence barrister, Hossein Zahir KC, why he edited the video, Jones replied: 'When I had time to view the footage after the demonstration, I was shocked at what I had actually said. 'I was horrified. 'Under no circumstances did I want to portray that to anybody, so I edited that last bit out.' The unedited video was eventually posted on social media platform X, formerly Twitter, where it attracted millions of views, the trial heard. Jones told jurors he felt 'very emotional and very upset' after receiving pictures, the day before the rally, of National Front stickers that had been left on a train, which had razor blades hidden behind them – supposedly so that people who tried to remove the stickers would injure themselves. He had also received reports from union members that more razor blades had been found stuck between seats, Jones added. 'I was very concerned about what had happened on the train. 'I was thinking, this (the speech) is a good opportunity to raise what happened.' The father-of-four and grandfather described the mood in the crowd at the time as 'happy and joyful', adding: 'There clearly wasn't any upset or anger from any people in that scene, because they clearly knew it was about what happened on the train.' Prosecutor Ben Holt, cross-examining, told the defendant: 'Your words about slitting people's throats were not cheerful or happy.' Jones replied: 'I totally agree, I'm ashamed.' The defendant however denied intending to encourage violence towards far-right protesters. 'What violence could have anyone caused to those people in the train?' Jones said. 'It was nonsensical – I didn't believe there was a risk.' Jones, who has been a borough councillor in Dartford, Kent, since 2019, was suspended by the Labour Party the day after the alleged incident. He was arrested on August 8 last year and interviewed at Brixton Police Station that night. The demonstration had been organised in response to plans for a far-right march outside Waltham Forest Immigration Bureau. It followed the disorder in parts of the UK last summer after the Southport murders. Jones, of Dartford, denies one count of encouraging violent disorder. The trial continues.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store