No to cuts, no to privatisation

NHS Feature

Pontefract and Wakefield:

No to cuts, no to privatisation

NHS SERVICES in the Pontefract and Wakefield district face a
shake-up. The council’s planning committee has given the go-ahead for
the £250 million hospitals development project that proposes to replace
Pontefract General Infirmary and Pinderfields General Hospital.

Mick Griffiths, secretary and Adrian O’Malley, chair,
Wakefield and Pontefract Hospital UNISON (personal capacity)

To meet the new privately financed developments, hundreds of beds
will be lost while staff face a massive cut in the pay bill. Pontefract
General Infirmary will ultimately close as a general acute hospital, to
become a glorified outpatients/ day case centre.

Trust bosses and the private sector financiers are drawing up the
30-year mortgage contract deal. Under the cloak of commercial
confidentiality, they will decide what services are provided and at what
cost.

Whatever the outcome, the public will be expected to pay much more
for the Private Finance Initiative (PFI) scheme. The private sector is
guaranteed its profits; these schemes usually cost three or four times
more than do publicly funded developments.

Staff have already been sent notices of potential redundancies. As
usual workers are expected to pay the price of the NHS funding crisis.

UNISON health group policy is for national industrial action to stop
this government in its tracks.

Health workers in our trust aren’t prepared to take this lying down.
Locally NHS Logistics in Normanton and the Prescription Pricing
Authority office in Wakefield are also up for closure, job cuts and
privatisation.

We’re determined to join forces with the local community and begin a
campaign of resistance and fightback.

We’re starting with a public meeting initiated with the trades
council’s help (details page 12) as a springboard towards setting up a
broad-based ‘no cuts, no privatisation’ campaign.