Gweithio'n galed ar ran pobl Gorllewin De Cymru / Working hard for the people of South Wales West

Archive for December, 2007

Nadolig Llawen! Merry Christmas!

To all bloggers everywhere, and to those who read this blog- Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year! I hope that you all have a well deserved break, and are careful not to eat, or drink too much during the next few days….. I will be back soon after a few days break, but don’t forget to tune in to the BBC Radio Wales politicians quiz tomorrow!

I flogwyr y byd, ac i’r rheiny sy’n darllen y blog ma- Nadolig Llawen a Blwyddyn Newydd Dda! Rwy’n gobeithio y byddwch yn mwynhau’r wyl, ac eich bod yn ofalus i beidio bwyta, nac yfed gorfod yn ystod y diwrnodau nesaf ‘ma…. Byddaf nol ymhen ychydig, ond peidiwch anghofio gwrando ar gwis gwleidyddion Radio Wales yfory!

The Queen on youtube. Who would have thought?

As you may know, I’m not a fan of the Royal Family. If you ask me, when we have thousands of young people in poverty in Wales in this day and age, its beyond my comprehension how we can continue to justify subsidising the lifestyles of the Monarchy. However, I am being ‘political’ by even considering to criticise the Royal Family, yet time and again, the BBC and other news sources continue to broadcast friendly, uncritical, one sided stories about the Royal Family. It really doesn’t make sense to me.

And so today, news has it that the Queen has launched a youtube channel of her own, aptly named ‘The Royal Channel’. You can see all the footage of her moving speeches, coronations, and visits- although I hope that she does her own editing, and doesn’t let a BBC producer loose on her editing suite!

While I recognise all of our attempts to modernise and to move with the ages, being somewhat bias, I fail to see how a youtube station can succeed in making an outdated and archaic tradition compatible with the 21st Century. I sense an edge of desperation on behalf of the media spin doctors in the Palace in trying to portray the Queen and the Royal Family as a modern necessity.

But I am sure there are many of you that will disagree with my viewpoint- those of you who will probably sit down to watch the Queen speech via youtube on Christmas Day this year……!

This isn’t what a Nationalist looks like!

Surprise surprise, Glenys Kinnock is against the One Wales Government in Cardiff Bay. The Unionists come out to play…and so close to Christmas, too. Not an ounce of good will for anyone to see. It’s bah humbug all the way!

Reading the article on today’s epolitix website I thought that I’d happened upon a description of a new War movie. The Nationalists as the evil ‘enemy’ to Glenys’s Labour battleship of Welshness, Britishness, Europeaness ( but nothing that means more power for Wales incidentally)

Unfortunately, it seems more and more obvious that Labour politicians outside the Assembly can only muster interest from the media if they ‘ come out’ against the One Wales coalition. How many more MP’s are to follow, and will there be any more before Christmas?

Glenys Kinnock may indeed ‘look like a feminist’, but there’s certainly no love lost between her and her Plaid sisters at the moment.

No rest for the wicked….

A picture of staff at Swansea’s NHS Direct Call Centre, and myself of course! It was again, an interesting visit, and a chance to lean about the nature of the calls that they receive, and the expansion of their services in Wales.

I forgot to mention that I also attended the fundraiser for Pontardawe Festival on Thursday night at St Peter’s Church in Pontardawe. Neath Male Voice Choir were superb, as were the excitable St Joseph’s School Choir. The Festival has huge deficits due to the bad weather over the last few years, so the organisers are intending to hold numerous fundrasier events in the run up to the anual summer Festival. There is extra pressure of course, because the Festival celebrates 30 years in 2008. I hope to assist in looking for funding, and to encourage mroe Welsh language folk bands to take part.

Today I have also done two interviews with regards the asylum case in Swansea. George William and his family have returned to Penlan, but two of his sons, who came to the UK to study, remain in the deportation centre as there are problems with their visas. They have been studying in Slough, and hope to finish their studies before returning to Pakistan. There will be another effort therefore from Asylum Justice in Swansea to write to the airlines requesting that they do not comply with deporting the older sons.

Plaid AM takes George William asylum case to Home Offi

I am speaking on this issue on Good Morning Wales tomorrow at 8am if you would like to listen in on it.

Plaid AM takes George William asylum case to Home Office

Local Plaid Cymru AM Bethan Jenkins has written to Jacqui Smith, the Secretary of State for Home Affairs following the appalling treatment of George William and his family by immigration officials. As reported in the Evening Post, Mr William and his family were taken away from their Penlan home during a dawn raid earlier this week.

Bethan Jenkins said:

‘Under international law the UK government is duty bound to offer asylum to those fearing persecution. George and his family fled Pakistan three years ago in fear because of their religious beliefs. Pakistan is currently in a state of political turmoil. Only today, a suicide bomber has killed over 50 people celebrating a Muslim holiday in the country. How anyone can be deported in that environment is beyond belief.

‘In a desperate attempt to sop the political right, New Labour is trying to talk and act tough on asylum and immigration. Not only are their actions irresponsible, but lead to inhumane treatment of individuals and families who have come to this country as a result of fear for their very lives. To turn our backs on people such as George and his family is the act of the gravest political cowardice and immorality’.

‘I have written to the Home Secretary raising the case of George and his family. I encourage as many people as possible to do so as highlighted by the Evening Post’

Plaid AM takes George William asylum case to Home Office

I am speaking about this on Good Morning Wales tomorrow at 8am. Feel free to listen.

Plaid AM takes George William asylum case to Home Office

Local Plaid Cymru AM Bethan Jenkins has written to Jacqui Smith, the Secretary of State for Home Affairs following the appalling treatment of George William and his family by immigration officials. As reported in the Evening Post, Mr William and his family were taken away from their Penlan home during a dawn raid earlier this week.

Bethan Jenkins said:

‘Under international law the UK government is duty bound to offer asylum to those fearing persecution. George and his family fled Pakistan three years ago in fear because of their religious beliefs. Pakistan is currently in a state of political turmoil. Only today, a suicide bomber has killed over 50 people celebrating a Muslim holiday in the country. How anyone can be deported in that environment is beyond belief.

‘In a desperate attempt to stop the political right, New Labour is trying to talk and act tough on asylum and immigration. Not only are their actions irresponsible, but lead to inhumane treatment of individuals and families who have come to this country as a result of fear for their very lives. To turn our backs on people such as George and his family is the act of the gravest political cowardice and immorality’.

‘I have written to the Home Secretary raising the case of George and his family. I encourage as many people as possible to do so as highlighted by the Evening Post’

Visit to the Dogs Trust in Bridgend

This week I visited the Dogs Trust in Bridgend. It was a very interesting visit, especially as I am one of those sorry souls never to have had a pet! I was a little nervous to be honest- knowing that there would be hundreds of noisy dogs in one building, and anyone who has been canvassing knows that dogs can be rather vicious on the fingers!

Nevertheless I really enjoyed the visit, and was warmly welcomed by the staff. The Dogs Trust in Bridgend is a re-homing centre, and the Bridgend Centre is one of the busiest in the UK for taking in dogs of all shapes and sizes who have been left to stray on the streets, abandoned by owners and so on. The Centre undertakes an outreach scheme to encourage neutering amongst dog owners, and there is a subsidised scheme also for those who find it hard to afford neutering their dogs.

This campaign has taken place due to the fact that Centres such as the one in Bridgend receive a large percentage of litters of puppies due to the fact that owners fail to neuter their pets, or are not aware of why they need to do it. Incidentally there wasn’t many puppies at the centre while I was there, but Wales’s centre does have the highest proportion of puppies a year according to the Manager of the Centre.

All in all a busy week. I am visiting Swansea’s NHS Direct Centre today, and then I am officially finished for the Christmas recess!

My response to Huw Lewis’s child poverty short debate

Bethan Jenkins: Thank you for introducing this short debate today. It is important that we keep this on the political agenda. I would also like to recognise some of the points that you made in terms of creating a progressive alliance across Government layers and ensuring that tackling child poverty is the settled will of the Welsh people.

To pick up on a few comments, you mentioned that some Members would abdicate responsibility to Westminster. I agree that Wales has to show leadership in this instance, and I think that we are doing so in terms of the new policies that have come to light from the Government. I also think that we have to work in co-ordination with Westminster; that is the key—to work with Westminster, not against it. That can only be done through a progressive alliance to make sure that the benefits and taxation systems benefit our young people, but that they also work in a cross-cutting way with what we are doing in Wales. That can only be positive.

I look forward to your work as part of the expert group. I had a discussion, this morning, with Brian Gibbons, the Minister with responsibility for this area, and note that there is broad scope for that new group to scrutinise Government policies and to offer new ideas. I am excited about that group and I hope that you are too, and that you can work with us here, at the Assembly, to ensure that child poverty will not fall beneath the radar and will be at the forefront of the political agenda in Wales.

Bethan Jenkins: Diolch am gyflwyno’r ddadl fer hon heddiw. Mae’n bwysig ein bod yn cadw hyn ar yr agenda wleidyddol. Hoffwn hefyd gydnabod rhai o’r pwyntiau a wnaethoch o ran creu cynghrair flaengar drwy wahanol haenau Llywodraeth a sicrhau bod ymdrin â thlodi plant yn ewyllys gadarn ymhlith pobl Cymru.

Gan gyfeirio at rai o’r sylwadau, dywedasoch y byddai rhai Aelodau’n ildio’r cyfrifoldeb i San Steffan. Cytunaf fod yn rhaid i Gymru ddangos arweiniad y tro hwn, a chredaf ein bod yn gwneud hynny ac ystyried y polisïau newydd sydd wedi’u cyflwyno gan y Llywodraeth. Credaf hefyd ei bod yn rhaid inni gydweithio â San Steffan; dyna’r peth pwysig—gweithio gyda San Steffan, nid yn eu herbyn. Er mwyn gallu gwneud hyn, mae’n rhaid cael cynghrair flaengar i sicrhau bod y systemau budd-daliadau a’r systemau trethu o fudd i’n pobl ifanc, ond mae’n rhaid i hynny hefyd gyd-fynd â’r hyn yr ydym yn ei wneud yng Nghymru. Mae hynny’n beth cadarnhaol, bid siŵr.

Edrychaf ymlaen at eich gwaith yn rhan o’r grŵp arbenigwyr. Cefais drafodaeth y bore yma gyda Brian Gibbons, y Gweinidog sy’n gyfrifol am y maes hwn, a sylwaf fod gwir gyfle i’r grŵp newydd graffu ar bolisïau’r Llywodraeth a chynnig syniadau newydd. Teimlaf yn llawn cyffro am y grŵp a gobeithiaf eich bod chithau’n teimlo’r un fath, ac y gallwch weithio gyda ni yma yn y Cynulliad i sicrhau na fydd tlodi plant yn diflannu o’n meddyliau, ac y bydd ar frig yr agenda wleidyddol yng Nghymru.

link to Huw Lewis’s debate

Question to Brian Gibbons- gender pay gap

Bethan Jenkins: It is well documented that women earn an average of 80p for every £1 earned by men. That figure is made substantially worse when you take account of part-time workers. Given that women, in many instances, try to juggle childcare and part-time work, what are your thoughts on this, and what work are you doing to try to address this discrepancy in the system?

Brian Gibbons: I am glad to say that the figure of 80p is a UK-wide figure; the gap between men’s and women’s pay in Wales is significantly narrower. We have worked with the trades union movement on many of the problems to help to increase its capacity to campaign on this issue. The first phase of the Close the Pay Gap campaign was directed specifically at the private sector. The problems of the inequality of women’s pay are based on the principle of equality, but there are also deep structural problems in how women are segregated in different occupations, and the fact that they have more domestic responsibilities than men which have the consequence of limiting how far they can travel to work.

All these structural issues need thoroughgoing responses, and they will not be readily available by just a simple initiative; we really do need a root-and-branch approach to tackle this totally unacceptable practice.

Bethan Jenkins: Mae’n dra hysbys bod menywod yn ennill 80c ar gyfartaledd am bob £1 y mae dynion yn ei hennill. Mae’r ffigur hwnnw’n waeth o lawer os ystyrir gweithwyr rhan amser. Gan fod menywod, mewn llawer achos, yn ceisio ymdopi â gofal plant a gwaith rhan amser, beth yw’ch meddyliau ynghylch hynny, a pha waith yr ydych yn ei wneud i geisio delio â’r anghysondeb hwn sydd yn y system?

Brian Gibbons: Yr wyf yn falch o ddweud bod y ffigur o 80c yn un ar gyfer y DU gyfan; mae’r bwlch rhwng cyflogau dynion a menywod yng Nghymru’n llai o lawer. Yr ydym wedi gweithio gyda mudiad yr undebau llafur ar lawer o’r problemau i geisio rhoi mwy o allu iddo ymgyrchu ar y mater hwn. Yr oedd rhan gyntaf yr ymgyrch Cau’r Bwlch Cyflog wedi’i chyfeirio’n benodol at y sector preifat. Mae problemau cyflog anghyfartal i fenywod wedi’u seilio ar egwyddor cydraddoldeb, ond mae problemau adeileddol sylfaenol hefyd o ran y modd y mae menywod wedi’u neilltuo i wahanol alwedigaethau, a’r ffaith bod ganddynt fwy o gyfrifoldebau yn y cartref na dynion a bod hynny’n cyfyngu’r pellter y gallant ei deithio i fynd i’r gwaith.

Mae angen ymatebion trwyadl i’r holl faterion adeileddol hyn, ac ni fyddant ar gael yn rhwydd drwy gynllun syml yn unig; mae gwir angen inni ddelio â’r arfer gwbl annerbyniol hon brig, gwraidd a bôn.

My latest LCO and measure for the ballot.

Proposed Access to Automated Tele Machines Legislative Competence Order

Bethan Jenkins

Pre-ballot Information: Outline Proposed Legislative Competence Order
Outline of proposed Order

This order will require an amendment to Schedule 5 Field 12 of the Government of Wales Act to make provision to improve access to Automated Tele Machines in low income communities.

Pre-ballot Information: Explanatory Memorandum
Policy Objectives of the Proposed Order

Numerous communities in Wales have little access to ATMs.

The purpose of this Order is to reduce the vulnerability of low income families to exclusion and debt by ensuring they have the best possible chance of having access to cash machines without facing charges they are unable to afford.
The costs of provision of free ATMS are prohibitive in some areas. The costs can be mitigated by de rating premises or parts of premises where the ATMS provided need to link to the areas concerned. Similar action has been taken in Scotland.

Proposed Impact Assessments for the Selling off of Playing Fields Measure

Pre-ballot Information

Bethan Jenkins

Policy Objectives of the Proposed Measure

The selling off of playing fields is said to have a negative impact on the communities around them, both in terms of health and well being and in terms of social inclusion. This measure would place a duty on local authorities to consider this impact before selling any playing fields

Support received/Consultation
General support for this from constituents