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Opinionopinion

Reprieved park keepers get by with a little help from their Friends...

Birmingham's green and pleasant land has been given a boost with the decision to put cash into the parks budget.

Lanchester Park in Castle Bromwich.

The council’s Labour leadership has come under increasing pressure over its budget proposals in recent weeks with the library closures and the cutting of park keepers and rangers attracting the most outrage.

Having batted responsibility for community library closures to their colleagues running the ten beleaguered district committees, much in the same way national government passes cuts to local, the parks remained the key issue.

But on the day the budget was announced, along with a near two per cent council tax increase, we discover Sir Albert Bore has found another few million down the back of the council’s sofa and piled another £2 million into the parks budget.

and the cuts to parks reduced to more manageable ‘efficiencies’. Sir Albert said that they concluded ‘cuts in park services would impact unduly on communities, given the value that people place on our parks’.

It is perhaps worth noting at this point that the dozens of Friends of Parks groups and their umbrella organisation Birmingham Open Spaces Forum mounted a huge lobby campaign.

They are well organised and represent hundreds of highly motivated volunteers – attending meetings, firing off emails, press releases and letters and generally piling the pressure on councillors. Other interest groups take note.

Perhaps the biggest awakening for the leadership was the realisation that these volunteers would not step in to replace the full time park staff, that managing a park is not something they would do.

In fact they have also come to realise that their volunteering is dependent on having a recognisable full-time member of staff on and that if the park keeper goes so will they.