Swansea Leader - February 2018

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Swansea

Leader Issue 110

February 2018 inside

The newspaper of Swansea Council

your city: your paper

Legendary Celebrity Sean heads coastline campaign plus

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• EARLY START: Youngsters at Highgate Day Nursery in Morriston are getting a great start to life thanks to extension of council’s free childcare offer. See page 11 for more.

SWANSEA Council is aiming to invest hundreds of millions of pounds in the coming year on services that touch residents’ lives every day. The council spends the equivalent of £4,000 on every household in every community in Swansea ranging from early morning recycling collections to late-night road gritting, from children’s education to elderly and disability care. Later this month councillors will decide how the council’s budget is going to be spent in the year ahead. Thanks to a major public consultation the views of hundreds of residents, young people and staff will be taken into account before decisions are made. Among the proposals on the table is an increase of £2.2m in funding for our schools which will go directly to head teachers, taking overall spending on education services to well above £160m a year.

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Budget aiming to invest in our communities’ priorities Key features of budget plans: • Budget will spend an average £1.6m a day on vital services • Around £100m for social services and around £50m on recycling, libraries, highways and other services • Proposed increase in funding for schools and wider education services • Around £22m of further savings on top of £60m total amount achieved in last three years.

That’s on top of a planned investment of more than £140m in the coming years to build new schools fit for the 21st century. Rob Stewart, Council Leader, said: “The consultation process has helped ensure the priorities of the people of Swansea are our priorities as well. “Our ‘Big Conversation’ with young people is

making a difference because they’ve influenced our thinking about the things that matter to them such as good facilities in which to learn.” He added: “We are doing more with less because the council is becoming smarter, leaner and more efficient. We’ve automated services so more often people can do business with us when they want 24/7 rather than when we can. “We’re also working with local communities who want to support services in their areas and we’re providing social services sooner to promote health and wellbeing and prevent problems later. “Despite budget reductions due to the austerity agenda, independent inspectors rate our priority services like education and social services very highly and they say we are in a good position to carry on delivering for the people of Swansea day in, day out in the years ahead.”

Looking up Sky’s the limit for our city’s propsects page 5

Our future Investment pays off at Pentrehafod

DOWNLOAD your

LAWRLWYTHWCH eich

Calendar

Calendr Casgliadau 2018

from www.swansea.gov.uk/recyclingsearch

o www.abertawe.gov.uk/chwiliocasgliadau

2018 Recycling

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Swansea Leader - February 2018 by City and County of Swansea - Issuu