Friday 25 October 2013

At tonight's full council meeting the Tory group of councillors spoke against a labour group motion seeking action against pay day lenders. (See below)

Subject: Full council tonight - the conservative group support pay day lenders At tonight's full council meeting the Tory group of councillors spoke against a labour group motion seeking action against pay day lenders. (See below) It came as a surprise that the conservative group suggested that the motion was denying people's rights to make their own decision, that it was a breach of their human rights. They stood by their views that pay day loans were useful and could help people, even despite the acknowledgement of the very high interest rates. The labour group presented examples of where individuals had encountered severe financial situations and the views of a number of voluntary and church organisations on how cruel this benefit reduction was impacting our most vulnerable members of the community. The motion was passed via a named vote supported by labour and liberal councillors. "The rising cost of living and falling income is causing genuine problems for people with their finances. Among those who borrow from high cost credit companies on average borrow around £326 per month. The interest paid on this money is punishing; many are unable to make the repayments. This Council invites Cabinet to block access to Payday loan websites through the public PC's in libraries and other Council buildings across North Tyneside and from its employees' computers unless and until the industry, including its advertising practices, is effectively controlled. This Authority pledges to investigate the use of planning law to regulate the growth and spread of Payday loan companies and pay weekly furniture providers who force maintenance and insurance agreements on customers, on our high streets. This action should be taken to enable the Authority to protect people from taking out high interest loans from companies that fail to check that they can repay the loan, often leading to them becoming trapped in a spiral of debt. This Council is committed to strongly support recognised Credit Unions within our Area as a sustainable alternative to high cost, short term credit. We also call on the Government to legislate and effectively regulate Payday lenders and protect our communities from the growth in easy debt to bring closure on austerity as early as possible".

Wallsend ward councillor Gary madden has raised concerns on behalf of his constituents, about the announcement for the possible closure of Wallsend fire station by Tyne and Wear fire authority. He has spoken to the elected mayor norma redfearn, and has been given assurances that there will be a full and open engagement process, before the fire authority make their decision. Councillor Madden

Wallsend ward councillor Gary mmdden has raised concerns on behalf of his constituents, about the announcement for the possible closure of Wallsend fire station by Tyne and Wear fire authority. He has spoken to the elected mayor Norma Redfearn, and has been given assurances that there will be a full and open engagement process, before the fire authority make their decision. Councillor Madden said, " I will be working hard to engage with residents and businesses to seek out their opinions, in particular to the impact assessments around a vibrant north bank of the Tyne full of engineering activity. The Wallsend area has always had a fire station as a consequence of the high number of homes and the vast array of industrial companies in the area. It is also important for inward investors to know they have essential public services nearby to mitigate potential business risks. I hope that the consultation period enables the views and opinions to be seriously considered before a decision is finally required and I know that this is a vital public interest matter that needs to demonstrate openness and honesty throughout the whole process"

Monday 30 September 2013

These comments from The Conservative Leader are not designed to be helpful, they are designed to be political and it is a shame that they do this on such an important matter that has very little to do with politics, but has a lot to do with planning for the future of our children and their children so they have landscape that meets their needs and aspirations.

The situation is that an All Party task group undertook work on the compilation of a draft plan that would go out for consultation to everyone and allow them an opportunity to make comment, opinions and observations. The principles were agreed by the Task Group, who had members from all parties involved, that we should do the consultation in an open and honest way so that there were no preconditions or hidden agenda items. We have deliberately included a high number of housing development sites, with the knowledge that the consultation will bring about changes. It also acknowledges that we are seeking mitigation plans to include neighbouring Authorities that could greatly reduce the numbers of houses required as a result of the current Government’s National Planning Policy Framework increasing the numbers. We have collated all the existing work including the Area Action Plans, which has been undertaken over the last 18 months, much of which was managed by the previous Cabinet. I believe that the document should be seen as a consultation document and not as a political document. The legislation commits Local Authorities to engage with residents, businesses, visitors and neighbours. The Task Group have met with Northumberland County Council, The North East Chamber of Commerce, Northumbria Water and the Northern Gas Utilities. All of which praised the Council for engaging them at such an early stage of the process, and they have agreed to continue working together throughout the consultation and final drafting of the Local Plan. As for the comments from the Conservative Group ? I would like to point out that the Labour Mayor has not played a part in the formulation of the consultation drafting and neither has the Cabinet, it has been done by members from all the political groups and is therefore a joint report that was presented to council last Thursday. The report will go to the Cabinet meeting in October now that Council approved it, and hopefully then it will go out to the wider audience to hear what they want to say. The Conservative Leader and her colleagues who opposed the plan going out for public engagement only represent one sixth of the Council Elected Members. They now have subsequently reverted to scare stories and accusations that bear no resemblance to what is included within the Draft or for what the Consultation is required to do by Legislation. They refer to numbers as though it was already agreed and the report clearly explains that the numbers currently reflect what the Government has told Local Authorities what the expectations are for them. We have worked hard already to reduce the numbers from the Government Target of just under 18,000 to get it down to between 12,000 and 10,500 homes. We indicate that we are working hard to reduce those numbers even further by working more closely with our neighbouring Authorities and there is a confidence that we will bring the numbers down. So in simple terms we have included land that has been designated as potential development land throughout the life of the current Unitary Development Plane that was agreed around 2003. But we do not expect to have to use all that land if we work in a positive way moving forward. These comments from The Conservative Leader are not designed to be helpful, they are designed to be political and it is a shame that they do this on such an important matter that has very little to do with politics, but has a lot to do with planning for the future of our children and their children so they have landscape that meets their needs and aspirations.

Members of North Tyneside Labour Party successfully completed the “Memory Walk” of 10 Km to raise funds for the Alzheimer’s Society. The members were Joanne Cassidy and Councillors Linda Darke, John Harrison and Jim Allan. They walked alongside over 600 people who had entered the walk to raise vital funds for an important issues that affects so many people in a cruel and enduring period of time.

Members of North Tyneside Labour Party successfully completed the “Memory Walk” of 10 Km to raise funds for the Alzheimer’s Society. The members were Joanne Cassidy and Councillors Linda Darke, John Harrison and Jim Allan. They walked alongside over 600 people who had entered the walk to raise vital funds for an important issues that affects so many people in a cruel and enduring period of time. All four have had a link to people who have had suffered with the disease and wanted to help raise public awareness and support to help find a cure for an illness that can be emotionally draining on the family and friends of their loved ones enduring the disease. They hope to raise over £400 between them. Rob Stewart, media officer for the Alzheimer’s Society, said: “The turn-out has been really overwhelming, it just shows how much passion there is amongst people in the North East to tackle the stigma that’s attached to dementia and to raise funds so that one day we might find a cure for the disease.”

Saturday 14 September 2013

WEETSLADE WARD LABOUR PARTY SELECT A NEW CANDIDATE FOR NEXT YEAR’s COUNCIL ELECTION Weetslade Labour Party has selected Joanne Cassidy

WEETSLADE WARD LABOUR PARTY SELECT A NEW CANDIDATE FOR NEXT YEAR’s COUNCIL ELECTION Weetslade Labour Party has selected Joanne Cassidy as their candidate for the local Council Elections in May next year, to replace Councillor Alex Cowie who is retiring through ill health. Alex said ' I am disappointed not to be standing for election again, but Joanne was born and raised in the ward and as a young mum who works part time she knows how important Council services like Education and childcare are to families. North Tyneside Council needs a wide range of people to represent their communities. Joanne is in touch with today's generation and will bring first hand skills and up to date experience to benefit local people, I will be helping her in the campaigning ahead and know she will do Weetslade proud'.

** NOTES FOR EDITORS North Tyneside Labour Party are selecting their candidates for the twenty electoral wards in the Borough for next year’s elections. The work is nearing completion and more information will be sent out on the other successful candidates. The Selection procedures in the Party are democratic and individual members of the respective wards decide who they want as their candidate. Photo attached of Joanne Cassidy

Tuesday 6 August 2013

There are a couple of points to add – did councillor Wallace explain that the previous Conservative Administration actually authorised seeking Legal Advice on this matter and it cost around £5,000. (this can be substantiated and proved)

Cllr Judith Wallace has accused the Labour group of 'political grandstanding' and wasting tax payers' cash for trying to push for a judicial review over the schools merger. Cash in that money was spent on legal advice. There are a couple of points to add – did councillor Wallace explain that the previous Conservative Administration actually authorised seeking Legal Advice on this matter and it cost around £5,000. (this can be substantiated and proved) The previous Conservative Executive agreed the current course of action back in the Autumn of last year, in agreement with all three Political groups and it was done so on the understanding that the matter was one of Education in North Tyneside and the impact of the academy on the current education provision. Cllr Wallace was part of that agreement in her role as Deputy Mayor and as Leader of the Tory Group of Councillors. The fact that there has been a change of political administration has not changed the position adopted by all three groups. The politics of the situation has now been invoked by the Tory Opposition and others, not by the Labour and Liberal Groups. The matter is a one of educational significance and impact on existing schools immediately the school term starts in September. This is a matter that Cllr Wallace will have to face in Wards along the Coast as residents learn that the sustainability of education in its current form will have to be addressed as a direct consequence of the imposition of the Academy. The fact that the impact is immediate and has meant that the council have no other options but to act straight away to implement a review of school provision as soon as possible. If the academy proposals had been undertaken over a longer period of time, then any reviews would have gone through a more sensible process and mitigation plans would have been considered on merit. The fact is the Academy and the DFE have avoided to engage in a meaningful way with the Local Authority and have dismissed the impacts on other schools. In fact even Northumberland County Council have schools that objected to the proposals because of a similar impact. If Cllr Wallace actually considered her position before making weak political points, she would have realised a fundamental political mistake in the reaction of parents of pupils in the other schools who will no doubt not appreciate the stance taken by the Conservative Group *** Please note - that 900 new places are actually nearly 3% of the school community and that is equivalent to 30 classes of 30 pupils in each class, so would it be better to use numbers rather than percentages to demonstrate the immediate change in the surplus places?

Friday 26 July 2013

The only thing Linda Arkley hasn’t left is a note telling the Mayor ‘there is no money left. I’m shocked at what has happened during the past four years and we need to act quickly to stop the situation worsening’.

LABOUR’S DISMAY OVER NORTH TYNESIDE FINANCE LEGACY
‘The only thing missing was a note from the Tories saying ‘there is no money left’ – Jim Allan
Incoming Labour administration headed up by Elected Mayor Norma Redfearn have uncovered a series of costly decisions taken by former Tory Mayor Linda Arkley as they seek to unpick the Tory legacy of excessive debt, missed opportunities and botched decisions.
Labour are pointing to a huge jump in the council borrowing from £233.901m when Linda Arkley took over from Labour in 2009 to £524.246m when she left office in May.
During the election Labour had warned residents over the excessive borrowing under the Tories and it’s now clear that this was the tip of a very large financial iceberg.
For example, this year budget which was controversially set by Arkley in April against the wishes of the majority Labour group and the Liberal Democrats, contains £21m deficit including £12m in the Tory ‘Change, Efficiency and Improvement’ programme and a further £9m in capital financing.
They have also identified a dramatic fall in the council’s strategic reserve and balances fund from £29.604m (when Labour left office in 2009) to £13.749m as it presently stands.
Labour group leader Jim Allan said
‘The council’s finances are in a perilous state and the Tories have turned a golden economic legacy left to them in 2009 into a set of figures which show the true extent of the council’s problems. Borrowing has doubled, council reserves have shrunk by over 55% and we’ve inherited a ‘Change’ programme which doesn’t reflect reality never mind prudent economics. The only thing Linda Arkley hasn’t left is a note telling the Mayor ‘there is no money left. I’m shocked at what has happened during the past four years and we need to act quickly to stop the situation worsening’.
End

Saturday 13 July 2013

Special Council Meeting on Wednesday 17th July - Re Merger of Kings School and Priory Primary School

Special Council Meeting on Wednesday 17th July - Re Merger of Kings School and Priory Primary School The Cabinet of North Tyneside Council have decided to seek the views of the full council on the proposals to merge Priory Primary School and the Independent Fee Paying Kings School in advance of making a decision on whether to seek a Judicial Review on the Secretary of State’s decision to approve the merger. This is an opportunity to allow all councillors to ask questions and express their views. The Leader of the Labour Group Councillor Jim Allan said :- The Labour Group of Councillors are seriously concerned that the proposal to merge Kings and Priory schools may have an unintended impact on the other schools across the Borough. Of course, parents and governors at the two schools in question are in favour of the merger but the Council's role on Wednesday is to protect the interests of the many thousands of children across North Tyneside who won't be going to the proposed school. Their voice hasn't been heard in this debate so far and it's high time the 'silent majority' who will have to live with the consequences had their voices heard. The Labour group is committed to representing that 'silent voice'. For example, we need to question the Secretary of State over the impact on other schools in the Borough when he uses £5m from the tax payers purse to wipe out Kings school debt. As it stands, there are no assurances that this money will not be recouped by central government by reducing the amount of funding per head in other schools across the borough. We feel Michael Gove has many questions to answer and that's why I will be writing to him prior to next week’s meeting to seek answers'.

Tuesday 9 July 2013

North Tyneside Clean Up Teams

On Wednesday 10 July Our North Tyneside Clean Up Teams will be in Bowman Drive, Fern Drive (up to March Road) Owen Brannigan Drive, Love Avenue, Patrick Terrace, Ozanan Drive and Burt Crescent making sure the neighbourhood is clean, tidy and safe.

On the day they will be tackling any specific ‘hot-spot’ areas and will carry out street cleaning.  They will also be removing any fly-tipping and graffiti, putting up ‘no dog fouling’ signs and issuing fixed penalty notices to anyone seen failing to pick up after their dog or dropping litter.  They will also remove bulky rubbish from resident’s property and if any residents wish to take advantage of this service they should contact the Estte Caretaking Service Team on 0191 643 - 7514/7515/7516 to advise which items they want removed

Wednesday 17 April 2013

Sky Tyne and Wear News

Cancellation of Mayoral Debate at TyneMet College

Posted by Lisa Dawson on Tuesday 16 April 2013 Other, Tyne and Wear
160413 UGC: Cancellation of Mayoral Debate at TyneMet College
The Debate scheduled to take place between the Mayoral candidates Linda Arkley (Conservative), Norma Redfearn (Labour) and John Appleby (Liberal Democrat) on Thursday 18th April at TyneMet Coast Road Campus, has been cancelled.
The decision to cancel the event has been made because of the withdrawal from the Debate by Elected Mayor Linda Arkley due to circumstances beyond her control.
Jon Vincent, Principal and Chief Executive, TyneMet College, said:
“As hosts for this event we felt it was essential that all of the Mayoral Candidates would have the opportunity to fully participate in the Debate.
It is therefore with regret that we issue this notice of cancellation.”


Elected Mayor from the Mayoral Debate on Thursday 18th April 2013 we have decided to cancel the event. I have asked Linda’s agent (Andrew Elliott) for her reason for non-attendance and alternative dates but thus far I have not received a response.

Subject: Fwd: Mayoral Debate - Cancelation
Dear Labour Team, we have been informed that the hustings meeting scheduled for this Thursday at the tynemet college, has been cancelled. The simple reason is that the Currrent Mayor cannot make it despite it being arranged quite a while ago.
I have attempted to find out what the circumstances are for her being unable to participate, without success. I did not want to be too critical in case there are genuine grounds, but as even a vague explanation has not been provided, then speculation will continue. It is really disappointing as there were a large number of North Tyneside Residents planning to attend to hear from the three candidates.

Could you please pass this on to others you maybe unaware of the cancellation.

If I find any information on her absence I will let you know, remember, the Tory Group did not attend the last council meeting and were vague of why none of them could be in attendance?

Best Wishes

Jim Allan

07909234752



>
Subject: Mayoral Debate - Cancelation
Dear All,

It is with great regret that I wish to inform you that following the withdrawal of the Elected Mayor from the Mayoral Debate on Thursday 18th April 2013 we have decided to cancel the event.  I have asked Linda’s agent (Andrew Elliott) for her reason for non-attendance and alternative dates but thus far I have not received a response. 

This afternoon I will be issuing a press release announcing the cancelation and making clear that our decision is based solely on the withdrawal of the Elected Mayor and our need to remain politically neutral.

I hope you will appreciate the very difficult position that Linda’s withdrawal has put us in and respect our decision.

Best wishes,

Jon Vincent
Principal and Chief Executive
T 0191 2295000 Ext: 5213 | E Jon.Vincent@tynemet.ac.uk

Monday 8 April 2013

Workers’ rights champion has Europe in her sights Jane Shotton- Mobile 07528793904

Workers’ rights champion has Europe in her sights
Monday 8th April, 2013
Community campaigner Jayne Shotton is looking to combine her political and trade union principles to good effect following her selection as one of four potential candidates for the Labour Party in the election for MEP to the European Parliament next year.
Jayne, 50, has a wealth of experience having worked for shopworkers’ union Usdaw as an Area Organiser for 14 years where she has campaigned tirelessly for improvements in workers’ terms and conditions across the North East.
She was at the forefront of the campaign when the Twinings factory in North Shields was closed and relocated to Poland. While the factory did eventually shut its doors, Usdaw was instrumental in stopping Twinings claiming a European Regional Development Grant to help the company relocate the site.
Before working for Usdaw Jayne, who left school at sixteen with very few formal qualifications, worked in retail and a call centre. She was an active trade union rep and represented workers for more than six years.
Jayne has been a member of the Labour Party for more than 20 years and served as a Labour Councillor in North Tyneside for six years for the Camperdown ward.
"The way Twinings could just upsticks and relocate, putting hundreds of workers on the dole, was one of the reasons why I have put myself forward so I can represent North Eastern workers in Europe," she said. "Stephen Hughes MEP has done an excellent job and I want to continue that and build upon it. I also want to work with other Labour Party members, and the electorate at large, to emphasise why Europe is important to the people of the North East.
"Since the Coalition was formed in the UK in 2010, workers have faced an onslaught on their terms and conditions at work and their standard of living. Many people don’t realise just how important the European Parliament is in setting minimum standards on workers’ rights – and the Coalition would love to take these away too.
"I’m looking to use all of my experience to promote and protect the citizens of the North East and to encourage future investment in the area."
Ends
Notes for Editors
Jayne Shotton was born in Barnsley and moved to the North East in 1998.
She is married with a daughter and two stepsons, has a grandson, and lives in North Shields. Her work with Usdaw has seen her represent workers from Tyneside to Teesside, across to Durham, Northumberland and Cumbria.
You can follow Jayne on Facebook, and Twitter @jshttn Email:
Jayne.shotton@live.co.uk
Picture enclosed

Friday 22 March 2013

There were scenes of amazement as North Tyneside’s Tory Mayor Linda Akley chose to snub her own council meeting to attend a Conservative Federation political fundraiser.

PRESS RELEASE
Mayor snubs her own Council Meeting
‘Mayor is failing the leadership test’ – Jim Allan

There were scenes of amazement as North Tyneside’s Tory Mayor Linda Akley chose to snub her own council meeting to attend a Conservative Federation political fundraiser.
The Mayor who earns over £61,000 per year and her entire Cabinet and Conservative group of twelve councillors failed to show for last night’s Council (21 March 2013) meeting which was due to agree the council’s pay policy and the new Health and Wellbeing  Board which will be responsible for over £10m of NHS and council spending.
Now the Mayor faces calls for her to ‘explain and apologise’ why she led the whole Conservative group in the council into, what is being described as a ‘dereliction of duty’ before she faces election on 2 May.
Labour group leader Jim Allan said
‘In the first time in the history of this council, a Mayor and her entire political group have snubbed their own meeting. Tonight’s pay policy and the establishment of the Health and Wellbeing Board are her own policies and she’s deserted her post. The Mayor and her Cabinet are paid collectively over £120,000 to make decisions and she’s decided to put her own party political aims above the needs of the residents of this Borough and the priorities of the council’.  
See Photograph of empty conservative seats in the full council meeting.
There were scenes of amazement as North Tyneside’s Tory Mayor Linda Akley chose to snub her own council meeting to attend a Conservative Federation political fundraiser.

Tuesday 19 March 2013

The government's economic plan is failing. Instead of more of the same failing policies we need a bold and radical Budget this week to kickstart our economy and help millions on low and middle incomes struggling with the rising cost of living.

Briefing for Labour Group Leaders

Pre-Budget script

The government's economic plan is failing. Instead of more of the same failing policies we need a bold and radical Budget this week to kickstart our economy and help millions on low and middle incomes struggling with the rising cost of living.

Our economy is flatlining, prices are rising faster than wages, the deficit is going up and even our triple-A credit rating has been lost. On every economic test this Government set itself, it has failed. It’s no wonder the Cabinet are losing confidence in the Prime Minister and his downgraded Chancellor by openly calling for a change of direction.

We need action now to kickstart our economy, create jobs and support businesses:
·         bring forward long-term infrastructure investment in schools, roads and transport and build thousands of affordable homes — getting builders back to work, creating the homes we need now and strengthening our economy for the future;
·         temporarily reverse the government’s VAT rise to boost spending power in the economy;
·         give small firms a national insurance tax break if they take on extra workers;
·         get people back to work to help get the benefits bill down by guaranteeing a job for every young person out of work for a year or more and every adult unemployed for over two years – a job that they will have to take up or lose their benefits – funded by a fair tax on bank bonuses and changes to pensions tax relief for the very richest;
·         and get lending going to small and medium-sized companies, who desperately want to invest and expand, by establishing a British Investment Bank.

A strong and sustained recovery can only be made by the many, not just a few at the top. So we need to ease the squeeze on people on middle and low incomes who are seeing their living standards fall year after year:
·         next month's tax cut for millionaires should be cancelled. It cannot be right that millions are being forced to pay more for this government’s economic failure - and through cuts to tax credits, child benefit, maternity pay and the bedroom tax - while millionaires get an average £100,000 tax cut;
·         we need fair tax cuts for millions of people on middle and low incomes, for example by bringing back a new lower 10p starting rate of tax (paid for by a mansion tax on homes worth over £2 million) and putting right a mistake Labour made in the past;
·         and if the government finally wants to help families with the growing cost of childcare, they should start by reversing their cuts to childcare tax credits which cost a family with two children up to £1,500 a year and extending Labour’s free nursery places from 15 to 20 hours a week.

The government is borrowing to pay for economic failure:
·         David Cameron says any action to kick-start the economy will lead to more borrowing. But the government is already borrowing more to pay for the costs of their economic failure.
·         Without growth we cannot get the deficit down. If confidence is crushed, businesses go bust, long-term unemployment soars, the Government gets less from tax revenues and the benefits bill goes up.
·         That is why the deficit is rising this year and the Government is set to borrow a staggering £212 billion more than planned to pay for the mounting costs of its economic failure.
·         This doesn’t make any sense. A steadier and more balanced plan – sensible spending cuts and tax rises, together with measures that support our economy, create jobs, invest in infrastructure, and reform our economy for the long term – would be fairer, more successful in getting the deficit down and make Britain better off for the future.

Background: Three years of economic failure

After nearly three years in the job, George Osborne’s record is one of failure – failure on growth, failure on living standards and failure on his own tests on the deficit and debt.

Failure on growth

·        Since George Osborne’s spending review in 2010, the UK economy has grown by just 0.7% compared to the 5.3% forecast at the time.
·        Only two other G20 countries have grown more slowly than the UK in that time.
·        Last year the UK went through a double-dip recession and the economy shrank by 0.3% in the last quarter.

GDP growth (%)
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
June 2010 Budget OBR forecast
2.3
2.8
2.9
2.7
2.7
n/a
Latest OBR forecast
0.9
-0.1
1.2
2.0
2.3
2.7


Failure on living standards

·        With the economy flatlining and inflation high, real wages have fallen since this government came to office meaning people are worse off.  

Real wages (%)
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
June 2010 Budget OBR forecast
-0.5
0.4
1.8
2.4
2.4
n/a
Latest OBR forecast
-2.3
-0.1
-0.3
0.6
1.7
2.0


Failure on the deficit and debt

·        Lack of growth has meant more borrowing to pay for the costs of economic failure – with borrowing forecast to be over £200bn more than planned at the time of the spending review.
·        The government will not “balance the books” by 2015 as David Cameron promised.
·        National debt as a % of GDP is not now forecast to start falling until 2016/17 – breaking one of the government’s fiscal rules.
·        Latest ONS figures show that public sector net borrowing (PSNB), excluding the Royal Mail and Asset Purchase Facility transfers, is over £5 billion higher so far this year than the same period last year.

PSNB (£bn)
11/12
12/13
13/14
14/15
15/16
16/17
Nov 2010 OBR forecast
117
91
60
35
18
n/a
Latest OBR forecast
121.4
119.9
111.6
98.6
81.2
49.0


Debt (% of GDP)
11/12
12/13
13/14
14/15
15/16
16/17
Nov 2010 OBR forecast
66.3
69.1
69.7
68.8
67.2
n/a
Latest OBR forecast
66.4
74.7
76.8
79.0
79.9
79.2