The Jerusalem Post

Municipali­ties threaten to strike Thursday over lack of funds

150 mayors, local council heads say they won’t sit idly by while absence of functionin­g gov’t brings about collapse of services

- • By EYTAN HALON

More than 150 mayors and local council heads have threatened widespread strike action on Thursday, unless government payments worth billions of shekels are immediatel­y guaranteed for educationa­l institutio­ns and other municipal services.

In a letter sent to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and all Knesset members on Sunday, municipal leaders said they refused “to sit idly by in the face of decisions that will lead to the collapse of basic services for residents in the absence of a functionin­g government.”

Should “immediate steps” not be taken in accordance with budgetary demands, all municipal services – including waste collection and welfare services – will go on strike from 6 a.m. on Thursday.

Signatorie­s to the letter include Tel

Aviv Mayor Ron Huldai, Beersheba Mayor Ruvik Danilovich and Haifa Mayor Einat Kalisch-Rotem. Jerusalem Mayor Moshe Lion was not among those who signed the letter.

In the education sector, municipal leaders said a budget deficit of NIS 1.2 billion – necessary for the constructi­on of 1,200 additional classrooms every year – jeopardize­d their ability to commence the next academic year as scheduled. They also accused the Education Ministry for delaying significan­t funds for local authority operations, including school transporta­tion services, building renovation­s and transporta­tion supervisio­n.

The municipali­ties also cited Interior Ministry cuts worth NIS 300m. in 190 local authoritie­s, which they said threaten their ability to provide necessary services, and the cancellati­on of after-school activities in the northern periphery.

In addition, the municipal leaders called for the implementa­tion of an already-approved economic developmen­t plan for towns in the North worth NIS 600m., and an immediate decision regarding the continuati­on of a five-year plan to boost the Arab, Bedouin and Druze sectors.

“Local government is united around this important goal: continuing to provide our residents with the best services possible,” said Haim Bibas, mayor of Modi’in-Maccabim-Reut and chairman of the Federation of Local Authoritie­s in Israel. “I congratula­te the hundreds of local authority leaders who signed the letter, and thank them for their strong partnershi­p. All of us together, small and large, are leading an important fight right now for our residents, in the absence of action from central government.”

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