Glasgow Times

Fears for jobs if plans to scrap £23m support fund go ahead

- BY CATHERINE HUNTER

THOUSANDS of redundancy notices could be on the cards for Glasgow’s third sector organisati­ons if plans to scrap the £23 million support fund are implemente­d.

The city’s Labour group has written to the administra­tion asking them to rethink their decision which they argue will affect people who have been working on the front line throughout this pandemic.

The party previously wrote to the SNP asking them to postpone the decision in May.

Now, Labour councillor Martin Rhodes said that if the SNP are determined to push this through then they have a responsibi­lity to establish a contingenc­y fund, to prevent anyone suddenly losing their jobs in the midst of this crisis.

Mr Rhodes wrote in his letter:

“This decision to push ahead will mean the start, in the next few weeks, of the process of issuing redundancy notices to staff in third sector organisati­ons across the city.

“If you are unwilling to reconsider your course of action of pushing ahead with this change, the Labour group would strongly argue that at the very least a contingenc­y fund is put in place immediatel­y so that no organisati­on has to issue redundancy notices due to this change being introduced by the council during this public health emergency.”

In April, the SNP Leader of the Council Susan Aitken wrote that the response from third sector and community organisati­ons had been ‘lifesaving’.

The current Integrated Grant Fund, which is being replaced by

A MAN made a daring getaway from knife-wielding thugs in a quiet South Side street.

Cops are on the hunt for the brutes after they pounced on the 32-year-old victim on Holmlea Road last week.

The man was walking near the Glasgow Communitie­s Fund, supports more 2000 staff and sessional staff and funds hundreds of organisati­ons across the city, many of which have been involved in providing food, supplies and companions­hip during the crisis.

Mr Rhodes added: “It is clear to absolutely everyone that the world has changed since March this year, and we do not yet know the scale of the challenge that the city will face. How we approach funding for third sector and community organisati­ons needs to respond to the changes caused by the ongoing public health emergency, and

to Holmlea Park at around 11.30pm last Wednesday when he was approached by the pair who threatened him with a knife and demanded money.

He managed to get away uninjured and contacted police, but has been left badly shaken. so the SNP in Glasgow should stop these plans now and rethink them.

“These organisati­ons have been at the forefront of the city’s response, and it is absolutely right to say that they have saved lives. The decision to force those organisati­ons to issue redundancy notices right now just isn’t right.

“If the SNP administra­tion decide to push ahead unnecessar­ily with a plan and a timetable drawn up before we had coronaviru­s, then they should at least provide a contingenc­y fund to keep people in their jobs at this difficult time.”

Glasgow City Council has been asked for comment.

The suspects are described as white, between 16 and 20 years of age, around 5ft10 in height. Both men had local accents and were wearing dark-coloured clothing.

Officers have been carrying out enquiries and are checking CCTV footage

from in and around the area for any additional informatio­n.

Constable Sean Kennedy, from the robbery unit, said: “I am appealing to members of the public who may have been in the area around the time of the incident to contact us.”

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 ??  ?? Labour councillor Martin Rhodes has written to Susan Aitken’s administra­tion
Labour councillor Martin Rhodes has written to Susan Aitken’s administra­tion

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