Opinion

Funding resolution needs consensus

1 min read Youth Work Editorial
The youth worker strike in Coventry is likely to be followed by further walkouts if other councils go ahead with their proposed youth service cuts.

Crippled by debt, local authorities are desperately trying to find savings anywhere they can, leaving those services that they don't have a legal requirement to deliver the most vulnerable to cutbacks.

This is nothing new. Time and again youth work has found itself at the front of the line for cuts when the economy falters or when local or national politicians decide investing in out-of-school activities for young people is no longer a priority. The lack of legislation to protect youth work affects both council-run and voluntary sector youth services and, ultimately, the young people whom they serve. In Birmingham, the city council's decision to cut spending has led to the withdrawal of an £800,000 grant for voluntary youth groups. The loss of the grant threatens the future of some of the region's most successful projects, including the highly respected Young Disciples project.

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