Unison hits back at ''misleading'' local government claims

Public sector union Unison has hit back at a report by management consultants Knox D’Arcy, which claims that local government staff productivity lags far behind the private sector.

The union has called the study misleading, unrepresentative and unhelpful.

Dave Prentis, Unison general secretary, said:

"This small survey flies in the face of evidence on public sector productivity, which, thanks to investment under Labour, has been rising since 2006. The real danger is that huge cuts now will turn back the clock, causing productivity to plummet, and a return to the dark days of Tory underfunding that ran local council services into the ground.

"The situation in Local Government now is more work on less shoulders. Council workers have delivered over and above targets for efficiency savings every year they have been set. UNISON's latest independent staff survey shows 31% of council staff regularly putting in extra hours without pay or time off in lieu. Two thirds said that their workload had gone up from the previous year. This is even before the latest round of job cuts hit home.

"The public cannot be fooled into thinking that job cuts will not have a devastating impact on local services. 500,000 job cuts would decimate local services. Care homes, day centres, libraries and children's homes are already shutting their doors. Charges for services like home care, meals on wheels, or nursery places are on the up. Serious shortages in social work and social care already exist, any more cuts will leave vulnerable people without the support they need.

"It is a red herring to compare private and public sector productivity. How can you measure the productivity of a care worker, and compare it with a car worker on a production line? Public services are labour intensive, and do not have the same scope for replacing people with technology.

"Instead of constantly running local government workers down, we should be focussing on boosting morale, which would also have a knock on effect to productivity."

Unison represents more than 850,000 local government workers, who work in libraries, care homes, as home carers, in parks and gardens, leisure centres, as social workers, teaching assistants, housing officers, in environmental health, as dinner ladies, school caretakers, meals on wheels staff and in local authority nurseries.