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News Report Page 12 of 14
Publication Date:-
2024-10-25
News reports located on this page = 2.

Government seeks views on new pay scale for NHS nurses

LIVERPOOL Philharmonic is offering over 1,200 free concert tickets to local Secondary Schools in 2024/25. Students will have the chance to experience the thrill of hearing the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra perform masterpieces by composers from Beethoven to Bernstein live from the iconic Philharmonic Hall. This year sees this exciting free offer extended due to high demand, with 3 times as many free tickets available as in 2023/24.  

This initiative is part of Liverpool Philharmonic’s long-standing commitment and dedication to inspiring a love of live music in young people and enriching music education in Schools. There are 12 orchestral concerts School groups can visit for free between:- November 2024 and April 2025. All concerts for this programme have been specially chosen for their alignment with the main Music GCSE and A Level curriculum, supporting teachers and students with their musical education. 


Highlights include:- 

  • Rachmaninov's Symphony No. 2. This also concert features renowned violinist Ning Feng performing Barber’s Violin Concerto and Nautilus - an exciting piece by the genre-defying composer Anna Meredith, and the Liverpool debut of up and coming young British conductor Adam Hickox. 
     
  • Bernstein, Barber & Glass. An exciting programme of American composers including:- Leonard Bernstein’s iconic Symphonic Dances from West Side Story. The evening is conducted by Joseph Young and features Chloë Hanslip performing Philip Glass’ Violin Concerto No.1. 
     
  • Eroica. Beethoven’s third symphony is led by the Chief Conductor of the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, Domingo Hindoyan. 
  • Shostakovich Symphony No. 6. Conducted by Russian-American conductor Lidiya Yankovskaya this concert pays tribute to Shostakovich in his anniversary year as well as music from Missy Mazzoli and Brahms Violin Concerto featuring violinist Alena Baeva. 

Teachers from Schools who attended a concert last year stated:- “Thank you so much for the tickets for the concert yesterday, the students loved every moment. The vast majority of our pupils come from underprivileged backgrounds. None of the children had heard a live orchestra before so the impact of this event will live long in the memory I am sure. Fabulous concert and a great experience for our students. Symphonie Fantastique is such an important orchestral work, as well as being on a few A Level specifications, and it is extremely beneficial for the students to hear it live. Thank you again for giving young people access to inspirational music making!” 

Peter Garden, Executive Director of Performance and Learning said:- “Providing free tickets to pupils studying music is an important part of our commitment to music and creative education. Hearing the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra live in this iconic concert hall is an inspiring and unforgettable experience. We would love for every local secondary and FE College music teacher to get in touch and take advantage of this opportunity.” 

Schools will be able to access free tickets for a range of concerts by the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, contemporary series Ensemble 10:10, and performances from the Liverpool Philharmonic Youth Orchestra, these are:-

  • 03 November 2024 - Sunday Afternoon Mozart
     
  • 07 November 2024 - Rachmaninov's Symphony No. 2 
     
  • 17 November 2024 - Liverpool Philharmonic Youth Orchestras 
     
  • 01 December 2024 - Mozart's Oboe Concerto 
     
  • 16 January 2025 - Bernstein, Barber & Glass 
     
  • 22 January 2025 - Ensemble 10:10 
     
  • 13 February 2025 - Shostakovich Symphony No. 6 
     
  • 15 February 2025 - LIMF with Youth Session Orchestra 
     
  • 23 March 2025 - Eroica 
     
  • 03 April 2025 - From the New Word 
     
  • 12 April 2025 - Janáček’s Glagolitic Mass 
     
  • 26 April 2025 - Ensemble 10:10 

All Secondary Schools within Liverpool City Region are eligible to apply for tickets to these performances. Please contact:- Learning@LiverpoolPhil.Com for more information. 


LGA says:- "Council housing faces the 'perfect storm' of competing pressures and requires urgent Government action"

THE future of Council housing finances hangs in the balance with rising costs and increasing pressures pushing budgets to the brink, new analysis published by the Local Government Association (LGA) reveals.

Conducted by Savills and commissioned by the LGA, the National Federation of ALMOs and Association of Retained Council Housing, the analysis explores the cumulative impact of historic and proposed Government policies and wider economic factors on the viability of Council Housing Revenue Accounts (HRAs).

The new report; published at today's LGA Annual Conference, finds the financial challenges which are plunging the future of Council housing in serious doubt are the result of a combination of different pressures.

Many Councils will therefore face the impossible choice between HRAs going into deficit or failure to meet statutory repair obligations, including:- the newly proposed Awaab's Law which will require landlords to fix reported hazards, such as:- mould and damp, within specified timescales. As a result, Councils will also be unable to finance the building of new affordable homes to help Government achieve its ambition to build 1.5 million new homes over the next 5 years.

Ahead of the Autumn Budget, Councils and ALMOs are urging Government to restore lost revenue due to the recent rent cap, estimated to be more than £600 million and to strengthen HRAs via a long term rent settlement to give Councils certainty on rental income and support long-term business planning.

The impact of rent cuts from:- 2016 to 2020, and the rent cap in 2023 resulting in much lower levels of anticipated income than had been promised by the then Government.

The increase in the amount of capital investment needed for existing Council housing. This includes:- for maintaining and repairing existing homes to bring them into line with current and proposed future requirements, for instance building and fire safety requirements, a new Decent Homes Standard, as well as minimum energy efficiency and net zero carbon requirements. In 2012 this was estimated as £64.2 billion over 30 years; it's now up to £96.1 billion; a difference of £31.9 billion that local authorities need to find.

Day to day repairs costs that are spiralling well above the rate of CPI inflation, as demand increases in the light of Awaab's Law and the need to address problems with damp and mould, and cost increases due to labour and supply chain shortages.

Pressures arising from enhanced regulation and proposed requirements for professional qualifications for housing staff.

The pressures are in part due to recent turbulence in the economy and markets; with high inflation and interest rates; but also a result of a range of national Government policy interventions since the 2012 HRA self-financing settlement was agreed, including:- the fact that rent increases have been cumulatively well below inflation over the last 8 years.

Even if Councils could increase rents back to what they would have been without the 2023 rent cap, additional finances would still be required into HRAs to keep them afloat in the short term.

The research shows that a 10 year settlement allowing annual rent increases of up to 1% above CPI would eventually balance HRA income and expenditure over 30 years, but in the short-term would still leave an income shortfall over the initial 5 to 10 years of between:- £6 and £7 billion.

Ahead of the Budget we are calling for:-

  • Restoration of lost revenue due to Government mandated below inflation rent increases, and a clear path to bring rents to the formulae the Government itself has set.

  • An urgent review and revision of the current self financing Council housing regime which has been in place since 2012, to ensure it can deliver both current and future requirements for Council housing.

  • A long term rent deal for Council landlords to allow a longer period of annual rent increases for a minimum period of at least 10 years. This should include:- flexibility for Councils to address the historic anomalies in their rents as a result of the ending of the rent convergence policy in 2015.

  • New burdens funding to cover additional requirements falling on Councils; including:- the decarbonisation of homes, professionalisation, enhanced regulation and minimum energy efficiency standards.

  • Increased Affordable Homes Programme (AHP) grant levels to help Councils build desperately needed new, high quality affordable homes.

Cllr Adam Hug, the LGA's housing Spokesperson, said:- "This is the most precarious position that Council housing has been in for over a decade, and urgent action is needed to ensure that local Government can keep up with its obligations around providing decent quality Council housing. We need to strengthen and provide stability to Housing Revenue Accounts by agreeing a long-term rent settlement, restoring lost revenue due to the rent cap and reviewing the self-financing settlement of 2012. This would provide Councils certainty on rental income and support long-term business planning to ensure they can deliver high quality homes and associated support for their tenants. However, it is important that to ensure there is further Government investment to help respond to priorities- from retrofit to building new Council homes- to avoid, all the pressure falling on the HRA and the residents whose rents and services charges fund them."

Mike Ainsley, Chair of the NFA said:- "This report is solid evidence that our national housing catastrophe cannot be addressed without a strong Council housing sector. The Savills data paints an unambiguous picture of the dire state this sector is in after years of decline. We urgently need a strong financial settlement to restore lost rent revenue and make HRAs viable. Only then can we provide the good quality social housing that the country needs."

Cllr Aydin Dikerdem, Chair of ARCH said:- "Councils are, rightly, expected to ensure that all their tenants' homes meet at least the basic requirements of the Decent Homes Standard, and are being held to account by Government and the Regulator where they fail to do so. For its part, the Government has a reciprocal obligation to make sure Councils have the funding necessary to meet these obligations."

 
      
 
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