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Karen Lee

KarenLee

Karen Lee was the Labour MP for Lincoln between 2017 and 2019. She is an NHS nurse and a Labour County Councillor for the Cathedral and Ermine ward of Lincoln


This government has created an entirely avoidable crisis in children’s social care, and families and children in Lincoln are suffering as a result.

Last year saw the biggest annual increase of children in care since 2010. Since the Tories came to power, cuts to local authority funding have resulted in a 40% real term decrease in spending on early intervention through children’s services. It’s clear that the government is prioritising tax cuts to the rich and big corporations over adequately funding the public services that children in Lincoln rely on.

It is particularly important that protection is provided for children with special needs and disabilities. In the last few weeks alone, I have had four Lincoln-based parents with autistic children contact my office with concerns that underfunded and overstretched services are struggling to provide adequate support.

One mother in Lincoln told me about the immense difficulties she faced throughout her son’s autism diagnosis. She is concerned that her son has had to move schools five times due to being bullied and feels he has been let down by a school system that cannot cope with the demand on services.

Another local parent reported that their autistic child’s education, health and care plan had still not been completed 13 weeks after the 20- week statutory deadline. A father in Lincoln also contacted my office for help after his daughter had been waiting for three years for an autism assessment. It is completely unacceptable that children in Lincoln are suffering because of under-resourced services which are simply too overworked to provide vulnerable children with the care they need.

Lincoln is also facing a potential loss of funding which could mean that we lose our two brilliant maintained nurseries; St Giles and Kingsdown at Birchwood.

These maintained nurseries support parents in all kinds of ways as many of the children require additional support to enable them to be ready for school. The nurseries’ role in teaching children the very basics, such as in eating, self-care, speaking and learning to be self-confident and aware of others, is crucial to their future success in life.

The nurseries’ role extends to helping parents sustain a quality home life for their child’s development, from dental hygiene, healthy eating, sleep routines, to toilet training and learning ‘how to play’. The expertise and dedication of nursery staff fills the gaps in social care, health and learning support that have been needlessly created by Tory austerity. These roles cannot continue unfunded, and children in Lincoln will suffer if the government refuses to act.

Over the past couple of weeks, I’ve raised the possible closure of St Giles Nursery School in a Commons debate and I was one of 33 MPs who presented a petition collected by residents calling on the government to guarantee that funding will continue after March 2020, when supplementary funding is set to end. However, we shouldn’t be forced to beg the government to keep providing basic services to our children.

It is often said that ‘the true measure of any society can be found in how it treats its most vulnerable members’. If that is the case, this government measures very poorly when it comes to the treatment of vulnerable children. Young people in Lincoln deserve better than what this government is offering them.

Karen Lee was the Labour MP for Lincoln between 2017 and 2019. She is an NHS nurse and a Labour County Councillor for the Cathedral and Ermine ward of Lincoln

The end of 2018 sees me 18 months in as Lincoln’s MP; it has been a year of ups and downs for Lincoln with some memorable events.

The opening of our new bus station in February was a big positive, as was the announcement in March that Lincoln has been successful in securing the new medical school which will open in September 2019.

The Imps winning the Checkatrade trophy in April created a massive feeling of pride in our city, and in May both the opening of our new mosque and the re-opening of Boultham Park after extensive improvement were fantastic.

However, despite these positives, it’s been a difficult year in political terms both nationally and locally.

In January I was promoted to the position of Labour’s Shadow Fire Minister, and whilst my workload has increased I continue to answer every single enquiry my office receives as well as holding regular local surgeries.

Whilst as an opposition MP my power to influence government policy is limited, I am often the lone voice in Westminster speaking out against government cuts which are hitting Lincoln and the surrounding areas.

My campaign to save RAF Scampton and keep the Red Arrows in Lincolnshire received over 5,000 signatures, and I was the only local MP who voiced a credible argument against this happening.

I also fought hard to try to retain Lincoln’s Walk-In-Centre, raising the closure with the Prime Minister directly at PMQs. Whilst our Walk-In did close, had Lincoln not had a Labour MP this incredibly unpopular decision would have gone completely unchallenged in Westminster.

Since East Coast Mainline descended into chaos in March, I have repeatedly sought assurances from government ministers that Lincoln will receive the extra train services we have long been promised and I am continuing to work with others to try to make this happen.

I believe very strongly that as well as speaking up for Lincoln, it is important that I am responsive to the views of my constituents. I was pleased to host an apprenticeship event last May, followed by a community engagement event on the NHS in October and a second community event focusing on policing and homelessness the following month.

At the national level, it is impossible to reflect on 2018 without talking about the Brexit chaos this government have pushed our country into.

Rather than negotiating a good deal with Europe, the Prime Minister has spent two and a half years trying to settle the squabbling within her own party. The recent Tory leadership vote and their unprecedented decision to cancel the vote MP’s were due to have on the deal have pushed the Brexit timetable dangerously further back.

This country simply doesn’t have a functioning government.

Alongside this, issues of huge national concern go almost unmentioned. Over 2,200 people living in Lincoln are receiving Universal Credit and my casework includes many people suffering as a result of this callous and spiteful attack on the vulnerable.

Homelessness has increased nationally by 169% since 2010 and is at its highest level ever on record. Calls to the police relating to begging, rough sleeping and addiction in Lincoln’s city centre increased by 51% this year.

2019 is going to be a tough year with many problems to solve, but I promise you that I will continue to work hard and do my best to stand up and be Lincoln’s voice in Westminster -something I will never tire of doing.

Karen Lee was the Labour MP for Lincoln between 2017 and 2019. She is an NHS nurse and a Labour County Councillor for the Cathedral and Ermine ward of Lincoln

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