Honiton councillor hits out at partial outsourcing of emergency night helpline
By Philippa Davies
17th Sep 2021 | Local News
The decision to partially outsource East Devon District Council's emergency night helpline for elderly and vulnerable residents has been criticised by Honiton councillor Jake Bonetta.
The Home Safeguard service will be run by a private company four nights a week because of staff shortages, for a saving of just £4,000.
Users of the service wear a pendant with a button they can press to call the helpline. An operator gives advice over the phone and calls the emergency services if necessary.
The service operates between 10:15 pm and 7:15 am and receives an average of 21 calls a night. But it has lost three team members recently and the remaining staff have become overstretched. Now the council is outsourcing four nights a week to a private company called Night Owl, with the in-house team covering the other three nights. The arrangement will run for four months.
Unlike the council's in-house service, Night Owl staff are not based in East Devon but at offices in Chichester, Exeter and Ashburton. Nevertheless, council officers say they have been familiarised with East Devon's needs.
Honiton councillor Jake Bonetta 'cannot support' the move
Some members of the council are against the idea, and are particularly worried by a report suggesting that the change could be made permanent if the service offered by Night Owl proves acceptable and more cost-effective. Officers believe around £4,000 will be saved over the next four months.
Speaking before the cabinet's decision on Wednesday, September 8, Councillor Jake Bonetta (Labour, Honiton St. Michael's) said: "I cannot support any move to take our council services out-of-house.
"Investing in our own services with better pay and better conditions is so much more valuable than potentially outsourcing permanently."
Councillor Paul Millar Exmouth Halsdon, who recently switched from being an independent to join Jake Bonetta as a Labour Party member, said: "So often this kind of policy can come at the expense of quality, working conditions and democratic accountability and, in the end, costs in the long term if our residents suffer from poor communication between the company and the council."
He said the current salary offered by the council, under £17,500 per year pro-rata, needed to be increased if it is to address the recruitment problems.
Cllr Millar added: "The core argument about saving money is not one I subscribe to. The savings are negligible.
"I don't think it should be about money at all. It should be about quality of service."
Council leader Paul Arnott (Democratic Alliance Group) said he sympathised with the criticisms and that he disliked the idea of outsourcing, but in his opinion it was a matter of necessity. He argued that without the emergency measures the service could not be maintained.
He concluded: "I know the answers don't please everybody or perhaps entirely anybody, but we will revisit this soon. That's an absolute commitment."
In a joint statement issued after the decision was agreed, Councillors Bonetta and Millar said they would work to prevent 'any future potential cabinet decision to make any unnecessary and expensive outsourcing of the highly valued Home Safeguard social service permanent'.
They said: "Labour councils in other parts of the country have proven that bringing services back in house and maintaining them there leads to cost savings, greater quality, and a more democratically accountable service to voting residents."
The issue will be discussed again by the cabinet when the contract ends next February.
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