HL Deb 22 May 1986 vol 475 c538WA
Lord Orr-Ewing

asked Her Majesty's Government:

Whether they can now estimate the staff savings from the abolition of the Greater London Council and the Metropolitan County Councils.

The Minister of State, Department of the Environment (Lord Elton)

The savings at present come about largely from the reduction in posts in the structure. The estimated number of claims for compensation for redundancy received by residuary bodies from ex-GLC or MCC employees is as follows:

London 3,000
Greater Manchester 640
Merseyside 358
South Yorkshire 521
Tyne and Wear 160
West Midlands 531
West Yorkshire 950
Total MCCs 3,160
GRAND TOTAL 6,160

These figures are broadly in line with the Government's estimate in Novembver 1984 that about 7,000 posts could eventually be saved through abolition. It does not mean that 6,160 people have been made redundant against their will. The great majority have been ready to go, generally by taking early retirement, and in some areas posts have been available for all employees of the outgoing authorities who wanted them.

The Government's earlier estimate was based on savings arising from rationalisation of the structure of local government, leaving aside any savings from changes of policy by the successor authorities. Initial redundancies will not be the same as the number of posts saved, because, for example, staff left the GLC and MCCs in anticipation of abolition and many of the jobs in residuary bodies will disappear in due course.

Residuary bodies are well advanced in making redundancy compensation payments to those eligible. It has been our aim all along that the number of posts should be reduced without making large numbers of people redundant against their will. I believe we have achieved both aims.