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Post office consultation was a first-class sham


EVERY Worcestershire post office earmarked for closure in the summer will have to shut up shop over the next couple of months.

The decision follows a public consultation that, as far as we can see, was little more than a box-ticking exercise for Post Office bosses.

These so-called consultations are increasingly being revealed as little more than charades - in the case of our post offices it seems to have been a first-class sham.

The Post Office has spent more than a year announcing, on a region-by-region basis, which of the UK’s post offices would be part of the Government’s plans to close 2,500 branches. Yet the public was given just six weeks to come up with alternative proposals.

It is an insult. How can six weeks be enough time for detailed alternative business plans to be put together? How can six weeks be enough time to gauge properly the views of people affected by a potential closure?

Some planning inquiries or inquest can, quite rightly, take many months to complete. Yet decisions to rip the heart out of communities get the green light after six weeks.

Post Office logo

The reality is that, just like last year’s proposal to close Worcester’s ambulance control centre, this public consultation was a way of the Post Office showing it had done its civic duty before rubber-stamping a decision it had already made.

We do not believe public protests, petitions and representations have been taken account of properly.

Post Office bosses say there was ‘substantial’ opposition to many of the proposed branch closures in Worcestershire.

They say they ‘considered very carefully’ all the comments made during the public consultation period. How can that possibly be the case given the time frame and that petitions, no matter how many thousands sign them, only ever count as one response?

This sham of a consultation, and others like it, was just not good enough. And the blame lies not with the Post Office but with the Government as it sets the ground rules.

It is time for Whitehall to look again at these processes. Too many major decisions are being made without due regard for the people they affect.

It is far from democratic. And it has to stop.

  • The catch up on yeserday's post office-related breaking news stories, click here.

Comments(5)

jb says...
10:12am Thu 30 Oct 08

Democratic? that all ended a long time ago. Private businesses do not take any note of public opinion as long as the balance sheet is in the black. These decisions were made in the boardroom and rubber stamped long before they came to the public domain. It is not a public consultation period more like a 'get used to it' period.

chrisnewmanuk says...
11:08am Thu 30 Oct 08

It seems to me its a tick box exercise

Public Consultation - Tick.
Close Post Offices - Tick.
Save Money - Tick.

helen donovan says...
11:30am Thu 30 Oct 08

They had no intention of listening, did they? It was a done deal, even before the consultation took place. We didn't stand a chance (re Bengeworth PO, Evesham).
All that effort, and peoples hard work.
So much for being in a so called democracy!
What a complete farce!

Common Sense says...
12:05pm Thu 30 Oct 08

We are now starting to feel the EU Iron Fist in the Westminster Velvet Glove - and we don't like it very much, do we?

Yes, the Post Office decided to "close Post Offices" because they were losing £4 million a week - a lot of money to lose!

They were losing it because they were ordered by the EU to open their business to "all foreign competition" (unlike Germany, where they protect their internal postal services!) and the best bits were then "cherry-picked" by the Dutch and German postal services.

So however you look at it, it all emanates from the EU instruction! The government only "passed on the instruction to the Post Office"!

This is only the first of many - so get ready to submit quietly in future, to all their new rules - please!

The one thing about these comments that I do like, is that we mostly all seem to agree that the country is falling apart - and the MPs are not only to blame, but not even doing anything about it!

I vaguely remember when MPs would stand up in Parliament and very vigorously complain, or make a point of order! not only that - it would be reported in all the media!

They represented us, our views and our wishes. Sadly, no more!

They must ALL go - one way or another - and soon!

varien says...
5:04pm Thu 30 Oct 08

Public Consultation? - This was a joke. Mind you anybody who thought for one minute that the Post Office was going to take notice of any objections or people's views need to have their brains tested.


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