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Nick Bourne AM

Leader of the Conservatives in the Welsh Assembly

Third Term and Hitting the Ground Running

The issue of extra powers for the Assembly should be seen as one of the acquisition of proper powers rather than a sterile debate and struggle between opposing viewpoints - a matter of common sense no less. As a nation we have invested heavily in devolution we must now make sure that devolution delivers and to do that we need the tools for the job.  Some clear examples have come up during the life of the Assembly.
 
 Currently the Assembly cannot act to ban three schoolchildren sitting on a seat on school buses designed for two, for example, although it would be a very sensible measure to promote road safety. I haven’t heard anybody dissent from this view following the tragic death of Stuart Cunningham Jones and the campaign for changes in the law led by his parents. But still nothing happens as we don’t have the proper powers!
 
We do not have the proper powers to permit a reduction in council tax for people who take measures to reduce their carbon footprint either. This too is absurd.
 
There are many other things that we should be able to do as an Assembly but cannot. We have already started looking at policy development in this third Assembly. We are looking at ways that we can, in conjunction with manufacturers, environmental groups, local authorities and others, eliminate plastic bags in shops. The watchwords of reduce, reuse and recycle should inform policy in this area and such a move makes sense though clearly there are issues to discuss.
 
In health there are many things that we would like to do to improve Welsh healthcare. To name one important issue - on lifesaving drugs rather than life enhancing drugs  that are awaiting final clearance we need a way of fast tracking their approval for all patients to provide the very latest treatments and to provide them throughout Wales.

On finance a major challenge is how we can lever in more money into the Welsh budget - use of the European Investment Bank, use of bonds and recourse where appropriate to PPP/ PFI are certainly some issues that need to be looked at as a matter of some urgency.
 
 I have felt for some considerable time that politicians should be very much at arm’s length from the commissioning and funding of large public projects. History has a habit of repeating itself. The Senedd building project is one clear example of budget overruns, and more recently we have seen the Assembly Government being asked to bail out the Wales Millennium Centre and the National Botanical Gardens ( again!). I am a frequent and enthusiastic visitor to both but we have to be wary of this practice of rushing in with
extra money after a long period of building up operational losses.  Our National Library doesn’t do it nor do our National Museums nor, for that matter, does our NHS. What marks these other projects out is that they are new and they are iconic. We need an arm’s length way of handling these bodies with women and men of proven commercial experience representing the government and the taxpayer on the boards, scrutinising monthly management ccounts and ensuring that bad news is addressed early on and not buried for
short term political reasons
 
These are just some of the areas that we are currently looking at.

One response to “Third Term and Hitting the Ground Running”

  1. Should not the Assembly be developing more Measures (i.e. legislation within the Matters/Fields in the Government of Wales Act 2006) than LCOs? The Assembly has a duty, of course, to push for greater powers but given the prospects of the glacial progression of LCOs through the Assembly and Westminster we should also give equal - or perhaps greater - consideration to Measure-making. My understanding of the situation is that there is only one Measure on the table at the moment - the NHS Redress Act. It would be a terrible shame, and a great argument for those who oppose devolution, if we were to reach 2011 with much greater potential powers but having done nothing of note with the powers already there. Passing Measures that improve life in Wales will be a great advert for the Assembly to the people of Wales and beyond.

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