SDLP Manifesto
Assembly Elections 2007
Delivering Real Progress 2
Delivering Key Priorities 3
Delivering for You - Leading & Winning 6
Delivering the Agreement 9
Delivering a United Ireland 10
Delivering Public Services, Investment & Government Reform 11
Delivering Quality Healthcare 14
Delivering Quality Education for All 17
Delivering Economic Growth & Jobs 19
Delivering Investment in Workers & Skills 21
Delivering Safer Communities 23
Delivering Affordable Quality Homes 26
Delivering Social Inclusion 29
Delivering a Sustainable Environment 32
Delivering Balanced Regional Development 34
Delivering for Agricultural & Rural Communities 36
Ag soláthar Acht Gaeilge - Delivering for the Irish Language 39
Delivering Arts & Leisure Opportunities 41
Delivering Equality & Human Rights 42
Delivering a Shared Society 44
Delivering for Victims, Truth & Remembrance 45
Delivering on International Affairs 46
Contents
1SDLP Manifesto Assembly Elections 2007
PAGENUMBER
Please note that certain objectives appear under more than oneheading to give a complete overview of each topic at a glance
Your Ambitions – Our Agenda
The SDLP stands in this election proud of our record and confident of our prospects. We havestood consistently for the Good Friday Agreement’s core principles of a lawful society and aninclusive democracy. The SDLP has held nothing back. We only want to move forward.
You deserve better than endless ‘process’ and stop-go politics. You need non-stop progress.The SDLP alone can be trusted to deliver that. The DUP and Sinn Fein want their ambitions forthemselves to become the people’s agenda in this election.For the SDLP, people’s best ambitions are our only agenda. Your highest hopes are our drivingpolitical purpose.
This manifesto outlines the SDLP’s clear, strong policies on issues that really matter to you –including water charges, rates, healthcare, jobs, poverty, education, policing andclimate change.
It underlines our determination - not just to deliver political progress - but to grow our economy,improve our society and fulfil the promise of a better way to a better Ireland.
It sets out our radical proposals for:
• Economic growth, social justice, environmental protection and cultural vitality;
• Ambitious targets for North South development;
• Cohesive plans for joined-up government;
• Greater transparency, effectiveness and accountability;
• Strong safeguards against ever-higher rates and other unjust charges; and
• Imaginative ideas for far-reaching investment and improving public services.
The difference between politics not working and a government working for you will be a strongSDLP. Ongoing political uncertainty is not a reason not to vote. It is a reason to vote SDLP. Yourvote can make the difference. Use it to deliver real progress.
Vote SDLP on Wednesday 7 March.
Mark Durkan MPSDLP Leader
DeliveringReal Progress
2 Let’s Deliver Real Progress
Delivering the Agreement
• Stand strong for the Agreement andseek the immediate restoration ofits democratic institutions ofGovernment;
• Keep pressure on all parties torespect the commitments at theheart of the Agreement to aninclusive and lawful society; and
• Seek the Agreement’s fullimplementation and development,including delivery of commitmentsin the Agreement and St. Andrewson devolution of policing andjustice; North/South co-operation;human rights; equality;demilitarisation; a shared future;victims; and the Irish language.
Delivering a United Ireland
• Seek the recalling of the Forum forPeace and Reconciliation;
• Engage in outreach with theunionist community to persuadethem of the benefits of a UnitedIreland and reassure them of theprotections that the Agreementoffers them in it; and
• Seek a referendum on a UnitedIreland when the Agreement’sinstitutions are operating stably andcampaign vigorously for a yes vote.
Delivering Public Services,
Investment & Government
Reform
• A fairer rates system based onability to pay;
• Strategic capital expenditure andService, Community & Enterpriseall-Ireland funds;
• Joined-up government across alldepartments;
• Strong long-term protection ofratepayers’ interests in the form of a revenue regulator; and
• Two new Assembly Committeesthat will examine governmentadministrative expenditure as wellas delivery and performance.
Delivering Quality Healthcare
• Cleaner hospitals through improvingand monitoring cleaning standardsand integrating hospital cleaningback into healthcare management;
• Invest in health promotion, primarycare and tackle health inequalitiesto reduce the burden on acutecare;
• Secure finances to implement therecommendations of the BamfordReview of Mental Health andLearning Difficulties;
• Ensure access to clinically effectivedrugs (where appropriate) fortreatment of conditions such asMS, Alzheimer’s disease andArthritis; and
• Improved access to NHS dentistryservices across the North.
Delivering Quality Education
for All
• The right for children to have a wideranging education;
• An end to academic selection byopposing the use of pupil profilesand Computer Adaptive Testing asa method of selection;
• Effective implementation of theSpecial Educational Needs Order;
• Promote the introduction of modernlanguages at primary school; and
• Investment in early years education.
Delivering Economic
Growth & Jobs
• Single all-Ireland corporation taxregime at 12.5%;
• Create an all-Ireland Research Fundand an Enterprise Growth Fund;
• Create broadband capacity of8Mbps across the North;
• Investment in biotechnology andcreation of biotechnology council;and
• Increased provision of workplacebased training packages.
Delivering Safer Communities
• Work for an all-Ireland sex offendersregister and end automatic 50%remission for dangerous offenders;
• Push for Garda secondments to thePSNI as well as lateral entry;
• Creation of North/South bodies onpolicing and justice including an all-Ireland Criminal Assets Bureau andan All-Ireland Law Commission;
• Create an all-Ireland Public SafetyBody;
• Harmonisation of road safetymeasures on the island; and
• Better measures to tackle anti-social behaviour, including penaltynotices.
Delivering KeyPriorities
3SDLP Manifesto Assembly Elections 2007
Delivering Investment in
Workers & Skills
• Campaign for a regional PensionProtection Fund;
• Cross-departmental strategy toaugment protection and awarenessof the rights of migrant workers;
• Widen access to Higher Educationthrough additional core fundingpackages for families on lowincomes;
• Eradicate adult illiteracy andinnumeracy by 2015; and
• Create an all-Island ResearchAlliance.
Delivering Affordable Quality
Homes
• Explore proposals for a ‘use it orlose it’ policy on lands zoned fordevelopment;
• Increase the upper limit threshold inthe Co-ownership Scheme;
• Release more land for socialhousing from the government landbank; and
• Address differentials between thetwo main communities in waitingtimes for public housing.
Delivering Social Inclusion
• Further development of the Anti-Poverty Strategy to ensureadequate oversight, dedicatedresources and realistic targets;
• Address the shortage of available,affordable and quality childcare;
• Work to eradicate child poverty by2020; and
• Implement the Money & DebtAdvice strategy.
Delivering a Sustainable
Environment
• Introduce stronger targets onemissions with year on yearreductions so that emissions will be20% below 1990 levels by 2010;
• Establish an All-Ireland IndependentEnvironmental Protection Agency;
• Campaign for the immediatecessation of Mox production atSellafield;
• Introduce marine legislation that willaddress the issues of pollution andhabitat protection; and
• Annual publication of a State of theEnvironment report.
Delivering Balanced Regional
Development
• Legislate for decentralisation ofgovernment functions and agenciesincluding at least 2000 jobs totowns across the North, targetingareas with high unemployment;
• Create a new all-Ireland transportand infrastructure body;
• Develop a plan to convert publictransport to operate on bio-fuels;
• Secure major capital investment forthe Belfast-Derry rail line; and
• Develop a light rail system for theBelfast Metropolitan area.
Delivering for Agricultural &
Rural Communities
• Complete an all-Ireland AnimalHealth Strategy;
• Develop an all-Ireland strategy forthe reform of the Common FisheriesPolicy;
• Work for a fairer rates relief packagefor agricultural properties;
• Replace PPS 14 with a system thatis fair to rural communities andcherishes the environment; and
• Develop a cross-cutting Rural WhitePaper to focus on the promotion ofeconomic regeneration and socialinclusion.
4 Let’s Deliver Real Progress
Delivering A Shared Society
• Increased shared spaces and moremixed estates;
• The prevention of sectarian ornational flags flying on publicproperty;
• A strategy against hate crime forthe criminal justice system; and
• New powers for the CommunityRelations Council to support theGood Relations work of localgovernment.
Delivering Equality & Human
Rights
• Deliver the Single Equality Bill toharmonise protection againstdiscrimination and guaranteeequality for all groups;
• Deliver effective rights protection ofour young particularly in the area ofmental health;
• A comprehensive Bill of Rights forNorthern Ireland; and
• Eliminate the differential inunemployment rates between the two communities by 2012.
Delivering for Victims, Truth &
Remembrance
• An over-arching victims strategy;
• A victim centred Truth Body todirect the process of truth andremembrance for all victims,compile a register of victims and re-open police files at the request ofvictims’ families;
• Well resourced and unimpededinquiries; and
• Paramilitary assets to be used tofund victims’ families compensation.
Ag soláthar Acht Gaeilge -
Delivering for the Irish
Language
• Tacaíonn an SDLP le Acht Ghaeilgeatá cuimsitheach, bunaithe ar churchuige cheartasach a dhéanfaidhteanga oifigiúil den Ghaeilge agus abhronnfaidh cearta fiúntacha archainteoirí na teanga i réimsíéagsúla – na hinstitiúidi polaitiúla,an rialtas áitiuil, riar na córa, antOideachas, agus na meáinchumarsáide ina measc.
• Support a comprehensive IrishLanguage Act founded on a rightsbased approach which will makeIrish an official language and affordworthwhile rights to Irish speakersin various aspects of public lifeincluding: the political institutions,local government, the justicesystem, education, and the media.
Delivering on International
Affairs
• Lobby for full implementation of the G8 commitments to increasevolume, quality and effectiveness of aid;
• Increase the number of Fair Tradetowns and cities across the North;
• Reverse the decision to exportrefugees and asylum seekers toScotland; and
• Campaign against the use of ourairports to facilitate ExtraordinaryRendition.
5SDLP Manifesto Assembly Elections 2007
At the time of the Westminster
elections, the SDLP asked
voters to make us stronger to
help us deliver our vision of a
better way to a better Ireland.
Since then, we have worked to
deliver on what we were elected
to do.
Although we have been held
back by suspension from taking
forward our plans on all
important bread and butter
issues, we have nonetheless
succeeded in delivering on key
planks of our agenda.
The SDLP has been:
• Winning on the North South agenda;
• Delivering on policing;
• Exposing the truth onwater charges;
• Defending the Agreement;
• Leading the campaign against MI5;
• Holding out for power-sharing;
• Safeguarding human rights;
• Preventing cover ups;
• Winning the argument on guns; and
• Keeping pressure on loyalistparamilitaries.
“The words which come quickest to
mind when writing about the SDLP
are decency, courage and tenacity…
Over the long barren years when
there was little hope, or little to
hope for, the SDLP kept faith with
its democratic message… And in
Drapier’s view, that endurance is
going to see it through the next
30 years as well. ”
Drapier, Irish Times
Winning on
North South
The SDLP is convinced that this islandcan be transformed through NorthSouth cooperation to the benefit ofnationalists and unionists alike.
At the time of the last election, we weregravely concerned that the North Southagenda was on go slow due tosuspension. Other parties were doinglittle to challenge this – for example, theSinn Fein/DUP ComprehensiveAgreement did not offer a single extraarea for North South cooperation orimplementation.
That’s why we launched ourNorth South Makes Sense campaign.That campaign has done muchto get the North South agendamoving again. As a result:
• Plans for all-Ireland free travel forolder people are now underway;
• The South is now investingunprecedented money in theNorth’s infrastructure through theNational Development Plan;
• The two Governments are workingon developing proposals on NorthSouth funds; and
• The Single Electricity Market is dueto open later this year.
Most importantly, it is now acceptedthat the North South agenda has tocontinue on whether or not we achievedevolution by 26 March.
The SDLP will continue to lead thecampaign on North South and work inparticular to deliver the rich rewards ofan all-Ireland economy.
Delivering
on policing
The SDLP has always argued that thebest way of delivering Patten was bygetting on the Policing Board. Recentmoves by other parties have vindicatedour position.
While others stood on the sidelines, theSDLP has been delivering Patten. Asthe report of the independent OversightCommissioner shows, over 86% ofPatten has been delivered in only yearfive of Patten’s ten year programme ofchange. As he has also found, thePolice, Policing Board and PoliceOmbudsman have done what wasasked of them.
Our achievements include:
• Collusion exposed - because theSDLP insisted that the Office of thePolice Ombudsman have the powerto investigate the past;
• Special Branch dismantled andreplaced by police intelligencestructures that “meet the bestpractice requirements of any policeforce in the world” according to theOversight Commissioner;
• Catholic levels in the regular policenow over 21% - and rising; and
• “More accountability than anypolice agency that I am aware of”in the words of Kathy O’Toole,Patten Commission member.
And we are working to deliver more -like the new police college, accessiblepolice stations and faster policeresponse times.
Delivering for You -Leading & Winning
6 Let’s Deliver Real Progress
Exposing the truth
on water charges
The SDLP has led the campaignagainst water charges and exposed the truth about the direct ruleadministration’s plans. For example,the direct rulers denied that therewould be privatisation. The SDLPexposed the truth: that the Treasurywas pressing for “greater private sectorparticipation.” 1
The SDLP has also exposed the truthabout the level of water charges.Contrary to British Governmentassurances, limits on water chargesthrough an affordability tariff are onlyplanned until 2010.
The SDLP opposed water charges inWestminster and will continue to do soin the Assembly.
“The SDLP have shown leadership
and courage for many years and
continue to do so to this day.”
Pat Rabbitte TD, Labour Party Leader
November 2005
Defending the
Agreement
The SDLP believes that the GoodFriday Agreement offers nationalistsand unionists alike the chance to worktogether as partners and as equals.
We do not believe that there is anythingwrong with the Agreement. All that iswrong is that too often parties havefailed to honour it.
That is why we have stood by theAgreement – and opposed attempts byothers to weaken its protections.It is also why we opposed the flawedComprehensive Agreement negotiatedby the DUP and Sinn Fein in 2004. AtSt Andrews we succeeded in undoinga lot of the damage done by that deal.For example:
• We have defended inclusion – andensured the abandonment of theComprehensive Agreement’sproposal for a new form ofautomatic exclusion.
• We have ensured that DUPministers cannot veto who ministersare – something that was concededto them in the ComprehensiveAgreement.
• We have cut out much red tapeon North South that was alsoconceded to the DUP in theComprehensive Agreement.
• Above all, we have ensured asunset clause – so that the DUP will not get any of the changesconceded by others to theworkings of the Agreement ifthey do not go into Governmentby 26 March 2007.
The SDLP will continue to defend theGood Friday Agreement – and work forthe restoration of its democraticinstitutions of government.
Leading the
campaign
against MI5
The SDLP has been leading thecampaign against British Governmentplans for MI5 to take over primacy forintelligence policing in the North.We have told the truth about MI5.
We have exposed their dangerous lackof accountability and the way that theywill be able to operate beyond thescrutiny of the Police Ombudsman.
We will continue to oppose the MI5takeover and campaign for the PoliceOmbudsman to be able to investigatewrongdoing by MI5 in the North.
Holding out for
power-sharing
The SDLP has stood strong for power-sharing at local government level – andopposed plans that could lead to thedominance of any one community overthe other.
Unlike Sinn Fein, we rejected the sevencouncil model – which we argued wasbad for minorities and bad for power-sharing. We did not make the mistakeof presuming that the seven councilmodel would ensure a 25% minority inevery council area and power-sharing.
There are two simple reasons for this.First, the seven council model does notensure a minimum 25% minority inmany council areas. In some, thenationalist minority would be well under20%. Second, the British Governmenthas not even given a commitment thatthere would be power-sharing evenwhere there is a 25% minority.
The SDLP will continue to hold the linefor real power-sharing, equality andpartnership in local government.
7SDLP Manifesto Assembly Elections 2007
1 Civil Service Memorandum revealed in the Water Service Judicial Review
Safeguarding human
rights and opposing
paramilitary
vigilantes
The SDLP is for restorative justice. Butwe made clear that the Government’splans in December 2005 did not go farenough – and risked creating state paidparamilitary vigilantes.
We forced David Hanson to admit thatthe Government had “got it wrong” andbring forward revised proposals.
Those revised proposals, thoughimproved, still do not go far enough –and we are still working to ensure thatpeople are protected from rough justiceand paramilitary control.
Preventing
cover ups
The SDLP succeeded in getting theBritish Government to withdraw theNorthern Ireland (Offences) Bill.
That Bill would have allowed loyalist,state and republican killers alike toavoid not only jail but even truth orthe discomfort of having to look theirvictims in the eye.
The SDLP exposed the dirty dealdone by Sinn Fein and the BritishGovernment to cover up the past andforced the withdrawal of the Bill.
We will continue to seek a better dealfor victims and oppose cover ups ofthe past.
Winning the
argument
on guns
Some said that IRA decommissioningcould never happen, would neverhappen and should never happen.
The SDLP pointed out that theAgreement said that it must happen.We also argued that the failure todecommission was only giving anti-Agreement unionists the excuse thatthey needed to hold back change. Ourargument won out. Decommissioninghappened. And the reason given?Because the failure to decommissionwas being used to hold back change.
“…I believe that the pivotal role of
the SDLP in courageously opening
political dialogue with the
republican movement must not be
cast aside. Both governments need
to recommit themselves to the
inclusive, all-party, transparent
model of negotiations envisaged
by the Good Friday Agreement.”
Enda Kenny TD, Fine Gael Leader
18 October 2006
Keeping the
pressure on loyalist
paramilitaries
While IRA decommissioning marks amajor step forward, the SDLP remainsconcerned at the failure of loyalists todecommission or end their activity.
We were the only party to object to the Northern Ireland (Offences) Billwhich would have let loyalists avoidboth truth and justice without havingdecommissioned a single bullet or ended their drug dealing and intimidation.
We were also the only major party toput pressure on the Secretary of Stateto declare the UVF ceasefire over –after they had murdered no less thanfour people.
The SDLP will keep the pressure onloyalist paramilitaries to wind up theiractivity and destroy their weapons.
Equally, we will continue to insist thatso called “dissident republicans”respect the will of all the people ofIreland by ceasing all activity anddecommissioning all weapons.
8 Let’s Deliver Real Progress
The SDLP is determined to
deliver all of the Good Friday
Agreement. Because we
believe in each and every one
of its key principles. And
because, as a truly republican
party, we stand by the will of
the Irish people, North and
South, who voted for it.
The SDLP is the only party to haveworked all the Agreement’s institutions– and a strong SDLP is essential toget the Agreement working. Left tothemselves, other parties justcannot deliver.
At the time of the Westminsterelections we promised to defend theAgreement and keep on pressure toget its democratic institutions ofgovernment restored. That is what wehave done – especially at St Andrews.
“Recent statements by Mark
Durkan…have revealed him as a
politician who is both surefooted
and determined. He will not easily
be forced to abandon the
Good Friday Agreement gains."
Irelandclick.com November 26 2002
We have kept the pressure on theproblem parties to live up to the twokey principles at the heart of the GoodFriday Agreement: an inclusive
democracy and a lawful society.
And we have succeeded in undoing alot of the damage done to the GoodFriday Agreement by the flawed SinnFein/DUP Comprehensive Agreementof 2004. For example, we have:
• defended the right of all parties tosit in the Executive in accordancewith their democratic mandate;
• ensured that the power of DUPministers to veto who otherministers could be has beenscrapped;
• got much red tape on the NorthSouth agenda removed;
• Above all, we have ensured asunset clause – so that the DUP willnot get any of the changesconceded by others to theworkings of the Agreement if theydo not go into Government by 26March 2007.
But there is more work to do:
The SDLP will:
• Stand strong for the Good FridayAgreement and seek theimmediate restoration ofits democratic institutionsof Government.
• Keep pressure on all parties torespect the commitments at theheart of the Agreement to aninclusive democracy and alawful society.
• Seek the Agreement’s full
implementation and development,
including delivery of commitmentsin the Agreement and St Andrewson:
- devolution of policingand justice;
- North/South co-operation;- human rights;- equality;- demilitarisation;- a shared future;- victims; and- the Irish language;
• Keep pressure on all paramilitarygroups to decommission all theirweapons and end all activity –including loyalists and dissidentrepublicans.
• Seek the implementation of theSDLP’s North South Makes Sense
proposals.
• Continue to undo the damageof the flawed SF/DUP
“Comprehensive Agreement.”
• Seek the removal of the DUP’s
veto on the devolution of justice
conceded by Sinn Fein in the“Comprehensive Agreement” and legislated for by the British Government in the NI(Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2006.
• Stand for good government andcontinue to oppose the DUPproposals that would causegridlock, deadlock and allow tit for
tat vetoes by different ministers.
• Ensure repeal of the Suspension
Act and an end to stop-go politics.
• Seek new partnership
arrangements between the Britishand Irish Governments in the eventthat we do not secure restorationby 26 March 2007, while stillworking for restoration.
• Oppose attempts by others to allowthe Assembly to continue past 26March 2007 if we do not achieverestoration.
“[I]n the eyes of his party and
many bystanders, the SDLP
leader has every right to call
himself the Agreement's champion.”
Fionnuala O’Connor, Irish Times
Friday 8 October 2004
Delivering theAgreement
9SDLP Manifesto Assembly Elections 2007
The SDLP believes in a United
Ireland. And we are the only
party with the vision, the standing
and the strategy to deliver unity.
We believe that all the rights,
protections, and inclusion that
nationalists have sought within
Northern Ireland while it is in the
United Kingdom, must equally
be guaranteed to unionists
within a United Ireland.
So our vision of a United Ireland
is based on equality. We are
emphatic that unity must not
be about the entrapment of a
new minority.
That is right in principle - since in aUnited Ireland we will still need to find away of sharing our society as equalsevery bit as much as we do today -and that is what the Agreement is allabout.
It is also right in practice. The bestcontext for holding and winning areferendum is when it is clear that theAgreement is fully bedded down andthat all its protections will continueregardless of the referendum’soutcome. A majority is most likely tovote for a United Ireland whenreassured that it is neither a voteagainst the Agreement nor a vote forconstitutional uncertainty.
Achieving a majority for Irish unity anytime soon will require the persuasion ofsome unionists. It will also require thereassurance of many others. Becausewe have always stood for peace andpartnership, only the SDLP canpersuade a majority in the North infavour of unity - just as we persuaded amajority of the North in favour of theGood Friday Agreement.
That is why only the SDLP can deliver aUnited Ireland.
Working towards a united
Ireland the SDLP will:
• Seek the recalling of the Forum for
Peace and Reconciliation. At thelast Forum, Sinn Féin would notsign up to the emerging consensuson how unity could be achieved. Atthis Forum we will seek theAgreement of all parties to ourvision of and strategy for unity.
• Engage in outreach with the
unionist community to persuadethem of the merits of a UnitedIreland and reassure them of theprotections that the Agreementoffers them in it.
• Seek a referendum on a United
Ireland when the Agreement’sinstitutions are operating stably andcampaign vigorously in favour of ayes vote.
Delivering aUnited Ireland
10 Let’s Deliver Real Progress
‘In a United Ireland we will still need to find a way
of sharing our society as equals every bit as much
as we do today - and that is what the Agreement
is all about.’
Reforming
Government
Under direct rule, little has been
done to tackle the legacy of under-
investment in infrastructure,
healthcare and our schools. In fact,
in many cases the situation has
worsened. In the last year Education
and Library Boards have received
significantly less funding, hurting the
children whose futures we should be
investing in.
The SDLP has pioneered the
advantages of an all-island approach
to issues such as infrastructure,
economy, health and education. The
recently published National
Development Plan provides further
detail of the benefits of a co-
ordinated approach. The NDP sets
out a major proposed framework for
all-island co-operation with
significant Irish Government
investment in North/South projects
and initiatives for the mutual benefit
of all on the island. Many of the
initiatives announced in the NDP
reflect policies from our North South
Makes Sense campaign – a result of
our intensive lobbying of
Government Ministers and
Oireachteas committees.
For four and a half years the populationof Northern Ireland has been living inthe limbo of direct rule. This has meantthat a new Executive will face manyimmediate challenges such asinvestment in infrastructure and people,ensuring sustainable governance andmeeting our commitments on climatechange. The SDLP is committed tosecuring better services not only fortoday’s generation but also for futuregenerations. We want to reverse theyears of decline by reshapinggovernment and rebuilding publicservices; investing in a future thatwe all deserve.
SDLP Goals:
Social Partnership Approach
• Ensure that an integrated approach
is adopted with regard to theimplementation of cross-cutting
strategies.
• Reshape the Programme for
Government, working withbusinesses, trade unions and thevoluntary sector on a basis of realsocial partnership to agree a fiveyear programme of priorities forGovernment for the people ofthe region.
• Reform the role and broaden
membership of the Strategic
Investment Board to includeunions and voluntary sector groupsto ensure longer-term, robustdecision making.
• Work to ensure that services
currently dependent on EU funds,
that reflect the priorities agreed bysocial partners, are in futuresupported by new mainstream
recurrent expenditure.
• Pool transferable benefits thathave been acquired through civilservice and elected representatives’travel and redistribute them tocharities (e.g. air miles).
Reforming Government
• Spend less on bureaucracy and
more on front line services (roads,nurses, schools etc.) The SDLPhas proposals to introduce thepermanent scrutiny of governmentperformance in meeting set targets,and government spending ondepartment’s running costs ratherthan on services. The SDLP willstrive to improve publicaccountability, transparency andefficiency throughout government.
• Legislate to require decentralisation
of government functions andagencies including at least 2,000jobs to towns across the Northwithin the next 5 years, targetingareas of high unemployment inorder to secure balanced regionaldevelopment (see also RegionalDevelopment section).
• Utilise the leverage of
government spending throughcriteria for awarding governmentcontracts, to achieve equality andenvironmental targets as well aseconomic regeneration.
Local Government Reform
• Secure a legal requirement for
power-sharing, ensuring crosscommunity protection inrepresentation and decisionmaking.
• Continue to oppose the seven
council model announced in theReview of Public Administration.The proposed structures will lead tothe creation of super-councils thathave an insufficient rates base tosustain them. The SDLP will workto secure a model that ensureseffective local representation, valuefor money, equality of opportunityand quality services for rate payers.
• Reform the delivery of public
services, creating opportunities forlocal ownership and delivery. Forexample, councils, voluntary bodiesor new partnerships could beinvited to bid for central governmentfunds to deliver services locally.
Delivering PublicServices, Investment& Government Reform
11SDLP Manifesto Assembly Elections 2007
Investing in Public Services
& Infrastructure
• Reconfigure the Strategic
Investment Board (see also SocialPartnership) to enhance theprofessional expertise available inconsidering funding options for allpublic-led investment projects.
• Release under-utilised public
land and assets and secure thefurther release of military bases togenerate economic and socialdividends for the whole community.
• Establish new ‘not for profit’ modelsfor investment in the development ofbetter public services.
• Following the launch of the NDPensure that a number of all-island
funds are created including:
- Strategic Capital Funds tosupport infrastructure andcapital spending. Our proposalswould require each jurisdiction tocontribute to dedicated North-South funds for part of suchspending, taking account ofregional imbalance. The fundswould be deployed through jointplanning and spending toachieve shared benefits. Thefunds would be similar to theExecutive Programme Fund, buton an island-wide basis.
- Services, Community &
Enterprise Funds forprogrammes and servicesrather than capital investmentwhich will help counter thedecline in European funding.
• Promote greater co-operation andinformation exchange between theComptrollers and Auditiors general onthe island, with a view to public servicesin each jurisdiction given the similarity ofchallenges faced in delivering effiency inservices North and South.
Revenue Regulator
People are rightly aggrieved by the bigrates increases imposed in recent yearsand the impact of water charges tocome.
Ratepayers – both householders andbusinesses – have cause to worryabout even more excessive demandsbeing made on them in the future.
• The Treasury will be pressing theAssembly for higher rates and willput the squeeze on reliefs includingthe “affordability tariff” introducedfor water.
• The RPA’s purported savings areunlikely to be realised, the newcouncils might not get the extraresources to match their newresponsibilities and some councilswill have much weaker rates basesall adding up to “Super-Rates Bills”from the Super-Councils.
• The Policing Precept is designed toimpose another band of rates ontop of everything else.
• Future revaluations could be usedto hugely increase the rates yieldrather than just redistribute theexisting burden.
The SDLP promises to guard against
all these factors in the Assembly, the
Executive and in Councils. But weare also offering strong, long-termprotection of ratepayers’ interests in theform of a Revenue Regulator.
This independent office would be awatchdog against excessive rates
increases and other charges beinglevied on householders and
businesses. It would effectively have“stop and search” powers on plansand actions by regional and central
government that are imposing costson ratepayers. It will have power toinvestigate and cap not just specificcharges by the Assembly, departmentsor Councils but their cumulative impacton households and businesses.
In the role of “Payers’ Champion” thisoffice would work with the ConsumerCouncil to ensure that people are onlyasked for a fair contribution for goodservices. It would also work with theAudit Office
- to encourage cost restraint
within local and regional
government;
- to improve transparency andreliability of estimates with rates
or other revenue implications; and
- to ensure justification for any
revenue demands or othercharges by regional or localgovernment.
The SDLP proposes that this office willalso review the equity and efficacy of
relief measures.
As an independent office it wouldprepare reports for the Assembly
including one during the budget cycle.In order to give Assembly weight to itswork we envisage the office engagingwith a dedicated Assembly Committeemodelled on the Public AccountsCommittee or, given its close work withthe Audit Office, the PAC itself.
12 Let’s Deliver Real Progress
Policing Precept
The SDLP is opposed to theintroduction of a policing precept
and would fully expect centralgovernment to continue to meet itsobligations to cover the costs ofimplementing the Patten reforms, whichare so central to political progress andthe future stability of Northern Ireland.The SDLP stress that a key issue in
the devolution in justice and policing
will be the adequacy of the budget
transfer from the NIO to the
Assembly. The Treasury will try toshort-change Northern Ireland andforce the Assembly to levy a heavypolicing precept on the rates. TheSDLP has been the most vocal partyagainst this future risk to ratepayers.
Water
The failure of other parties to agree hasallowed direct rulers the opportunity topush through the Treasury agenda ofintroducing water charges. The SDLPhas been consistent in its opposition
to new water charges as we alreadypay for water through our rates and weshould not be forced to pay twice. Inthe short term we will do what we canto reverse the damage that thislegislation has caused and the waythat this new company has beenestablished. Such an obligation wouldrequire the same commitment andclarity from other parties. In the longterm the SDLP will mitigate againstprivatisation of our Water Service.
• Within the next Assemblyscrutinise and review the water
reform process in terms offairness, affordability and
sustainability, with a view tolegislating for restoration of thetransparent link between rates andwater, for which the Barnett formuladoes not make provision;
• Oppose any plans to privatise
the water service;
• Modernise the water service
and improve water quality;
• Review other options for the statusand structure of the Water
Service including mutualisation;
• Upgrade the sewage system to
meet EU and modernenvironmental standards; and
• Develop a modern and
streamlined procurement process
for all major capital and structuralmaintenance contracts in order toensure increased accountability andtransparency, providing better valuefor the public.
THE SDLP WILL CONTINUE
TO OPPOSE SEPARATE WATER
CHARGES AND WILL RESIST
PRESSURES FOR PRIVATISATION
OF THE WATER SERVICE
Rates
The SDLP has clear concerns about thenew rating system and in the Assemblywill work to secure:
• A fairer system which is based onability to pay;
• Provide relief for students in theform of student financial support
packages rather than provide reliefto landlords;
• Lobby for extra finances for the
support package for older people
with particular attention to singlepensioner households;
• The extension of transitional relief
beyond the three years if the ratingsystem has not been reviewed bythen;
• Disability relief that is not
dependent on home adaptations;
• A revenue regulator to act as a‘ratepayer’s champion (see above);
• A transparency mechanism to
monitor where savings are being
achieved e.g. the Audit Officeoverseeing the Review of PublicAdministration; and
• Create two high-powered
Assembly committees styled onthe cross-cutting Public AccountsCommittee. One to challengedepartments on the cost ofgovernmental administrative
expenditure and one to focus onpolicy delivery and performance.
13SDLP Manifesto Assembly Elections 2007
The Review of Public
Administration is a big
challenge to Northern Ireland’s
public services and throughout
the review speculation and
expectation have been high.
This provides an opportunity
to reshape Northern Ireland’s
public services in the best
interests of the patient.
We must ensure that the 5
Health Trusts relate effectively
to the relevant council areas
and we must ensure that all
service users have equal
access to their appropriate
trust. It is evident that mixing
public and private health care
undermines the National Health
Service. Everyone has a right to
the best health care under the
National Health Service. While
people have the right to choose
private health care we must
ensure that it is not at the
expense of the NHS.
The SDLP is committed to a well-resourced National Health Service, with excellent and efficient healthcare,delivered free at the point of needwithout reference to ability to pay. It is imperative that the RPA deliversorganisational change that will improvethe quality and speed of patients’ care.The benefits of better organisation inour hospitals could be seen mostclearly in more available beds, moreefficient A&E departments and moreappropriate staff in frontline services.
Within an island of 6 million people itmakes sense to share expertise andequipment. The SDLP is committed toimproved cross border arrangementsregarding acute hospitals and GP outof hours services.
SDLP Goals:
Investment
• The SDLP is committed to ensuringa well-resourced health service
where money is spent moreefficiently and effectively.
• Dedicate additional resources intoprevention and treatment of cancer,
heart disease, stroke andrespiratory disease, among the largest causes of mortality in Northern Ireland.
Review of Public
Administration
• Use the RPA to cut bureaucracy
and ensure that all savings aredirected to front line services andtackling waiting lists.
Waiting Lists
• Priority must be given to cutting
waiting lists. We need firm limitsfor waiting times in every specialitywith investment in diagnosticequipment and staff.
Health Promotion
• The SDLP views a positive health
agenda as key to reducing demandon our health service. We need totackle challenging lifestyles byencouraging people to adopthealthier lifestyle choices e.g. stopsmoking, reduce alcoholconsumption, eat a better diet andexercise more. We support groups likethe Healthy Living Centres who aregetting this message through to hardto reach groups in the community.
Health Inequalities
The SDLP acknowledges that ourhealth is affected by a series of widerdeterminants such as environment,education and poverty.
• Improve the health of those worst-off in society by widening access
to services in schools, workplacesand the community.
• Co-ordinate approaches from the Department of Health SocialServices & Public Safety and theOffice of First Minister & DeputyFirst Minister and other relevantdepartments to ensure action on
anti-poverty measures that willhelp reduce health inequalities.
• Support community development
approaches and professionalnetworks involving people workingin nursing, environmental health andhealth promotion north and south ofthe border that will meet localhealth needs, improve people’shealth and tackle health inequalities.
Primary Care
• Over 90% of the care we receive isdelivered at primary level in thecommunity through GPs and otherallied professionals. The SDLP willwork to secure a well-resourced
primary care-led service deliveredthrough real partnership betweenGPs and other health workers inorder to reduce demands on acuteservices.
DeliveringQuality Healthcare
14 Let’s Deliver Real Progress
Hospitals
• Co-ordinated strategy that willenable hospital staff and other
health care workers to work in anenvironment free from fear of
attack.
• Recruit and retain staff as requiredand encourage modern, flexible
work practices that will keeppersonnel working in the NHS.
• Provide additional care packages,
step down care and the expansionof rehabilitation services to ensurethat people regain theirindependence after a hospital stay.
• Better management and simplechanges in working practice toensure major improvements in bed
availability by tackling inappropriateadmissions, and poor anticipation ofneed e.g. in a winter crisis.
Healthcare Acquired Infection
It is totally unacceptable that vulnerableill people go into hospital with the hopeof getting better, but pick up apreventable infectious disease thatcontributes to further ill health.
• Improve basic hygiene and
cleaning standards which will beconstantly monitored.
• Provide highly visible hand
washing facilities on hospitalwards for patients, staff and visitors.
• Integrate hygiene and cleaning
services back into hospital
management and explore newways of fighting healthcare-acquiredinfection such as MRSA.
• Even though the occupancy bedturnover is increasing rapidly thereneeds to be strict adherence to
hygiene standards.
Access to Services
• Principles of equality and ruralproofing must be adhered to solocal hospitals across the North willdeliver consistently high qualityhealth care. In all rural areas it is
essential to have the retention of
the ability to assess trauma
patients and stabilise them beforethey are safely transported to thetrauma centre.
• Given the poor road infrastructure insome rural areas it is vital to have afully resourced ambulance service
with adequate paramedic andtechnician provision.
• Ensure the delivery of services for
at risk, hard to reach and isolated
groups and communities e.g. thedelivery of tailored men’s healthprogrammes. Primary care servicesare especially important in ruralareas from the GP service to thecommunity groups e.g. NI RuralWomen’s Network.
• Ensure that local needs are
addressed while providing
consistently high quality care.
It is unacceptable that certaintreatments and clinical drugs areavailable in some trust areas andnot in others.
• Wider access to National Health
Service dentistry in all areas andincreased training places for dentalhygienists and nurses as well as animproved working environment fordental care staff in the NHS.
Mental Health
The SDLP believes that good mentalhealth is imperative to an individual’sgeneral well being.
• Provide the necessary funds
to implement in full therecommendations of the Bamford
Review of Mental Health and
Learning Disabilities and the
Suicide Prevention Strategy,
addressing the chronic lack of childand adult mental health services asa matter of urgency
• Advance island wide co-operation
in mental health services
providing better services for adultand child psychiatry.
• Develop an all-Ireland approach,which would include an all Ireland
Forum on Mental Health, tosuicide prevention, co-ordinatingapproaches and resources toreduce the alarming number ofsuicides on the island.
Nursing and Personal Care for
Older People
Older people should receive highquality health care and support whichshould be free at the point of use.
• During devolution the SDLPsecured funds to introduce freenursing care; the SDLP continuesto support the Royal Commission
proposals on free personal care
and will continue to work towardsthis goal.
15SDLP Manifesto Assembly Elections 2007
‘The SDLP is committed to a well-resourced
National Health Service, with excellent and efficient
healthcare, delivered free at the point of need.’
Access to Clinically
Effective Drugs
• Work to ensure access to
clinically effective drugs (whenappropriate) that enhance quality oflife, particularly in relation toconditions such as Alzheimer’s
disease, Arthritis and Multiple
Sclerosis.
• Develop a strategy for these
conditions so people with theseillnesses can identify the keyelements that they should be able toexpect from their health service.
Valuing Carers
• Increased support for carers with
greater access to advocacy andinformation services
• Access to suitable respite
provision for the individual beingcared for.
• Provision of services that promote
good health and reduce thenegative impact of caring on carers’health.
Disability
• Provide a co-ordinated cross
departmental approach so thatpeople with physical and mentalhealth issues have all the resourcesthey require to lead a full andsatisfying life.
Autism
The SDLP believes that earlyintervention and early diagnosis is keyin dealing with this developmentaldisability.
• Ensure that a comprehensive
cross-departmental strategy isimplemented to secure the securityand human rights of people withautism.
Tackling Drug and
Alcohol Addiction
Increasing usage of alcohol and drugaddiction cause major problems for oursociety.
• Secure additional resources forthe implementation of the Drug and
Alcohol strategies and adequatelyresource public awarenesscampaigns on binge drinking.
16 Let’s Deliver Real Progress
The present time is one of
uncertainty in which politics
and political bargaining are
threatening to take priority over
our children’s future. The SDLP
supports positive education
reforms but will protect schools
and communities from arbitrary
school closures. The education
system is under immense
pressure with declining pupil
numbers and post primary
arrangements.
The SDLP views a high quality
education as a human right.
Schools should be allowed to
retain their ethos, whether that
be state, integrated or faith-
based and the SDLP supports
the right of parents to choose
what environment their child is
educated within.
We want to deliver an agenda forprogress which is transparent andgives confidence to parents andteachers about the shape of thepost-primary education system.We brought this debate to the heartof Westminster.
The SDLP has a proven track recordon education. Our engagement withteachers unions and parentsassociations has given voice to thosemost informed about the pressuresand potential for progress in today’seducation system.
SDLP Goals:Education Reform
• Implement the findings of theCostello Report affording allchildren the right to unrestrainedaccess to wide ranging educationand not be stigmatised by earlyexperiences of rejection.
• Invest in educational reforms thatwill develop well-balanced andhighly skilled citizens of the future.
• Ensure the end of academic
selection by opposing efforts touse new pupil profiles and
Computer Adaptive Testing as
academic selection by the back
door and ensure profiles aredesigned to achieve their objectiveto help parents make an informeddecision about their child’seducational future.
• Develop all-ability, co-educational
school system based on theavailability of a common curriculumand a wide spectrum of choice suitedto each pupil’s particular needs.
• Replace A-Levels with a broader
Post-16 curriculum that wouldoffer all young people wider careeroptions and life pathway choices.
• Develop an agreed future
Sustainable Schools’ Policy
through collaboration between theMinister for Education andeducation providers, which servesthe community and upholdsparental choice with attention to theBain Independent Strategic Reviewof Education.
• Invest in a safe and comprehensive
school transport system that willprovide for equal rights to ‘home toschool transport’ for all pupilsparticularly those in rural areas.
Acknowledging Special Needs
• Ensure effective implementation
of the Special Educational NeedsOrder to enable children with adisability to attend mainstreamsecondary, primary and pre-schoolsif desired.
• Oppose cuts in education
spending that would see areduction in funding for SENservices rather than an increase asexperienced in England and Wales.The bureaucracy involved insecuring SEN should be cut, notthe funding of services.
• Support the development of
increased teacher-training and
classroom support in mainstreamschools to ensure that theenrolment of children with adisability works in the interests ofchild, teacher and other pupils.
• Support the introduction of an
Autism Act for Northern Ireland
to help ensure that children withautism spectrum disorders receivethe services they need throughoutlife. Also, advance the opening ofthe Centre of Excellence for Autismat Middletown in County Armagh.
• Invest in improved services for
young adults with learning
disabilities (post 19), to connecthealth and employment withtraining provision and making betteruse of existing facilities.
Delivering QualityEducation for All
17SDLP Manifesto Assembly Elections 2007
Investing in Early Years
& Primary Education
• Invest in and develop integrated
early years care for 0-6 year olds
incorporating the complete range ofservices including breakfast clubs,educational provision, child careand after school clubs, 2 yearsfunded pre-school access for thosewho need it and investment inChildren’s Centres as a means oftackling child poverty anddisadvantage.
• Implement the Foundation Stage
Primary Curriculum and the Play
Policy for Northern Ireland
alongside a strategy to createphysical environments for youngchildren which meets theirdevelopmental needs.
• Invest in the training, registration
and professional development ofthe workforce dealing with earlyyears provision through the deliveryof a Transformation Fundemphasising recruitment andworking conditions so as toovercome low levels of pay.
• Develop an effective literacy
strategy through promotion of astructured language frameworkbased on the model describingknowledge, understandings andskills appropriate at each yearfrom Primary 1 to Year 10.
• Promote plans to explore thepossibility of introducing modern
languages at primary school anddevise a coherent language strategyto prepare our children for fullparticipation in a global economyof the future.
• Ensure the effective implementationof a schools’ policy to supportethnic-minority children who haveEnglish as an additional language toensure that all children reach theirfull developmental potential.
Irish Medium Education
• Build on commitments in the GoodFriday Agreement to Irish Medium(IM) Education through theestablishment of a 10 year
development fund.
• Increase funding for the Comhairlena Gaelscolaíochta to supportparents to develop IM Educationthrough preschool, primary and
post-primary education.
• Ensure oversight and delivery of the10 year plan to establish a networkof Irish Medium post-primaryprovision in key locations initiativeby the establishment of an IMsatellite of Coláste Feirste inCookstown.
Citizenship
• Support the Young Enterprise
Fund designed to strengthen linksbetween schools and businesses towork with schools in devising anactive citizenship programme thatwill complement the citizenshipcurriculum.
• Build on the success of existingschemes, to promote an awarenessof social responsibility,
participation and the beneficialuse of leisure time among youngpeople.
• Include personal budgeting,
financial awareness & consumer
rights within the citizenshipagenda.
Supporting the profession,
managing change
• Invest in support for teachers,
prioritising health and well-beingissues for our teachingprofessionals through effectiveimplementation of the CurranReport Part II proposals forimproved working conditions.
• Secure fair pay for teaching
professionals by restoring payparity with England and Wales andseek the inclusion of NorthernIreland in the terms of the legislationprotecting teachers in cases of falseallegations.
• Increase funding to colleges in theNorth to teach and examine theIrish language teaching qualificationto remove barriers to the
movement of teachers betweenthe North and the South of Ireland.
• Develop a cross-border General
Teaching Council to develop acoherent approach to teacherqualifications, superannuationentitlements and the movement oftrained professionals betweenjurisdictions.
• Ensure that change is managed inpartnership with teachers, parentsand governors, supported by thedevelopment of a North-South
Consortium to deliver a coherentand integrated approach to School,Youth and Teacher exchanges.
18 Let’s Deliver Real Progress
The island of Ireland must
recognise and react to the
challenges presented by
globalisation. In the North there
has been a legacy of
underinvestment in our
infrastructure and we have
become too reliant on the public
sector. It is imperative that the
Assembly address the direct
rule era of neglect and develop
local solutions that will attract
foreign direct investment,
promote private sector growth
and value the work of small to
medium sized businesses.
The Comprehensive Study on an all-Island economy and the NationalDevelopment Plan demonstrate howNorth-South collaboration can producebenefits for all people on the Island ofIreland. The SDLP has embraced thisvision and has developed policies thatwill enhance the competitiveness andgrowth of economies North and South.The NDP offers unprecedentedopportunities in terms of co-operationon infrastructure improvements,research & development and innovation“these projects and initiatives willbenefit the entire island of Ireland…they will benefit the entire communityin Northern Ireland on the basis ofsound economic principles andequality” 2. The SDLP will work tocreate the political stability that isrequired to make Northern Ireland anattractive place to invest in.
“SDLP economic plan may cure
North's malaise. The document's
range of vision is unprecedented.”
Marc Coleman, Economics Editor, Irish
Times, 13 February 2006, following the
launch of ‘North South Makes Sense’
SDLP Goals:Economy
• Continue to press for a single all-
Ireland corporation tax regime at
12.5%.
• Place a cap on industrial rates
with a menu of reliefs or
exemptions to take into accountareas of high unemployment.
• Establish targets for economic
growth, job creation and all-
Ireland business co-operation
and resource a proper strategy toachieve this.
• Establish an all-Ireland economic
policy unit under the auspices ofthe North-South Ministerial Council.
• Develop a North-South strategy to
maximise overseas investment.
• Create a new “Enterprise Growth
Fund” comprising a loan fund andequity fund to work together toincrease the number of businessstart ups, promote social economyenterprises and also to enhance theall-island business co-operationmodel.
• Implement IBEC-CBI Joint BusinessCouncil’s 20 key actions foreconomic co-operation andinternational business.
• Extend the brief of InterTradeIreland
to include the development ofoverseas investment opportunities.InterTradeIreland has successfullypioneered innovative programmessuch as Fusion and Expertise Irelandwhich have created trade andbusiness development networksacross the island. InterTradeIrelandtogether with Invest Northern Irelandand the IDA, should develop acommon strategy to attractinvestment from overseas,promoting the island as a whole andworking with individual companies totailor specific packages to help themtake advantage of separate andshared strengths of the differentregimes North and South.
• Establish a Cross-Border
Economic Development Zone topromote development in the Border,Midland and Western Region andthe western counties of NorthernIreland.
• Work with Enterprise Agencies witha view to increasing measures to
enable those from low income
backgrounds with sound businessproposals to become self
employed (see also Employment& Learning).
Delivering EconomicGrowth & Jobs
19SDLP Manifesto Assembly Elections 2007
2 National Development Plan 2007-2013 TransformingIreland a Better Quality of Life for All
Research & Development
• Establish an all-Ireland research
fund to develop capacity in targetsectors and help maximise thecommercial potential of research asquickly as possible. Linking HigherEducation institutions with businessto provide a ‘mix and match’service.
• Commission economic research
bodies North and South to worktogether to produce proposals forfurther all-Ireland co-operation anddevelopment in social andeconomic policy.
• Seek a new tax relief and rate reliefon an offset basis against spendingon Research & Development
Communications
• Eliminate broadband blackspots
that still exist throughout rural areasin the North. Unlimited availability ofbroadband is essential if rural areasare to become viable locations forcompetitive businesses.Telecommunications should bedeveloped on an all-Island basis inline with priorities set out in theNDP. (See also Rural Development).
• Support competition to bring
down the price of broadband.
• Create broadband capability of
8Mbps across the North anddevelop a very high speedcommunications infrastructure toencourage inward investment,particularly from the financialservices sector.
• Continue to work withgovernments, regulators andoperators to secure standard andaffordable national rates for
mobile phone calls whether
they cross the border or not.
Tourism
Tourism Ireland has successfullymarketed the island of Ireland abroadresulting in a 7% increase in visitornumbers despite an adverse globalenvironment.
• Build on the success of TourismIreland by facilitating greater
co-operation between Tourist
Boards North and South
developing practical approachessuch as the integration of websites,such benefits would include anall-Island accommodation
booking system.
• Enhance the tourism marketing
budget to maximise tourismpotential of the island.
• Greater cross-border co-operation
to attract world-class events suchas the World Rally Championship.
Biotechnology
• We are committed to fully exploitingthe considerable potential thatcurrently lies untapped withinuniversities and the health service.We believe that biotechnology canoffer one of the best areas forpotential growth and there needs tobe initial financial pump-priming
of biotechnology opportunities.The SDLP in government wouldestablish a biotechnology council
to drive this agenda forward.
Small Medium Sized Business
• Work to ensure that labour law
policy takes into account theparticular needs of small and
medium sized businesses andthat clear guidance is providedfor employers.
• Include entrepreneurial skills inthe school curriculum.
• Increase provision of workplace
based training packages
particularly to target skills deficitsand up-skill the existing workforce.
20 Let’s Deliver Real Progress
Many SDLP gains during
devolution in the area of
employment and skills have
been eroded since the return
to direct rule. During the
lifetime of the Assembly, SDLP
Ministers delivered innovative
policies aimed at tackling
unemployment, improving
essential skills, providing free
courses at Further Education
colleges as well as providing
improved financial support
including the reintroduction of
grants for third level students.
Evidence shows that many
school leavers are being
deterred from entering third
level education by fears of
significant debt following the
introduction of top-up fees.
The SDLP views employment
as a key route out of poverty
which is why we must develop
affordable and sustainable
childcare policies that will allow
many economically inactive
people to return to the
workplace.
We will work to ensure that adulteducation acts as a means of personalfulfillment, as well as a way ofaddressing skills needs. The SDLP willcontinue to work to attract high-valuejobs in particular. We must learn fromthe economic successes of the Southand match investment plans,particularly in the areas of researchand development.
SDLP Goals:Protecting Workers
• Campaign for a Regional Pension
Protection Fund to address theneeds of those whose employers maynot have sufficient reserves puttingthem at risk of poverty in the futuredue to insufficient pension provision.
• Ensure dedicated funding toimplement the recommendationsand targets of the new Anti-Poverty
strategy, particularly in the area ofchildcare, and focusing on loneparents and areas of greatest need.The SDLP will fight to protect theRight to Work of everyone equally.
• Deliver a cross-departmental
strategy to augment protection and
awareness of the rights of Migrant
Workers, as outlined by the HumanRights Commission in the recent‘Migrant Workers Advice Guide.’
• Campaign for the UK governmentto sign the UN Convention on the
Rights of Migrant Workers.
• Remove tax barriers imposed oncross-border workers – those livingon one side of the border andworking on the other – includingimplementing the recommendationson the Study of Obstacles to Mobility.
Employability and Tackling
Unemployment
• Deliver programmes to match theskills of the unemployed and
economically inactive to theneeds of the flourishing economy.
• Continue the progress made onovercoming the barriers toemployment, using innovativestrategic measures under theguidance of the Taskforce on
Employability and Long-Term
unemployment.
Adult Illiteracy and
Innumeracy
• Raise awareness of the manysuccessful and effectiveprogrammes run in Adult Education,and work to remove the stigma
attached to adult illiteracy, toencourage high take-up andcontribute to breaking thepoverty cycle.
• Eradicate adult illiteracy andinnumeracy by 2015 through aproperly funded essential skillsprogramme.
Student Support
• Secure an independent review
into the system of tuition fees andits impact on student numbers.
• Secure an additional Core Funding
Package to widen access toeducation for families on lowincomes. The SDLP is committedto respecting the Right to Educationin this way.
• Dedicate specific extra funding for
mature students, students with
disabilities and students with
dependents.
• Continue to oppose tuition top-up
fees, and while they are still
enforced, campaign for a ten-
year cap. In the past year alone,there has been a 16.7% drop inapplications for third leveleducation. This is over twice thedecline experienced in England.
• Introduce Career Development
Loans in the North.
• Lobby for the removal of the upper
age limit on student loans toensure that lifelong learningopportunities are extended to all.
Delivering Investmentin Workers & Skills
21SDLP Manifesto Assembly Elections 2007
Further Education
• Carefully monitor the new super-colleges on the delivery of further
and community education to thelocal community.
• In light of the review of FE services,ensure an effective delivery of
those skills in demand from our
economy. Encourage efficient andeffective cooperation between thesix super-colleges, and otherdepartments where necessary, to provide the highest level ofeducation possible.
• Ensure proper funding for communityeducation programmes particularlyin areas of social disadvantage.
• Enable and properly fund FE
colleges, to enhance students’educational experience throughauthentic, robust vocationalexperience.
• Encourage efficient partnership
among colleges, business sectorand voluntary sector groups topromote social inclusion andeconomic development and makeFE services available to all.
• Develop greater flexibility forcolleges to offer e-learning,
currently only provided as an‘add-on’ service for studentsalready registered to attendclasses in person.
• New arrangements put in place bythe FE Review must stillacknowledge the vital social
inclusion role of less vocational
courses and the fact that they canoften be an important steppingstone towards courses providingjob-skills.
• Ensure that schemes such as Invest NI’s Knowledge Transfer
Programme are made moreaccessible to local companies.
• Provide FE lecturers with parity ofpay with school teachers.
Higher Education
• Establish an all-Island Higher
Education Outreach programmemobilising expertise and experienceto assist Higher Education indeveloping countries and tomutually benefit from sharedexperience.
• Build on the work of the BusinessAlliance to create an all-Island
Research Alliance based on theGeorgia Research Alliance to workwith colleges and other institutionsto operate a ‘mix and match’service with businesses, maximisingthe economic potential of newresearch as quickly as possible.
• Encourage the Higher Educationsystem and business to maximise
applications for the European
Research Area and in the
European Research Framework
Programme. Increasedinvestment in technology isessential for our economic future.
• Promote greater accountability in
Higher Education institutions, interms of planning, development,policy, equity of access andtransparency, in the context ofrespect for academic freedom and institutional autonomy.
Widening Horizons
• Acknowledge the community
sector as a valuable service
provider and grant mainstreamfunding on a multi-annual basis topromote long-term planning andsustainability.
• Fast-track moves to end
discriminatory rules restricting
eligibility for key civil service
posts to UK nationals only.
• Compile a comprehensive
database of all training provision
to be made available to localtraining and employment agencies,schools and colleges.
22 Let’s Deliver Real Progress
Communities in the North want
the rule of law – and safer
communities. That’s why the
SDLP has been working on the
Policing Board, District Policing
Partnerships and Community
Safety Partnerships.
And we are delivering Patten. As theOversight Commissioner has said,there has been “excellent progress” inimplementing Patten, with over 86%implemented in just year five of a tenyear programme of change.
Achievements include:
• Collusion exposed - because theSDLP insisted that the Office of thePolice Ombudsman have the powerto investigate the past;
• Special Branch dismantled andreplaced by police intelligencestructures that “meet the bestpractice requirements of any policeforce in the world” according to theOversight Commissioner;
• Progress to a more representativeservice – with Catholic levels in theregular police now over 21%,women accounting for over 1/3 ofappointees and unprecedentednumbers from minority ethniccommunities applying to join; and
• “More accountability than anypolice agency that I am aware of” in the words of Kathy O’Toole,Patten Commission member.
While other parties deliveredthemselves on policing, the SDLPdelivered Patten. But our work is notdone – and more is to come. This isour agenda for law, justice and safety.
The Rule of Law
• The SDLP believes that everybodyis equal before the law and thatneither the state nor paramilitariesshould be above the law.
• We will continue to demand that allparties and paramilitaries acceptthe rule of law.
“Unionists, loyalists and republicans
should urgently support the effort
the SDLP is making to force the
British government to ensure the
Police Ombudsman, the Human
Rights Commission, the Policing
Board and other arms of the
oversight community are provided
with the right and the means to hold
the security service publicly to
account just as rigorously as they
do the PSNI.”
Chris Ryder, Belfast Telegraph
17 January 2007
Safer Communities and
Criminal Justice
The SDLP will:
• Work for an all-Ireland sex
offenders register.
• Support the tagging of dangerous
offenders and faster, tougher
sanctions for breach of licences.
• End automatic 50% remission
for dangerous offenders.
• Seek greater use of post release
supervision and intermittent
sentences to reduce re-offending.
• Avoiding clogging prisons with finedefaulters through supervised
attendance orders.
• Ensure that suspended sentences
and deferred sentences can attachconditions requiring reparation tovictims or other activity.
• Support penalty notices for
disorder, with safeguards andbearing in mind the Scottish finesystem.
• Ensure that police officers are betterequipped with investigation skills
so that prosecutions come to courtand are upheld.
• Support best practice in designing
out crime and anti-social behaviour.
• Favour diversion over prosecution
for young offenders where appropriate.
• Support the availability of properly
regulated human rights compliant
restorative justice working with thecriminal justice system.
• Oppose partial or rough justice
through poorly regulated restorativejustice schemes.
• Ensure a multi-agency approach
to anti-social behaviour.
• Review anti-social behaviour order
legislation to ensure that these ordersare only used as a last resort, subjectto proper safeguards, and followingproper consultation with educationand social services.
• Integrate the work of CommunitySafety Partnerships (CSPs) intoDistrict Policing Partnerships (DPPs)and in the interim, seek better
coordination between them.
• Seek an overarching hate crime
strategy for the criminal justicesystem.
• Review the prison establishment,
modernise the estate and seek abalanced workforce.
Delivering SaferCommunities
23SDLP Manifesto Assembly Elections 2007
• Work to deliver proper facilities forwomen prisoners and young
offenders and provide propertreatment of those with mentalillnesses.
• Seek continued reform of Forensic
Science Northern Ireland toensure that it is fit for purpose.
• Campaign for reasons to be given
to victims when criminal charges
are dropped or not brought – as arule, not an exception.
• Seek new leadership of the
Prosecution Service, as theCriminal Justice Review envisaged.
Delivering Patten
and better policing
The SDLP will:
• Continue to get police officers out
from behind their desks and onto
the streets. Closure of policestations that don’t contribute topolicing will help.
• Hold the police to all targets against
crime set by the Policing Board.
• Ensure that the police meet localpolicing priorities through District
Policing Partnerships.
• Lead the campaign against the MI5
take over of intelligence policing andfor the Police Ombudsman to beable to investigate MI5 wrongdoing.
• Continue to push for Garda
secondments to the PSNI – as
well as lateral entry.
• Oppose the use of plastic bullets
and will seek a safe, non-lethalalternative.
• Push for vacated police and army
sites to be returned to community
use, building on Mark Durkan’s
Reinvestment and Reform Initiative.
• Work for a routinely unarmed police
service with emergency support units.
• Work to secure the long delayedPolice College and supportNorth/South training at it.
“The SDLP is to be congratulated
for not taking a rejectionist
approach and staying in there to
work to see its vision of a balanced,
credible and accountable new
police service for Northern Ireland
slowly bearing fruit.”
Irish Echo Editorial
27 November 2002
Devolving Justice
The SDLP will:
• Seek devolution of justice by theMay 2008 deadline - if not sooner.
• Push for the British Government totake away the DUP vetoes on thedevolution of justice conceded bySinn Fein in the ComprehensiveAgreement.
• Ensure no reduction in the
powers of the Policing Board and
the Police Ombudsman.
• Seek a single new Department todeal with both policing and justiceissues.
• Seek a new generation of North/South
bodies on justice including:
- an All-Ireland Criminal Assets
Bureau, with the powers of the Criminal Assets Bureau; and
- an All-Ireland Law Commission.
Normalising the North
The SDLP believes that we are allentitled to a normal society. Wewelcome progress such as thedismantling of towers in South Armagh– but are impatient for more.
We will:
• Seek the repeal of the permanent
policing powers given to the British
Army in the Justice and Security Bill.
• Campaign for an end to the“continuity Diplock Courts”
provided for in the Justice andSecurity Bill. The Criminal JusticeAct 2003 already provides sufficientsafeguards against jurorintimidation.
• Work on the Policing Board to close
or defortify intrusive and
militarised police stations, buildingon progress already achieved andcontinue to deliver accessible andacceptable police stations.
• Reduction in troop levels to 5,000and below.
• Ensure the full implementation of
Joint Declaration commitments
on normalisation.
• Oppose British Government
proposals for 90 day detention
without charge and also work forincreases of recent years to be
reversed.
“Not for the first time, in contrast to
the near-silence form the Adams
McGuinness team, it has been left to
SDLP Leader Mark Durkan to voice
civil libertarian criticism of the new
Westminster justice and security bill.
As it emerges that soldiers may stop,
search and make arrests in Northern
Ireland, unlike the rest of the UK, and
that the Human Right Commission
may investigate alleged abuse dating
only from August of this year, Sinn
Fein’s willingness to take Tony Blair’s
word about MI5’s accountability
looks ever more feeble.”
Fionnuala O’Connor Irish Times
Friday 9 February 2007
24 Let’s Deliver Real Progress
Public Safety
Public safety initiatives are spreadacross a number of governmentdepartments and agencies. That hasmeant fragmentation – and lives being lost.
The SDLP wants to:
• Create an all-Ireland Public Safety
Body to build on the successfulcollaboration on road safetyadvertising and education initiatives.
• Bring together all aspects of publicsafety under one main
government unit.
• Implement and resource thestrategies on home accident
prevention, workplace health and
road safety.
“The SDLP led the way in
supporting policing, in reforming
policing and in ensuring that the
Patten Report is being implemented.
“There are people in the SDLP,
including people in this room, who
suffered intimidation and physical
violence because they had the
determination to do the right thing
and to make a better life for their
community. I salute their courage.
They deserve our admiration.”
Taoiseach Bertie Ahern
31 January 2007
Road Safety
Over one hundred lives are lost eachyear on our roads. The SDLP wants tosee this carnage stopped.
We seek:
• Harmonise road safety measures
on the island, including thecreation of an enforceable penaltypoints system to operate regardlessof jurisdiction as well as greater co-operation on enforcement generally.
• Further collaboration between the
National Safety Council, the
Road Safety Council and their
respective government
departments particularly toaddress the high road trafficaccident rates on border roads.
• A holistic approach to road safety
involving education, enforcement
and road improvements.
• Full implementation of the NorthernIreland Road Safety Strategy.
• Reduction of the acceptable blood
alcohol levels for driving from80mg/l to 50mg/l.
• Better highlighting of accidentblack spots.
• Increased traffic calming measures
around schools, hospitals andresidential areas.
Emergency Services
The SDLP wants to:
• Ensure that rural areas are not
disadvantaged with regard toresponse times for accident andemergency services.
• Formalise and develop existing co-operation between
emergency services north andsouth to ensure a rapid and co-ordinated response to save livesin the case of major accidents.
• Support the work of the AmbulanceService by ensuring that eachambulance control centre is staffedby sufficient numbers of
paramedics and technicians
• Enforcement of legislation onlicensees against under-agedrinking, with more spot checks.
• Implementation of the Drug and
Alcohol strategy and therecommendations of “Reducing
Alcohol Related Harm”.
25SDLP Manifesto Assembly Elections 2007
During direct rule the cost of
living has rapidly increased.
The scheduled introduction
of the new rating system and
water charges will have dire
consequences for many. Rising
fuel costs mean that people
who had previously been lifted
out of poverty now face the
prospect of re-entering it. In
many parts of the North there is
quite simply no affordable
housing provision. Public
housing stock is being sold but
insufficient social housing new
builds are completed each year
to meet demand. While we
welcome the Semple Review
into affordable housing, it must
be responded to with targeted
interventions that will address
the housing shortage.
The SDLP wants to deliver anenhanced poverty strategy that will alsohelp those for whom returning to workis not a viable option. The SDLP iscommitted to developing effective andviable strategies to ensure thateveryone in Northern Ireland lives in asafe, warm and comfortable home. It is vital that we invest today in thesustainable development of homes for tomorrow.
SDLP Goals:Improving Affordability
• Call for decisive action and
implementation by the
government in response to any
effective proposals delivered bythe Semple Review of AffordableHousing. Raising the level of newbuild social housing is the first keyto dealing with the problem ofhousing affordability.
• Explore proposals for a ‘use it or
lose it’ policy on lands zoned fordevelopment. However this must beaccompanied by enhanced servicedelivery from Planning Service andother statutory agencies.
• Increase the upper threshold limit
in the Co-ownership Scheme toensure that this option continues tobe a viable strategy in the contextof rising house prices.
• Tackle problems of affordability forfirst-time buyers through sharingthe experience of programmes suchas the Affordable Housing Scheme.
• Research alternative models for
improving housing affordability.
A restored Assembly would be inthe best position to analysedemographic data.
• Release more land for social housingfrom the government land bank.
• Develop greater powers for Credit
Unions, as investors in local socialhousing projects as is the practicein England and Wales.
Quality Homes
• Address the need for sustainable
‘Lifetime Home’ standards to beincluded in Building regulations sothat planning powers can beexercised to guarantee improvedquality and building standards, andgreater attention to environmentalpriorities.
• Ensure that building regulations
for social housing developments
include the proviso that all newbuilds have the capacity to undergorenovation in the case of reducedmobility or disability, supported bythe provision of grant aids forrenovation of existing dwellings.
• Demand realistic built-in
benchmarks and rigorous
oversight of the government’s aimto provide warm, safe homes for allby 2020.
• Tackle fuel poverty to ensure that
fuel payments are improved tokeep pace with ever increasing fuelcosts.
Delivering AffordableQuality Homes
26 Let’s Deliver Real Progress
Increase Housing Stock
• Develop a new Housing Strategy
to address the urgent need forsocial-living new builds. Theimmediate need for increasedinvestment means that a newstrategy should be properly linkedto the Regional Development
Strategy and planning policy.
• Defend the right of the ruralcommunity to live in thecountryside. The SDLP iscommitted to the removal of PPS
14 and will ensure that it is replacedwith a system that is fair to rural
communities and that cherishes
the environment.
• Increase the budget to provide for ahigher target of 2,000 additional
new build dwellings in the socialrented stock per annum as well assufficient planning to address theexisting backlog of 2,000.
• Address differentials between thetwo main communities in waitingtimes for public housing, especiallyin urban areas.
• Tackle the shortage of constructionworkers on an all-Ireland basis byimproving linkages betweenjurisdictions to facilitate free and
easy movement of skilled
workers.
• Address the issue of sustainable
rural development in some of themost deprived border areas throughNorth-South co-operation oninitiatives at both local anddepartmental levels.
• Propose implementation of Section
106 as used in England, makingplanning permission for large privatedevelopments conditional upon theallocation of 10-15% of the projectto affordable housing.
• Implement proposed procurement
strategy for social housing toallow smaller building firms andhousing associations to continue toparticipate, for example, throughsupporting clusters of smallercompanies.
Effective Administration
• Address need for mixed housing
stock and well-resourcedsupported accommodation sinceowner occupation is not an optionfor everyone. Plus the need tosupport those who now ownhomes but are at risk of losing them due to financial difficulties.
• Guarantee improved co-operation
between the public and private
sectors that will produce plan-leddevelopment of high qualitydevelopments with timely andample provision of water, sewerage,energy, communications andtransport networks.
• Welcome transfer to the HousingExecutive management of theSocial Housing DevelopmentProgramme and ensure thatsufficient resources are invested
to produce an efficient and
speedy transition, allowingHousing Associations to make fulluse of their ability to channelsubstantial amounts of privatefinance into the development ofgood-quality, affordable socialhousing.
• Reject government proposals
under the RPA to transfer the
“Supporting People” function
from NIHE to Councils.
Supporting People should be runconsistently across the North bythose with relevant expertise.
27SDLP Manifesto Assembly Elections 2007
• Adjust the powers of the
Planning Service under PPS 12 toallow the zoning of land to supporthousing developments of mixedtenure, size and type, thusimplementing the RegionalDevelopment Strategy’s aim of“mixed and balanced communities.”
• Provide the Housing Executive
with first refusal on under utilised
public land for social housingbefore private developers.
• Revise the insufficient and unfairly
compiled housing growth
indicators through the RegionalDevelopment Strategy. Growthindicators must also be matched bythe allocation of additional land.
Tackling Homelessness
• Ensure effective implementation ofthe Promoting Social Inclusion
report on Homelessness.
• Make sure that the publication ofthe Homelessness Strategy is a
statutory obligation for the HousingExecutive and that the strategy isfully implemented by delivering thenecessary co-operation andresources.
• Provide comprehensive long-term
social support on educational,
financial and social issues as ameans of breaking the cycle leadingto homelessness.
• Provide assistance under theHomelessness legislation thatincorporates a statutory right to
review and right to appeal
Housing Executive decisions.
• Enhance support for homeless
teenagers and care-leavers.
Private Rentals
• Extend mandatory licensing toraise living standards and landlordaccountability.
• Protect tenants of private
landlords, through the
introduction of a requirement to
produce a written contract withset minimum terms and a newscheme where deposits are held byan independent body.
Housing Benefit
• Review the Housing Benefit
system, to prioritise fair rent levelsand streamlined procedures forassessment, payment and review of claims.
• Secure adequate annual finance
to deliver the Supporting
People Fund.
Rental Arrears &
Mortgage Debt
• Develop new guidance for social
landlords on rental arrears
management to require thepublication of procedures andintroduction of debt counselling toaddress problems quickly andprevent homelessness.
• Invest in independent agenciesequipped to provide financial adviceand devise a system to activatetimely support for those who find
themselves in difficulties.
28 Let’s Deliver Real Progress
The expanded aim of the Anti-
Poverty Strategy to work to
eradicate both poverty and
social exclusion by 2020 is more
progressive and comprehensive
than previous proposals. The
strategy fails, however, to
acknowledge the need for a
dedicated anti-poverty fund, a
vital component that the SDLP
has consistently called for. The
current proposals have also
failed to clearly map out an
effective timetable of achievable
benchmarks and oversight,
which are essential to realising
broader targets both interim and
long-term.
The SDLP has successfully
championed equality, social
justice and economic rights for
decades. We will continue to
work towards the implementation
of a more effective Anti-Poverty
Strategy that can unleash the
potential of all our people to
contribute to the building of a
prosperous economy and a fair
and inclusive society.
Breaking down barriers to employmentis not a viable route out of poverty foreveryone. The SDLP is committedto improving social inclusion for all,particularly those most at risk: children,older people, people with disabilitiesand those living in rural and isolatedhomes. Party policy has long focusedon the invaluable potential benefits ofcross-border co-operation in the areasof reconciliation and social inclusion.The prioritisation of funding anddevelopment of social inclusionstrategies within the NationalDevelopment Plan is thereforegreatly welcomed.
SDLP Goals:Tackling Poverty
• Demand further development of theAnti-poverty Strategy to ensureadequate oversight and thedesignation of realistic targets
both interim and long term.
• Create a dedicated fund to target
social need and support the Anti-Poverty Strategy, to underpin andact as a top-up fund for the‘skewing’ of resources in individualdepartments towards areas ofgreatest social need.
• Support a Ministerial-led cross-
departmental forum to oversee allaspects tackling poverty with adetailed remit stating the Forum’sexact functions, operation,composition and powers.
• Develop North-South cooperation
to promote social inclusion anderadicate poverty.
• Increase the minimum income
guarantee.
• Ensure coherence between
intrinsically linked government
strategies on tackling socialexclusion and poverty that needclear mapping of their sharedobjectives and common targets:Anti-Poverty Strategy, Investing forHealth, Neighbourhood Renewaland Fuel Poverty.
• Ensure that funding bodies are
provided with all available
research and deprivation
indicators that will allow them totarget their resources at areas ofneed and promote consolidation of applications.
Reduce Barriers to
Employment
• Extend the work of the Taskforce
on Employability and Long Term
Unemployment to tackleunemployment black-spots andaddress the issue of barriers toemployment for people withdisabilities.
• Address the shortage of
available, affordable and quality
childcare to allow parents to goback to work, particularly loneparents in areas of social need.
• Give preference to government
contractors recruiting from thepool of long-term unemployed.
• Demand greater emphasis withingovernment policy and the terms ofthe Anti-Poverty Strategy on the aimof eliminating the unemployment
differential between the twocommunities by 2012.
Debt Management
• Introduce a centrally co-ordinatedand well resourced debt adviceplan to support money and debt
advice strategies and make use ofexisting advice infrastructure andexpertise.
• Co-operate with CAB, Credit
Unions and others to put togetherthe resources necessary to protectpeople from loan sharks and assistthose with social debt problems.
• Establish a Financial Services
Authority office in Northern Ireland.
Delivering SocialInclusion
29SDLP Manifesto Assembly Elections 2007
Child Poverty
• Work to achieve the NorthernIreland-specific target to eradicate
Child Poverty by 2020 as stated inthe Anti-poverty Strategy, withadditional focus on extreme childpoverty that often falls below theradar of government anti-povertyattainment levels.
• Increase investment for the
development of Children’s
Centres in Northern Ireland at arate that matches developmentin England.
• Call for the extension of acentralised school meals
reform plan to Northern Ireland.
Older people, poverty
& social inclusion
• Support the appointment of aCommissioner for Older People.
• Increase the basic state pension
linked to a minimum incomeguarantee.
• Guarantee mainstream funding for
independent advice bodies andvoluntary sector bodies.
• Reduce the age limit for free TV
licence.
• Work to secure free personal care.
• Support voluntary and community
organisations working inpartnership with older people sothat policy is better informed andolder peoples’ needs met moreeffectively.
Fuel poverty
The eradication of fuel poverty is a vitalelement of the work to eliminate socialexclusion and to achieve a sustainablefuture for all. People in warm homesare healthier, and children in warmhomes are more likely to reach their fulldevelopment potential. Developing aneffective strategy against Fuel povertywill mean less strain on the healthservice and people will take fewerdays off work through ill-health.
Work has been done to develop aviable strategy. The SDLP recognisesthat this is a cross department remitthat involves not just DSD but also theDepartment of Health and by investingmoney in fuel poor homes will meanfewer people will suffer the physicaleffects of fuel poverty.
• Consolidate resources and authoritywithin a coherent structure so thatstrategy and planning cansystematically target those most
at risk, particularly older peopleliving in isolated rural communities.
• Commit additional resources to
provide energy efficiency
solutions for fuel poor homes inkeeping with the targets set by theFuel Poverty Strategy, to eradicatefuel poverty in vulnerable and fuelpoor households by 2010 and in allhouseholds by 2016.
• Broaden the Warm Homes criteriaso that those most vulnerable tofuel poverty can be assisted e.g.central heating to be made availableto those who don’t have anoperational heating system.
• Work to formally establish new
building standards that act to
prevent fuel poverty throughmodern installations and energyefficiency improvements.
• Incorporate renewable energy aspart of the fuel poverty solution.
• Implement good practice models
from successful and productivelocal partnerships working togetherto eradicate fuel poverty at ground level.
30 Let’s Deliver Real Progress
Social Security and
Tax Credits
• Simplify and streamline
benefit application procedures
and delivery.
• Make effective use of technology
to reduce time-consumingform-filling.
• Reform the Tax Credit system;
make award notices more readilyunderstandable, call an amnesty onover-payments as a result of InlandRevenue errors, provide clearerguidelines on how people canchallenge recovered over-paymentsand allow easy public access toinformation and support throughSocial Security offices.
• Remove the age requirement for
the DLA mobility provision toenable parents of infants with adisability to seek support.
• Develop a more user-friendly
process for oral appeal hearings.
• Offer greater assistance incompleting forms to those applyingfor Disability Living Allowance,
Assistance Allowance or
Incapacity Benefit.
• Increase the number of
independent doctors with thepower to collect correct informationat the outset of claims.
• Decrease paperwork involved in
the appeals process so as tocomplete more speedily.
• Improve the service to first-time
applicants so that, once contact ismade with the system, all relevantbenefits are identified andprocessed quickly and efficiently.
• Allocate responsibility for Carers’
Benefits to one senior member of
staff at each local office. This wouldallow flexibility to deal with benefitsfor dependants as well as benefitsfor carers themselves, and to makehome visits to those unable to leavethe house.
• Invest in and support the work of
the Citizens’ Advice Bureau,
valuing their work tackling injusticesand gaps in the system.
31SDLP Manifesto Assembly Elections 2007
‘We will continue to work towards the
implementation of a more effective
Anti-Poverty Strategy that can unleash
the potential of all our people.’
Climate change is one of the
most serious long-term threats
facing the world today. Evidence
suggests that increasing
concentrations of greenhouse
gases in the atmosphere
contribute, at least in part, to
climate change. Climate change
will have serious, wide reaching
effects on people, land, marine
and wildlife. The Stern report
has indicated that urgent action
must be taken.
The SDLP is committed to
taking action to reduce our
carbon footprint so that we can
avoid some of the worst effects
of climate change.
We must have year-on-yearenvironmental targets if we are to see meaningful change. That is whythe SDLP will press for the annualpublication of the ‘State of theEnvironment’ report. In a newAssembly the SDLP will advocate forresources and meaningful targets forthe Sustainable Development Strategyand advance the introduction of an all-Ireland Environmental ProtectionAgency. The SDLP want to furtherdevelop North South co-operation onenvironmental issues that will benefitpeople on all parts of the island.
SDLP Goals:
Climate Change
• Introduce stronger targets andpolicies to meet internationalobligations with the aim of year onyear reductions to reduce emissionsto 20% below 1990 levels by 2010,with 3% reductions annually by2050.
• Promote renewable energy
sources including wind-power,tidal power and bio-mass.
• Build on the work of theEnvironment and RenewableEnergy Fund by developing aRenewable Energy Plan for
Northern Ireland.
• Encourage micro-generation from
renewable sources by providingfinancial incentives such as ratesrebates and fee free planningapplications.
• Encourage higher energy
efficiency and the integration ofmicro renewables in new andexisting buildings.
• Plan for all public transport bus
stock to operate on bio-fuels and
incentivise farmers to grow high
energy crops locally.
• Increase investment in publictransport, encouraging thepromotion and development ofsustainable transport routes
across the North (see also RegionalDevelopment section).
Environmental Protection
• The SDLP welcomes the Review ofEnvironmental Governance and iscommitted to the establishment ofan All-Ireland Independent
Environmental Protection Agency
to improve government and privatesector accountability.
• Introduce marine legislation that willaddress the issues of pollution and
habitat protection, legislate for aspatial planning strategy that willensure the sustainability of ourseas.
• Continue to campaign for theimmediate cessation ofreprocessing and Mox production
at the Sellafield site and campaignfor the earliest possible closure ofthe whole plant.
• Increase penalties for polluters
who should be required to pay forthe damage done, as well as payfor the restoration of the habitat toits prior condition.
• Call for all multi-national companiesto commit to ‘triple bottom line
reporting’ which reports onenvironmental performance as wellas business and financialperformance in annual reports.
Delivering a SustainableEnvironment
32 Let’s Deliver Real Progress
Halting Biodiversity Loss
• Work to ensure that all importantwildlife sites in Northern Ireland aredesignated as Areas of Special
Scientific Interest (ASSIs) by 2010.
• Campaign for the provision ofappropriate resources on improvedmanagement of important wildlife sites.
• Ensure staff capacity to improve themanagement and monitoring ofASSIs.
Waste management
• Develop a waste management
strategy on the basis of North-
South co-operation, to move awayfrom landfill and maximiseopportunities to ‘reduce, reuseand recycle’.
• Establish a real waste reduction
target to stabilise waste production.
• Increase recycling targets,
with year-on-year reductions andwidespread access to recyclingfacilities, ensuring that everyhousehold has access to arecycling bin or regular multi-material kerbside collections.
• Lobby for legislative changeincluding economic incentives to
reduce, reuse and recycle, anincreased landfill tax, and landfillplans for specific materials.
• Secure an all-Ireland approach to
market recyclable material,
including exploring opportunities toadvance the development of an all-Island tissue mill.
• Build on recent progress in terms ofthe new North-South WasteEnforcement network by:
- securing effective enforcementpowers North & South;
- addressing the differential in the cost of landfill;
- improving PSNI/Garda co-operation;
- developing a waste disposalsmart card system throughoutIreland; and
- introducing tougher penalties to prevent illegal dumping.
• Examine the health and
environmental impact of energy
recovery methods includingthermal processes as an option oflast resort after opportunities forrecycling and composting havebeen exhausted.
• Legislate for a tax on plastic bags.
GM Foods
• Continue to oppose the
development of GM crops on thegrounds of inadequate reassuranceon the implications for health andthe long term transfer of modifiedgenes.
Education
• Widen children’s knowledge andoutlook by ensuring that outdoor
education is included inCitizenship classes in the newcurriculum.
Planning
• Reform the planning system toensure a strategic, co-ordinatedand design-led system.
• Replace PPS 14 with a planningsystem that is fair to rural peopleand which cherishes theenvironment.
• Improve the public consultation
system at an earlier stage tominimise formal disputes later andintroduce a right of third partyappeal for bona fide cases.
• Improve enforcement of planning
decisions and increase penaltiesfor breach.
33SDLP Manifesto Assembly Elections 2007
‘The SDLP is committed to taking action to
reduce our carbon footprint so that we can avoid
some of the worst effects of climate change.’
The failure of other parties to
end suspension has allowed
direct rule and the Treasury’s
agenda of water reform to
proceed. Despite public
opposition, unfair water
charges are scheduled for
introduction in April 2007.
Public transport continues to
be under-funded and as a result
we have become a very car
dependent society. Uncertainty
continues to surround the future
of the Belfast-Derry and the
Belfast-Larne railway lines.
The SDLP views access to a
sustainable transport system as
essential not only for social
inclusion but also to help meet
our international obligations on
carbon emissions.
It is imperative that investment is madein our public transport system to allowfor long term planning that will meetfuture needs in a sustainable way.SDLP representatives have successfullylobbied for new trains to be used onthe Belfast-Derry rail line. This hasenabled passenger figures to increaseby over 20%, demonstrating how viabletheses lines will be with significantcapital investment. The SDLP iscommitted to delivering balancedregional development across the North.
SDLP Goals:Balanced Regional
Development
• Within the next Assemblylegislate for decentralisation
of government functions andagencies including at least 2000 jobsto towns across the North, targetingareas with high unemployment.Enabling regional towns and ruralareas to derive benefits fromgovernment led investment.
• Target areas of under-developed
infrastructure with enhanced
support.
Public Transport
• Increase investment in public
transport, encouraging thepromotion and development ofsustainable transport routes acrossthe North and linking new systemsinto existing and planned crossborder networks.
• Plan for all public transport bus
stock to be converted to operateon bio-fuels.
• Develop a light rail system for theBelfast Metropolitan area.
• Provide an integrated, value for
money public transport road andrail system within public, private,
community and rural transport
providers.
• Increase frequency of bus
services with additional bus stopfacilities in rural areas.
• Upgrade the Belfast-Dublin rail
connection to ensure a morefrequent service that meets theneeds of commuters.
• Secure major capital investment
for the Belfast-Derry rail line tomake certain that the line remainsopen for future generations,including consideration to duallingthe line.
• Expand the Rural Transport Fund
and the Transport Programme for
People with Disabilities further tomeet the needs of people whocannot access mainstreamservices.
• Extend the concessionary fares
scheme to allow disabled and olderpeople who cannot access existingpublic transport to use theirconcession on other transportservices.
• Examine proposals to extend theuse of bus station facilities to
private operators.
Air & Sea
• Guarantee air access to Heathrow
airport from the North.
• Develop a sustainable aviation
strategy for the island.
• Support the viability of trust ports
and introduce measures to givethem more commercial freedom.
Delivering BalancedRegional Development
34 Let’s Deliver Real Progress
Infrastructure and Roads
• Develop a new all-Ireland
transport and infrastructure body
and develop a strategicdevelopment framework foreconomic corridors, Trans EuropeanNetworks (TENS) as well as air andseaports (see also EU affairs).
• Expand demand responsive
transport initiatives; particularlydemand responsive services suchas community taxis and rural roverbus services.
North-South
• Increased co-operation between
public transport providers, toensure improved servicesparticularly in border areas.
• Explore opportunities for cross-
border co-operation on public
transport development,
procurement and relevant grant aid.
Energy
• Ensure a fully competitive all-
island single electricity market.
• Work to reduce energy tariffs for
domestic and business customers.
• Promote renewable energy
sources including wind-power,
tidal power and bio-mass,
particularly in areas beyond thereach of the natural gas network.
• Extend the gas network so thatadditional customers can benefitfrom an alternative source ofenergy.
• Advocate recognition of the island
of Ireland as a European Energy
Zone to assist in reducing costs,meeting targets, improving planningand ensuring better regulation ofEnergy suppliers.
• Increase support for energyefficiency measures with additionalfunding for efficiency programmesthat target the vulnerable andpeople living in fuel poverty.
Water
The failure of other parties to agree hasallowed direct rulers the opportunity topush through the Treasury agenda ofintroducing water charges. The SDLPhas been consistent in its opposition
to new water charges as we alreadypay for water through our rates and weshould not be forced to pay twice. Inthe short term we will do what we canto reverse the damage that thislegislation has caused and the way thatthis new company has beenestablished. Such an obligation wouldrequire the same commitment andclarity from other parties. In the longterm the SDLP will mitigate againstprivatisation of our Water Service.
• Within the next Assemblyscrutinise and review the water
reform process in terms offairness, affordability and
sustainability, with a view tolegislating for restoration of thetransparent link between rates andwater, for which the Barnett formuladoes not make provision.
• Oppose any plans to privatise the
water service.
• Modernise the water service and
improve water quality.
• Review other options for the statusand structure of the Water Serviceincluding mutualisation.
• Upgrade the sewage system to
meet EU and modernenvironmental standards.
• Develop a modern and streamlined
procurement process for all majorcapital and structural maintenancecontracts in order to ensureincreased accountability andtransparency, providing better valuefor the public.
THE SDLP WILL CONTINUE
TO OPPOSE SEPARATE
WATER CHARGES AND WILL
RESIST PRESSURES FOR
PRIVATISATION OF THE
WATER SERVICE
35SDLP Manifesto Assembly Elections 2007
Over the past few years the
farming community has faced
unprecedented challenges.
Globalisation, the Nitrates
Directive, Cross Compliance
and Single Farm payment
regulations have brought many
farms close to the limit of
viability. We need local political
intervention to ensure that the
agricultural industry does not go
the way of manufacturing and
ship building industries here.
The recurring threat of avian influenzademonstrates the need for localministers making decisions in the bestinterests of farmers in the North, just asBrid Rodgers did in the last Executive,taking firm control of decision making inorder to prevent the devastation of afoot and mouth epidemic.
The SDLP is committed to fighting thefarmers’ corner ensuring sustainedinvestment in agricultural initiatives andschemes over the period of theComprehensive Spending Review. TheSDLP will work to deliver for farmers byregenerating the rural community anddevelop sustainable farmingcommunities.
SDLP Goals:
All-Island Strategy
• Develop an all-island agriculture
industry involving sustainedmonitoring and dedicatedresources.
• Complete an all-island Animal
Health Strategy that focuses on aneffective contingency plan and callsfor co-operation on animal by-products, and improved monitoringof restricted herds.
• Establish a new All-Ireland Food
Marketing Body to improvebranding and food labelling of localproduce intended for both the retailand food service sectors, andconduct a vigorous internationalmarketing campaign capitalising onthe green, clean image of Ireland.
• Tackle the issue of beef exports
from Northern Ireland beingstigmatised by internationalconcerns about British beef owingto UK-wide food labelling practice.
• Remove all cross-border trading
impediments, particularly thoseaffecting the sheep sector.
• Develop an All-Ireland strategy for
the reform of the Common
Fisheries Policy to secure thefuture of the Irish fishing industryand communities.
A Fair Deal for Farmers
• Represent local farmers in thestruggle to deal with EU and DARDbureaucracy.
• Cut agricultural red tape in linewith EU promises, allowing a returnto the day when farmers spendmost of their time on the farm.
• Simplification of an unnecessarilycomplicated sheep tagging
system.
• Prioritisation of the provision ofassistance to farmers working to comply with the EU Nitrates
Directive. Government grant aidmust be increased to maximise EUgrant income and achieve a RuralDevelopment Programme on thescale necessary for NorthernIreland.
• Review immediately theeffectiveness of DARD advisory
services.
• Secure entry to the Euro-zone asa key priority in raising farmincomes and ensuring a competitiveposition for Irish farmers on theEuropean market.
• Promote the growth of
co-operatives between suppliers tolarge multiples. Such collaborationwill enhance selling power.
• Promote better use of ICT toreduce paperwork.
Delivering for Agricultural& Rural Communities
36 Let’s Deliver Real Progress
Support Diversification
• Work for a fairer rates relief
package for agricultural
properties. Farmers should not bepenalised for buildings necessaryfor diversification projects,cancelling out the rewards of hardwork and innovation with heavyrates bills.
• Support farmers wishing to explorediversification projects andorganic farming, and securegovernment grants and informationservices to encourage creativity andinnovation.
• Continue increasing tailored
training opportunities for farmers,
as a means of promotinginnovation, sharing skills andgenerating farming communitynetworks.
• Develop a network of cross-border
agricultural liaison groups inborder regions which can benefitfrom shared learning exchangesand joint strategy development.
• Seek two year tax relief forBiomass development asintroduced in the South of Irelandfor rural projects and provideincentives for farmers who grow
energy crops locally.
Investing in the Future
• Promote the formulation of anEnergy Procurement Policy forPublic Buildings that use localsources of renewable energy.
• Promote the capacity of rural andfarming communities to lead theway in the development of
renewable energies such asbiomass by providing capital andsupport for such innovation.
• Work to deliver funding that willenable farmers to dispose ofplastic silage wrap free of charge
at local Council amenity sites.
• Oppose the development of GM
crops on the grounds ofinadequate reassurance andresearch on the implications forhealth and the impact of long-termtransfer of modified genes.
• Reform planning policy to enabledevelopment of rural businesses
such as agri-tourism on farms andintroduce ‘brown-field’ policies,which would enable replacement ofrun-down agricultural buildings.
• Press for higher relief barriers on
inheritance tax. Under theConacre System tax relief onagricultural property is still at anunacceptably low level imposinglarge unavoidable penalties on thenext generation of our ruralcommunities.
37SDLP Manifesto Assembly Elections 2007
Rural Development
The direct rule administration has failedin its pledge to become the championsof rural communities. Prohibitiveplanning legislation through theintroduction of Planning PolicyStatement 14 jeopardises the familyand community way of life in ruralareas. Ministers, who are notaccountable locally, have failed toensure meaningful rural proofing ofall key policy decisions.
The SDLP is committed to developingeffective joined-up government toaddress the issues that will deliversustainable rural communities.We want to develop the opportunitiesannounced in the NationalDevelopment Plan to deliver aprogressive approach that is necessaryto sustain rural communities particularlyin border areas. The SDLP will work toguarantee effective cross departmentalworking to ensure that the traditionalrural way of life is protected andenhanced.
SDLP Goals:Protecting Rural Communities
• Develop a cross cutting Rural
White Paper to focus on thepromotion of economicregeneration and social inclusionand strengthen the fabric of ourrural society.
• Implement ‘Rural Proofing’ that willensure central governmentdepartments effectively monitor theimpact of their policies on ruralcommunities.
• Strongly oppose government
plans to close rural post offices
in the coming months. The postoffice acts as a rural hub providingthe community with access topublic services information, touristinformation and the internet.
• Oppose the direct rule
moratorium on countryside
development through unfair
planning legislation PPS-14.
Replace PPS 14 with a system thatis fair to rural communities andcherishes the environment.
• Develop a viable and effective
transport system for rural areas
that is demand responsive.Inadequate mobility and access totransport is a key contributing factorto social exclusion and poverty inour rural areas, particularly amongstthe elderly, and countrycommunities must have the sameright to demand responsivetransport services as their urbancounterparts.
• Provide sufficient funding for
rural roads.
Planning for the Future
• Development of an all-Ireland
strategy aimed at optimising thepotential for tourism and
recreational hubs in our rural
areas. Exploring possibilities forregeneration of the Ulster Canal ascommitted to in the NDP couldprovide a sustainable tourist hubthat would benefit numerous ruralcommunities.
• Support the good work of existing
rural community and voluntary
organisations who promote ruraldevelopment through increasedfunding and facilities for groups byopening schools and communityhalls for their use.
• Promote economic regeneration
of the rural community throughinvestment in new innovation aswell as continued support forongoing good practice. Thenoptimise that innovation throughextensive and effective marketing.
• Establishment of a Rural
Observatory to support the roleof the new National Rural Network.This will act as a cross-sectoralforum for academics, politiciansand interest groups on rural issuesto enhance and support ruraldevelopment strategy formulation.
• Eliminate broadband blackspots
that still exist throughout rural areasin the North. Unlimited availability ofbroadband is essential if rural areasare to become viable locations forcompetitive businesses.Telecommunications can bedeveloped on an all-Island basisin line with priorities set out inthe NDP.
38 Let’s Deliver Real Progress
Tá an SDLP gníomhach ar son
na Gaeilge agus ar son Acht
spesialta leis an teanga a
chaomhnú agus a chothú. Tá sé
thar a bheith riachtanach go
mbeidh an Acht bunaithe ar
cheart Gaeilgóirí a dteanga a
úsáid sa saol phoiblí gan bac
gan deachracht.
Spriocanna an SDLP:
• Tacaíonn an SDLP le Acht Ghaeilgeatá cuimsitheach, bunaithe ar churchuige cheartasach a dhéanfaidhteanga oifigiúil den Ghaeilge agus abhronnfaidh cearta fiúntacha archainteoirí na teanga i réimsíéagsúla – na hinstitiúidi polaitiúla,an rialtas áitiuil, riar na córa, antOideachas, agus na meáinchumarsáide ina measc.
• Creideann an SDLP gurbh fhearr ibhfad dá gcuirfí an t-Acht bhfeidhmi Westminster toisc go bhfuilcumhachtaí ansin ar ghnéithetábhachtacha den tsaol póiblíabhus, cúrsaí cánach aguscraolachán ina measc, nach bhfuilúdarás ag an Tionól orthu ach atáan-tábhachtach do chearta teanganan phobail ghaelaigh.
• Gaelscoil iarbhunoideachais abheadh ina saitilít de CholáisteFeirste a bhunú ar an ChorrChríochach mar chuid de ghreasániarbhunoideachais ineochaircheantair ar fud an Tuaiscirtle linn na deich mbliana ataromhainn
• Tógáil ar na comitmintí a tugadhdon ghaelscolaíocht i gComhaontúAoine an Chéasta trí chisteforbartha deich mbliana a bhunúdon ghaelscolaíocht a chinnteoidh:
• Maoiniú leanúnach do Chomhairlena Gaelscolaíocht a thacóidh letuismitheoirí an gaeloideachas afhorbairt
- Maoiniú do Iontaobhas naGaelscolaíochta to ciste a bhunúle tacú le gaelscoileanna nua
- Maoiniú le áiseanna a fhorbairt letacú leis an Teidlíocht Oideachaisa chur i bhfeidhm san earnáilghaelscolaíochta
- Maoiniú le haghaidh foirgnimhbuan a chur ar fáil donaíscoileanna san earnáilGhaeloideachais
- Maoiniú le tacaíocht leanúnach achur ar fáil d’fhorbairt naréamhscolaíochta san earnailGhaeloideachais
- forbairt cúrsaí Gaeilge dobhunscoileanna Béarla
- oiliúint inseirbhíse leanúnach domhúinteoirí Gaeilge snascoileanna sin
- soláthar téacsleabhair,bogearraí, agus áiseanna ar linedo na scoileanna ag foirsteando chumais agus aoiseanna nandaltaí a bheas á n-úsái
- soláthar cuí do theagasc naGaeilge mar ábhar do dhaltaímeánscoile a fuair a gcuidoideachias nó cuid de trí mheánna Gaeilge
• An Ghaeilge a bheith aiteanta saBhille Ceart
• Níos mó maoinithe don chistescannánaíochta agus teilifíse
• Níos mó maoinithe d’Fhoras naGaeilge a chuideoidh leis an teangaa fhorbairt ar fud na hÉireann
• Glacadh uile-Éireann a bheith agTG4 agus RTÉ agus a dhéanamhcinnte de go mbíonn rath ar anteanga sa ré dhigiteach
Ag solátharAcht Gaeilge
39SDLP Manifesto Assembly Elections 2007
The SDLP has been at the forefront ofthe campaign for an Irish LanguageAct. We need carefully draftedlegislation to protect the rights of Irishspeakers. We will still be fighting topromote the rights of our Irish-speakingcommunity long after it is written in law.
SDLP Goals:
• Support a comprehensive Irish
Language Act founded on a rightsbased approach which will makeIrish an official language and affordworthwhile rights to Irish speakersin various aspects of public lifeincluding: the political institutions,local government, the justicesystem, education, and the media.
• Demand the passing of an Irish
Language Act at Westminster inorder that reserved powers, suchas broadcasting, will be fullycovered by the Act.
• The establishment of an Irish-
Medium (IM) post-primary
satellite of Coláiste Feirste in
Cookstown as part of a network ofIM post-primary provision in keylocations throughout the north overthe next 10 years.
• Build on the commitments made inthe Good Friday Agreement to IMeducation through theestablishment of a 10-yeardevelopment fund that will ensure:
- continued funding for Comhairlena Gaelscolaíochta to supportparents to develop IME;
- funding to allow Iontaobhas naGaelscolaíochta to set up atrust fund to support new IMeducation provision;
- funding to develop resources tosupport the EducationalEntitlement in IM post-primaryprovision;
- funding to provide permanentpremises for IM voluntarypreschool provision;
- support for the continueddevelopment of IM preschooleducation;
- development of Irish languagecourses for use in Englishmedium primary and secondaryschools;
- ongoing inservice trainingin Irish language teachingmethods for teachers isthese schools;
- the provision of textbooks,software, and on-line resourcessuitable to the ages and abilitiesof pupils in those schools; and
- adequate measures for theteaching of Irish as a subject tosecondary pupils who receivedsome or all of their primaryeducation through the mediumof Irish.
• Ensure recognition for Irish in theBill of Rights.
• Increase funding for the IrishLanguage Film and TV fund, tobuild on its impressive infancy anddevelop a durable institution topromote the Irish language.
• Secure increased funding to Forasna Gaeilge, to support an all-islandapproach to the promotion of thelanguage and culture.
• Ensure all-Island coverage of RTÉand TG4, and commit to ensure theIrish Language flourishes under theopportunities afforded bywidespread digital TV uptake.
Delivering for theIrish Language
40 Let’s Deliver Real Progress
Under direct rule, culture, arts
and leisure projects have not
been provided with adequate
support. The Arts Council
receives significantly less
money proportionately than
those in England, Scotland and
Wales and, consequently, has
been limited in the support it
can offer the sectors it serves
and in the initiatives it can take.
The SDLP recognises that
cultural and leisure activities
have much to offer our society
in its struggle for a shared
future, with richly developed
young people and a strong
sense of community. An
exploration of culture and the
arts allows for learning through
creativity and can be done so
on a shared basis between
communities.
We will develop all aspects of Irishcultural life, island-wide. We recognisethat investment in leisure opportunitiesleads to improvements in lifestyle anddiet, and as such merits governmentsupport. We have proved our capacityto negotiate this by successfullylobbying for increased funding to theSports Council and the NorthernIreland Events Company.
SDLP GoalsDevelop all-Island culture,
arts & leisure strategies.
Arts
A thriving Arts landscape offers thechance to enrich and educate, to shareand discover. Ireland has a proudartistic history, which we will respectand foster local talent.
Reverse direct rule funding cuts for thearts which have left the Arts Councilwith a substantially lower budget thanits counterparts in England, Scotlandand Wales.
• Develop a cross-departmental
strategy linking all the relevantagencies in the development andpromotion of community arts.
• Support the Northern Ireland
Theatre Initiative, and its drive tocreate a regional theatre company.
• Encourage greater investment in
community-based arts schemes,
in recognition that the employmentrate within the creative industriessector is growing faster than theUK average.
• Involve young people in
regeneration of their own areasby developing relevant culturalschemes and strategicallyharmonise development of
the arts and development
of community relations.
Sport and Leisure Activities
• Equality and inclusion are atthe core of our values, and werecognise the role sport and leisurehave to play in making these ourreality, as well as the valuable andsorely needed health benefitsthey offer.
• Ensure Northern Ireland is not
excluded from the dividend
of the 2012 London Olympic
Games.
• Invest in centres of sporting
excellence, modelled on thosecurrently flourishing in Australia, toattract and develop athletes beforeand after the games.
• Invest effectively in the promotion
of sport and leisure to offset futuresavings for the NHS that could becaused by high obesity levels.
• Recognise the potential for leisure
schemes as a tool against
community division and anti-socialbehaviour.
• Promote a 2 hour weekly
minimum time allocation on theschool curriculum for sport and
physical education.
Delivering Arts & LeisureOpportunities
41SDLP Manifesto Assembly Elections 2007
The SDLP is committed to
promoting equality and
protecting human rights.
Equality and Human Rights are
not just slogans – they are a
part of our founding philosophy.
They remain as important under
Mark Durkan as they were under
John Hume.
A lot of promises were made in theGood Friday Agreement to protectrights that had been trampled on orignored throughout the Troubles. Butmany of those promises have yet to bedelivered. The SDLP is committed tomaking these rights a reality on theground.
The Damage of Direct Rule
• Unjustifiable delay on the SingleEquality Bill.
• Toothless strategy to tackle the factthat one in three children grow up inpoverty.
• Go slow on action to tackle theunemployment differential.
SDLP Goals:
Promoting Equality
• Deliver the Single Equality Bill, toharmonise protection againstdiscrimination upwards andguarantee equality for all groups.
• Impose tougher penalties on
persistent discriminators,including exemplary damages.
• Eliminate the differential in
unemployment rates between thetwo communities by 2012.
• Vigorously oppose any dilution of
fair employment monitoring – avital protection against sectarianism.
• Ensure that the British Governmenthonours commitments to end
discriminatory rules restricting
eligibility for key civil service
posts to UK nationals only.
• Help eliminate the gap between
men’s and women’s earnings by
introducing equal pay audits.
We will minimise the burden onbusiness by timing these with fairemployment reviews.
• Address the shortcomings of theGender Equality Strategy byimplementing positive action
measures and a well-resourcedaction plan.
Delivering Equality &Human Rights
42 Let’s Deliver Real Progress
• Ensure a target of 40% women
involved in public life – we havemet this with our candidates in thiselection.
• Ensure cross-departmental
cooperation to deliver the rights
recently laid down in law for thosewith special educational needs
or a disability.
• Prohibit public authorities from
cutting back on expenditure for
children with special educational
needs.
• Deliver an effective, well-resourced
Sexual Orientation strategy,
alongside an annual action plan, topromote rights and awareness ofrights within the LGBT community.
• Develop an anti-bullying policy,including measures aimedspecifically at homophobic bullying,to be implemented in every schoolin Northern Ireland.
• Continue training for party
representatives against all formsof intolerance, including racism andhomophobia.
• Provide quality, accessible
pre-school care for traveller
children, under the newAnti-Poverty strategy.
• Ensure full development of
Section 75 of the Northern
Ireland Act by providing adequatefunding to groups involved inequality consultations.
• Develop a cross-departmental
strategy to review and address
the needs of migrant workers, tobuild on work to raise awareness ofrights and of social welfare,education and health services.
• Campaign for the UK governmentto sign the UN Convention on the
Rights of Migrant Workers.
• Oppose proposals to put Justice
and Equality into the one
department. The SDLP will notgive equality to the securocrats.
• Deliver, upon the foundation of theNorthern Ireland Strategy forChildren and Young People,effective rights protection for our
young, particularly in the area ofmental health.
• Invest in education for Travellers,so that in the medium-term alltravellers’ educational needs canbe sensitively met in the integratedsystem.
• Provide appropriateaccommodation to meet
Travellers’ needs including theprovision of transit sites.
Guaranteeing Human Rights
SDLP Goals:
• Deliver a comprehensive Bill of
Rights for Northern Ireland,
including socio-economic rights, byagreement between political partiesand civic society.
• Champion an All-Ireland Charter
of Rights to institute a unifiedcommitment to the higheststandards of rights protection.
• Provide the Human Rights
Commission with real powers of
investigation, as required by theUN’s Paris Principles, and withoutthe unnecessary limits of theJustice and Security Bill.
• Reverse the decision to export
asylum seekers and refugees to
Scotland.
• Consolidate the SDLP position asthe most informed and engagedparty on issues of human rights.
• Vindicate the human rights of
those with mental health issues
or learning disabilities and, inparticular, resolve the plight of thoseat Muckamore Abbey.
43SDLP Manifesto Assembly Elections 2007
Any party that claims to be
democratic must also stand
against intolerance and
discrimination wherever they
find it. We must learn the
value of working together and
living together. The SDLP will
strive to construct a shared and
equal society free of hate.
SDLP Goals:
• Promote shared spaces. Publicauthorities need to cooperate toensure that shared spaces canflourish – for example, police tomaintain security; councils topromote them, and transport toprovide access.
• Bring forward new legislation to givethe Community Relations Council
power to support Councils’ goodrelations work and to ensure thatmoney spent by Councils deliversreal outcomes. Councils that donot promote good relations shouldnot receive funding for that workthis should instead be administereddirectly by the CRC.
• Work to develop mixed estates,
while ensuring an equal right tohousing. In particular, the victimsof sectarian harassment and otheranti-social crimes should not beforced out of their homes andcommunities.
• Co-ordinate cross-community
activity for the young, providingopportunities for integration andcooperation between schools,community groups, youth clubs andamateur sport teams.
• Protect the public from hatethrough stronger incitement laws.
• Outlaw all sectarian or national
flags flying on public property.
Public property belongs to all of usand should not be used to offendany of us.
• Develop a strategy against hate
crime for the criminal justicesystem.
• Prevent bands, that promote hate
or use paramilitary symbols, fromparading.
• Introduce Bonfire Regulations toprotect the environment and ensurepayment if damage is caused.
• Outlaw sectarian chanting atfootball matches.
• Eliminating hate and promoting
good relations must be a cross-
community project; we must workto ensure involvement and willingparticipation from churches, politicalparties, voluntary and community-based organisations, trade unionsand employers.
• Promote Good Relations
guidelines amongst communitybased organisations andencouraging voluntary participationin Good Relations practices.
“We are all in debt to the SDLP for
its sustained commitment, through
one of the darkest periods of our
history, to a form of politics which
was resolutely anti-sectarian and
unswervingly peaceful and
democratic.”
Dick Spring TD
Former Leader Labour Party
Delivering a Shared Society
44 Let’s Deliver Real Progress
The SDLP believes that real
peace and reconciliation will
only be achieved when we
acknowledge and account
for the past and address
the suffering of victims and
survivors. Nothing less will
do if we are to leave the past
behind on a moral basis.
The SDLP is also concerned that therights and needs of victims andsurvivors are not being met. Ourproposals – set out below – aredesigned to put right this wrong.
SDLP Goals:
• Convene the Victims’ and
Survivors’ Forum. The SDLPwelcomes the commitment to aVictims’ and Survivors’ Forum. Thisis something for which we have longcampaigned. We want to see itconvened without delay. It shouldhelp ensure that the voice of victimsis no longer ignored. We also wantthe Forum to design a process fortruth, recognition and remembrancethat puts victims’ rights and interestsfirst.
• Victims’ Commissioner - TheSDLP welcomes the commitment toa permanent Victims’ Commissioner.We will work to ensure that anyCommissioner raises the profile ofvictims’ needs, promotes victims’interests and oversees the co-ordination of services and funding.
• Implement a new overarching
victims’ strategy to increase theeffectiveness of service delivery andto accommodate all practicalneeds, including properpsychotherapy services.
• Improve monetary compensation
available for victims, ensuringdecent levels, awarded on the basisof need. We do not believe that the£2,000 sought by the interimVictims Commissioner is sufficient.
• Sustainable funding of victims’
groups.
• Redistribute paramilitary criminal
assets seized by the AssetsRecovery Agency – or anysuccessor body - to help financebetter compensation and funding.
The OTR withdrawal “is a deserved
reward for the astute political and
parliamentary criticisms made of the
British legislation from all sides of
the Commons, and especially by the
Social Democratic and Labour Party.
Irish Times Editorial on withdrawal
of OTR legislation 12 January 2006
Truth and Remembrance
The SDLP has long believed in theneed for a mechanism for truth andremembrance for our society to moveforward.
Below is our proposal. But it is justthat – a proposal. We believe victimsand survivors themselves should havethe greatest say in shaping any truthand remembrance mechanism throughthe Victims’ and Survivors’ Forum.
SDLP goals:
• Seek a Truth Body with members ofindependent, international standing,to direct the process of truth andremembrance for all victims be theyof the state or paramilitaries.
• Task the Truth Body with compilinga register of victims, open to all, toallow those injured or bereaved tohave their story heard, formallyrecorded and held in a public archiveso that what happened to them isnever forgotten.
• Give all victims’ families the right tohave the Truth Body re-open police
files – and carry out investigations –as an alternative to the police doingso, where families want this. Victimswould also have the right to waive,or not to waive, prosecutions.
• Support a ‘Day of Reflection’ inrecognition and remembrance ofpast events.
• Continue to press for increased actionto be taken on finding the bodies of
the disappeared, ensuring thatadequate time, resources and moderntechnologies are employed.
• Keep the pressure on the BritishGovernment to hold anindependent public inquiry into themurder of Pat Finucane, as theypromised they would do.
• Work to ensure that the publicinquiries into the murders of Robert
Hamill, Rosemary Nelson and Billy
Wright are not impeded and havethe resources they need.
• Support all families seeking justice– as we have done for the Conlonfamily, the families of the GuildfordFour and the Maguire Seven, forfamilies like those of RosemaryNelson, Robert Hamill, RobertMcCartney, David McLain, JohnTourney, Peter McBride and manymany others.
• Oppose any dirty deal like theNorthern Ireland (Offences) Bill thatwould deny victims the prospect ofboth truth and justice.
Delivering Real Progressfor Victims & Survivors
45SDLP Manifesto Assembly Elections 2007
The SDLP has a strong
commitment to international
co-operation, to rise to the
challenges that do not respect
borders. The inequality
experienced by so many
demands that a new principle
of Trade Justice become
international practice.
Only an informed and
coordinated response will
begin to meet such a challenge.
On international issues, the
SDLP has shown itself to be
a voice of reason and respect.
The SDLP has demonstrated itscommitment to putting Northern Irelandon a global stage for the right reasons.The legacy of conflict in NorthernIreland can be of great value in thepursuit of peace elsewhere throughsharing of experiences and frameworksfor reconciliation. The SDLP hasshown itself to be engaged and activeon international affairs.
SDLP Goals:
• Continue to support a united
response from the International
Community to Iraq. We supportthe immediate restoration of waterand electricity services. The SDLPhave maintained their opposition tothe war in Iraq.
• Lobby for the full implementation
of the G8 commitments to
increase volume, quality and
effectiveness of aid and that thesignatories ensure that debtcancellation be genuinely additionalto aid flows.
• Campaign to ensure that theEconomic Partnership
Agreements with African,
Caribbean and Pacific countries
support each countries’development programmes andstrategies for tackling poverty.
• Lobby for accelerated progress inthe Millennium Development
Goals, with particular focus on:
- Achieving Universal PrimaryEducation;
- Ensuring EnvironmentalSustainability; and
- Combating HIV/Aids, Malariaand other diseases.
• Support the work of the All-Party
Group on International
Development under the newdevolved Assembly, and create aninternational network of expertise toallow, for example, soil experts fromthe North to assist with irrigationin Somalia.
• Promote Fair Trade goods and increased reliance on suchproducts by public bodies andencourage the establishment of FairTrade towns and cities across thenorth following Belfast’s example.
• Reverse the decision to exportasylum seekers and refugees toScotland.
• Deliver a cross-departmental
strategy to augment protection
and awareness of the rights of
Migrant Workers.
• Campaign for the UK governmentto sign the UN Convention on the
Rights of Migrant Workers.
• Campaign vehemently against
the use of our airports to
facilitate Extraordinary Rendition
and oppose proposals to extendthis practice to Knock airport.
• The SDLP believes that the onlypath for resolving the conflict isan end to Israeli occupation, self-
determination for the Palestinian
people and the full implementation
of international law.
Delivering onInternational Affairs
46 Let’s Deliver Real Progress
E.U. Affairs
The SDLP is the only major andconsistent advocate of EU membershipamongst all the parties in the North.Membership has paid handsomedividends in the South, and in a time ofpeace investment into Northern Irelandhas never been more attractive. TheSDLP has long been dedicated tobringing our strengths and skills to theattention of Europe.
• Campaign for a coordinated
approach to tackle the Darfur
crisis. Ensure the U.N. offers firmand long-term assistance, andclosely monitors progress.
• Continue the campaign for entry
to the Euro zone. In the interim wewill work to promote the use of theEuro by businesses, individuals andpublic services.
• The population of the EU nowstands at 500 million. We willdeliver innovative strategies to
capitalise on the opportunities
this presents.
• Highlight the success andmodernity of our agri-food sector,and remove red tape to allow it toflourish and be accessible acrossEurope (see also Agriculturesection).
• Ensure effective distribution of
the Peace III fund.
• Campaign for the development ofTrans-European Networks in
Transport, Energy and
Telecommunications, to establishfirmly the North at the heart ofEurope.
• Work for a coordinated European
approach to encourage Fair
Trade conditions apply to as manycontracts as possible. Developsustainable partnerships in thedeveloping world, while promotinglocal produce where possible.
47SDLP Manifesto Assembly Elections 2007
48 Let’s Deliver Real Progress
Published by SDLP Head Office 121 Ormeau Road, Belfast BT7 1SH.Printed by Commercial Graphics Limited, Conlig, Co Down.