Leicester academic comments on report of Commons select committee inquiry into public parks
A Leicester academic from the Department of History, Politics and International Relations has commented on the House of Commons Public Parks Inquiry which was released this week.
Dr Katy Layton-Jones published her report ‘Uncertain Prospects: Public parks in the age of austerity’, which analysed the effects of austerity cuts on parks, during the inquiry.
Speaking on the inquiry, Dr Layton-Jones said: “The committee conceded wholeheartedly that our parks are in crisis. It's a fair assessment and they're right, and they don't pull any punches.â€
The ‘Uncertain Prospects’ report for the Gardens Trust found that, since 2010, austerity cuts have marked the beginning of the end of a parks renaissance which was started by the launch of the Heritage Lottery Fund's urban parks programme in 1996.
The report recommended park maintenance should be made a statutory duty for local authorities, identifying baseline funding requirements for all parks, that local authorities should be enabled to introduce local taxation to fund parks and a recognition that for the vast majority of public parks there is no alternative to local authority ownership and management.
Dr Layton-Jones said: “The general trend is clear. As a result of austerity cuts we will have more parks in declining condition in 2020 than we did in 1998.
“That is a terrible indictment of what Government policy is doing to parks.â€