Two little gems emerged this week midst all
the political shenanigans.
The first was inevitable in one form or another. Anyone who believed purchasing an electric
car was saving the planet and would be rewarded for it by not paying fuel duty
and getting 100+ mpg to boot for threepence was being naive, to put it
mildly.
In fact, it could end up costing you a whole
lot more than the equivalent petrol-engined car at current prices. A study sponsored
by government has emerged, suggesting ways to claw back the lost fuel duty when
these cars finally sell in numbers. Anyone who thought the zero road tax and
all the other goodies would go on into the sunset of motoring is now having their eyes peeled as suggestions emerge of toll roads in place of tax, or probably alongside
? Or mileage charges depending on when and where you drive, allied to city
restrictions and zone charging. Running a car is going to be a lot more
expensive than now. Add in the current disparity in prices for electric
vehicles and many will not bother and maybe that is what they want regards
cities.
There is no silver lining with this as you
can’t strangle car use without having to make up the shortfall in revenue in
another way. Going green has always been a con and whilst the spaghetti
knitters will be cheering from the sidelines the man on the Clapham Omnibus, if
he can get on one, will suffer the costs and inconvenience. Why do the hordes of
gold plated civil servants that are put onto these schemes always come up with
something that pleases a few and costs everyone else?
On a similar track is the announcement the
supermarkets are starting to roll out “surge pricing.” This little wheeze
involves electronic labelling that can
change the indicated price in twenty seconds. Ostensibly this is to
reduce waste, yesss, and in their words……
“This would let them react to events and
remove or introduce offers increasing the ice cream price during a heat wave
for example.”
Needless to say “concerns” have been voiced
from consumer groups that ultimately most shoppers will pay more. A 3% increase
in profit margins is possible with this system, so once again those that work
and have limited time to shop and have to do so in lunch hours and similar times will
not only have to put up with the crush at those times but pay more for the
privilege.
And just to round off the lightening of
wallets by stealth - or diktat, in the government's case - the same supermarkets
that now control the bulk of petrol retailing want to use the same surge
pricing for their petrol forecourts. So the commuter who has to use his car
will pay more for the privilege of using roads that as a taxpayer he has
already paid for; will, if he uses a petrol station during the same commute
periods, pay more for his petrol; and his wife, shopping during the lunch hour at
work or on the way home, will pay more for their food.
A spokesman for Sainsbury’s said, “We always
look at ways that technology can help us improve the shopping experience for
our customers.”
And just to make you shuffle nearer to the
cliff edge, the energy companies would also like to charge you according to
demand with cheaper prices when nobody uses energy and the reverse when we do. Looking at all that, the only small chink of light is your very expensive
electric car can be charged at night at a cheaper rate, though I am sure the
government or energy company can fix that in no time at all.
Oh, and I just noticed the BMA want GPs to
shut doors amid safety fears. Another spokesman said, “There has to be a limit
on what you can do in a day, it is not about money it is about patient safety,”
so shutting the doors when someone needs to see a doctor is a safety measure. That’s one way of looking at it, and of course there is only so much anyone can
do in a day, but that day in the case of my surgery and most others is in effect a half day: the majority of GPs working there are only working part-time.
They want to able to declare a black alert
as hospitals do when not capable of providing a safe and sustainable service
and in order to protect patients (they are thinking of us, really) practices
are enabled to self-declare a safety alert and direct patients to alternative
service providers such as a "local hub", a walk-in centre or A&E. I have no
idea what a local hub is but our one and only walk-in centre is overwhelmed, their doctors are working full-time and overtime; and the A&E department will be overjoyed
that GPs are wanting to direct even more
patients their way than they do now.
This particular problem in the NHS is not
about money. It is about someone somewhere insisting that the contracts that
enable most GPs to go part time not work evenings and week ends are changed. The Blair government cock up , if that’s what it was, is costing us dearly - regardless of their independent business status GPs are paid by the taxpayer
but you wouldn’t think so sometimes.
On my last visit to my surgery's web site
they made great play of the fact ”they are a self care surgery.” Intrigued, I
clicked the link and found they are advising everyone to help themselves in all
ways possible: “Seek advice from your pharmacist, phone the NHS helpline, query
whether your doctor's appointment is really necessary and try to treat yourself
if you believe you only have a common ailment.”Do you get from that they
perhaps are not wanting to have to deal with patients at all? Along with the
fact that getting an appointment has reached the stage you have either cured
yourself, self cared (!)or died waiting.
Perhaps shutting the doors is the
sensible thing to do. Not a lot of people would notice.