Barry writes for B&K times- "Government Must Wake Up and Smell the Novocaine"

Toothache is a pain.

Before Covid it was easy to fix.

Just go along to your local friendly dentist and they would get it sorted in no time.

But since the lockdown in March we have all heard the gruesome stories of people in agony, resorting to pliers to take out their own offending teeth. Dentists have had to take stringent precautions to keep their patients and themselves safe and have simply been unable to do the same amount of work as before.

Many NHS dentists have only done 20% of their usual treatments. And emergency treatment for those in pain is having to take priority over the everyday running repairs. What this means is that anyone who needs a crown or a bridge or simply needs to get their broken dentures repaired is finding it very difficult to get the work done.

Rarely do we think about the people behind the dentist’s surgery: the Dental Laboratory technicians – but these are the people who keep us all with functioning mouths, happy smiles and able to enjoy real food with false teeth. These NHS laboratories manufacture 80% of all crowns, bridges, dentures and implants and they are now in danger of having to close down because their work stream has dried up.

At the end of August, a Department of Health Review recommend a number of packages of support for these Dental Labs but a month later nothing has happened. We should all be concerned.

Government must wake up and smell the novocaine! It is of course right and vital that dentists themselves are supported to take care of their patients through this crisis. Dentists are the front line. But no army works without its supply chain and the dental laboratories and their technicians provide the logistical backup that keeps our dentist able to provide a full service that is about more than pain relief.

Hundreds of thousands of people up and down the country rely on this Cinderella service. Budget cuts in the NHS over the past decade have already hit their sector hard. When we eventually come out of Covid there is going to be a huge backlog of denture repairs and crowns that need to be manufactured. If we do not speak up and support them now, then this skilled workforce will simply no longer be there. Dentistry as part of the NHS could well become a thing of the past.

And that will not just be a pain in the mouth, but “a pain in the proverbial” for all of us.

Barry visits Chester Zoo as Co-chair of APPG for International Conservation

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Barry went with a cross-party group of MPs to visit Chester Zoo.

Parliamentarians have demanded changes to the way Government is supporting zoos and aquariums through the coronavirus pandemic, in a forceful letter signed by 11 MPs and peers. The letter, which you can find below, organised by the APPG for Zoos and Aquariums and the APPG for International Conservation, is concerned that the financial devastation of the pandemic will hit international conservation efforts at a time Government is pushing forward a ‘world-leading’ environmental agenda.

Barry said: “The IPBES report could not be clearer. Biodiversity is declining at a faster rate than at any time in human history. The life support mechanisms upon which human life on earth depend are being unplugged one by one. Conservation has never been more important and zoos are at the forefront of that work. COVID has disrupted all this and government must act now to keep these vital conservation programmes alive.”

On the recent visit to Chester Zoo, members of the APPGs learned about the Zoo’s many conservation projects, from Asian songbirds to black rhino.

BIAZA members normally receive over 35 million visitors each year, the majority of which falls between spring and summer. This essential income goes towards the high cost of animal care and crucial wildlife conservation.  

Theo Clarke MP, Co-chair of the APPG for International Conservation said: “I appreciate that the zoos and aquariums sector is facing a very difficult situation due to Covid-19. I am asking everyone to support their local zoos by visiting them. By doing this, not only will you enjoy a Covid-secure day out but at the same time you can make a real difference to the future of wildlife across the world.” 

Barry visits students at Kingsbury High School

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Barry visited Kingsbury High School where he was taken on a tour of the Lower School and introduced to KHS’s new Article 28 project. He was shown around the classrooms that will become the home for those students needing the extra support. 

Barry then met a group of student school council speakers, who did a number of presentations for him (whilst always maintaining appropriate social distance, as you can see in the above picture). These included an introduction to UNICEF Rights Respecting School, their students’ travel plans and the importance of their safety while doing so, as well as talking to Barry about what lockdown meant for them.”

The visit was concluded by a Q&A where Barry took on questions from the students.

Barry speaks in Westminster Hall debate on 'No Recourse to Public Funds'

Barry has given an impassioned speech in the recent Westminster Hall debate, where he spoke of the desperate situation of two separate constituents that have contacted him in recent months.

One constituent told Barry of the pain for her and her children watching her previously healthy 45 year old husband die from COVID. Barry’s office urgently contacted the Home Office and appealed to them to provide her with Recourse to Public Funds. Thankfully, it was granted, however, it took the Home Office five weeks to respond and grant her this. A five week wait for a grieving family with a child in destitution is quite frankly unacceptable. The worry is- this was one of the good outcomes.

Barry then spoke of a second constituent who had contacted him in January. He is a single father with a 7 year old daughter and No Recourse to Public Funds. He has been trying to establish his right to remain in the UK. Barry admits that without help of Brent Council, he doesn’t know what would’ve happened to that constituent and his daughter.

Barry challenged the Secretary of State to answer these questions:

  • How he expects a single parent during this pandemic to pay rent and look after a child with No Recourse to Public Funds.

  • How the unemployed are going to survive for the 5 weeks wait from the Home Office for a change in condition.

Barry finished his speech by pressing the Secretary of State to commit to determining any application for a change of condition within 48 hours of receiving it. Those at risk of destitution simply cannot wait any longer.

You can see his speech in full below.

Barry writes for LabourList- "Government must step up. Boulder Barry-ers alone cannot protect our seas"

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No doubt there are some people in parliament who can think of no better place to have Barry Gardiner deposited than 100 feet under the North Sea. Some may even be in my own party! But I wear it as a badge of pride that a boulder with my name on it, weighing half a tonne, will cause a nasty shock to anyone trawling for fish in one of our most important marine protected areas (MPAs): the Dogger Bank.

The Dogger Bank is the largest sandbank in UK waters. It provides a habitat for a wide range of species living both on and within the seabed, which are a vital food source for whales, porpoises, dolphins, cod and seabirds like puffins. The protected feature in the Dogger Bank MPA is the seabed itself, but strangely it is not being protected. The government allows scallop dredgers and beam trawlers to plough up the very feature it is supposed to have protected.

Bottom trawling catches demersal species that live on or close to the seabed, but it is a particularly destructive fishing method. It not only removes vast quantities of fish, but also scrapes and ploughs the seabed, disrupting sediment, destroying habitat and killing large numbers of vital bottom-dwelling organisms. That is why Greenpeace has deposited a number of what I like to call ‘boulder Barry-ers’ to disrupt this devastating mode of fishing.

Our seas and oceans are facing more pressures than at any time in human history. Last year, just 59% of UK fish stocks were fished at or below sustainable levels. Turn that figure round and you get a sense of the damage being done: 41% of all fish stocks were being overfished in a way that will lead to the decline and eventual collapse of that species. That is 10% worse than it was just the year before.

The scale of some of these gargantuan vessels is awesome. Over 100 metres in length, they use nets over a mile long with a gaping mouth 200-300 metres wide. These ‘super trawlers’ spent about 3,000 hours fishing in MPAs all around the UK last year – the equivalent of 123 days. The biggest super trawler on the planet, the Annelies Ilena, has been fishing in our supposed protected areas. It can carry approximately 10,000 tonnes – the weight of the Eiffel Tower – in fish. Is it any wonder that only five out of the UK’s 73 MPAs are making any progress towards their conservation target?

Governments love big announcements: ‘championing this initiative’, ‘world-beating that record’. And this government is no exception. Boasting of establishing the Global Ocean Alliance and championing the creation of marine sanctuaries covering 30% of the world’s oceans by 2030. This is blue not just as a political colour but a branded ‘blue-belt’ initiative of designated MPAs around all our overseas territories. It is great. It is big. It is sexy. I support it – but the key word is protected.

It is not enough to simply designate MPAs. The whole point is to protect them. Rhetoric breaks down when one of our most important, Dogger Bank, is being ravaged not only by super trawlers but also by sandeel fisheries, scallop dredging, electric pulse fishing and pair trawling. The reality is that this government is failing to protect our most important and vulnerable marine ecosystems. The answer is simple: ban destructive and industrial fishing vessels from all UK MPAs. That ban, backed up by fisheries protection vessels and the Royal Navy, would be an important first step towards establishing a coherent network of marine sanctuaries. Enforcement will be the test of the rhetoric.

Such a ban would help boost our inshore fishing industry. One square mile of fully protected ocean produces five times the amount of fish than an equivalent unprotected area. That’s because fish in protected areas grow to maturity, which means they have higher reproductive outputs. The orange roughy fish in the North East Atlantic may take 30 years to mature and, as it grows older and larger, its fecundity shoots up. At just over a kilo, a young female will produce just over 30,000 eggs, but an older five kilo fish will produce 170,000. And because fish and their eggs disperse out from the MPA to surrounding areas, this has a positive impact on fishery yields outside the protected areas themselves. This spillover effect to other local waters would help revitalise fish stocks, benefitting small-scale, low-impact fishers who see increases to their catch.

Without government action it is up to non-governmental organisations such as Greenpeace to act. But there is only so much they can do. This year they will carefully plant ‘boulder Barry-ers’ to protect 47 square miles of MPAs – an important token – but a token in an ocean. It is government that must take action, raising the reality to the rhetoric so that an MPA becomes exactly what it says: protected. Until that time, the boulders are the only thing truly protecting these precious marine ecosystems.

Barry speaks in Democracy Forum webinar on 'Understanding China’s challenge to the international order’

Barry was very pleased to send in a pre-recorded video to the most recent Democracy Forum webinar. He would have loved to have been able to speak in person but unfortunately this webinar clashed with his select committee duties. 

The Democracy Forum continues to have very important discussions with experts in their field. This webinar was focused on ‘Understanding China’s challenge to the international order’.  

You can see Barry’s pre-recorded contribution below:

Barry speaks at Labour Connects on the Green Revolution

Barry’s contribution to Labour conference this year came in the form of this discussion on the Green Revolution post-Covid, hosted by Openreach.

In his first contribution, Barry talks about the importance of investment into new infrastructure, embedding long term resilient behaviour, and a fair and equitable transition from the old economy to the new.

Barry then speaks about targets, incentives and infrastructure for electric vehicles.

You can watch his contributions below:

Barry writes to Matt Hancock to demand assurances for testing capacity in Brent

Barry has written to Matt Hancock to seek assurances on 3 very important matters for Brent :

  • Seek assurance that the London Borough of Brent will be given priority access to testing given its history of vulnerable and deprived communities being so badly affected by the first pandemic wave.

  • Ask for confirmation that household-level information and contact tracing data will be available to Brent Council in real time?

  • Ask for confirmation that additional testing capacity and targeted testing hubs will be available within our vulnerable communities and that local residents can access tests at those hubs so that my constituents are not compelled to travel to distant areas and risk spreading the virus?

You can read Barry’s letter below.

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