Liverpool's libraries saved from closure

Mayor Joe Anderson reverses planned cuts of £1.6 million to city's library services

Library Closure Protest
Published 10th Mar 2017
Last updated 10th Mar 2017

The Mayor of Liverpool has said that no libraries will close in the city in the next three years, after the Government announced more funding for the city's Adult Social Care budget.

Liverpool is to receive £27m for Adult Social Care as part of a £2bn programme announced in Wednesday’s budget – the same day as Liverpool city council agreed its own, which included cuts to its library service in 2018-19.

Mayor of Liverpool Joe Anderson said: “I welcome this money for Adult Social Care as we have been lobbying the government for the past four years to face up to this crisis.

“Liverpool has had to reduce spending on an unprecedented scale - £330m since 2010 and another £90m over the next three years. The Chancellor has given us a small bit of breathing space which means we can review some of the cuts we were proposing – and top of that list is our library service.

“Libraries make up the fabric of our society and play a unique role in our communities and are a fundamental building block of lifelong education. The fact that we had to look at cutting its services was genuinely heart-breaking and shows the scale of the problem which councils like Liverpool are having to address.

“I would stress this Adult Social Care funding is a one-off settlement so questions still remain about what happens beyond 2020. I’ll be straining every sinew to maintain the pressure on government to make them understand that this sticking plaster approach is now way to treat our elderly and those who work to care for them.”