Town councillors worked out their official response to
controversial plans to shake up health services in Llangollen at their meeting
on Tuesday night.
Although the precise wording has yet to be worked out by the
town clerk, this will be along the lines of a suggestion from the mayor, Cllr
John Haddy, that there must be some certainty that if the Cottage Hospital
closes as proposed, the services it currently provides will continue to be
delivered locally until a planned new health centre is opened.
The closure of the hospital and its replacement with a new
health facility, possibly on the site of the derelict River Lodge just up the
road, is proposed by the Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board (BCUHB) as
part of a major programme of changes to services across the region.
The current public consultation exercise on the programme
ends on October 28.
The plan has already sparked a backlash in Llangollen and
led recently to calls for a local referendum to be held on the issue.
Last Monday evening at a public meeting hosted by
newly-formed action group Keep Llangollen Health Services (KLHS) there were
calls for a mass letter-writing campaign to oppose the loss of any local health
facilities.
The Town Council has in the past come under fire for not
playing a more active role in the issue.
As its official response to the consultation was being
discussed on Tuesday evening, these criticisms were referred to by Cllr Mike
Pugh.
Explaining that he had attended the KLHS public meeting, he
said: “There was a feeling there that there should have been more input from
the Town Council.
And Cllr Tony Baker said: “I have been asked by members of
the public why the Town Council has not been more proactive.”
The mayor replied that there had been a group who called for
a referendum under legislation that was not appropriate.
He added: “Although we advised that this was not the way
forward they decided to go ahead anyway.
“There are two problems with that – first, it put us in a
position where we could not support that and, second, the emphasis was on a
referendum rather than the health board’s proposals.
“We were proactive but there are limits to the areas in
which we can act.”
Town clerk J Gareth Thomas said: “We have been thoughtful
and diligent in the way we have taken it forward.”
Concerns were voiced by a number of councillors about the
possibility of a lengthy time gap between the hospital being closed and a new
heath centre opening.
Cllr Robert Lube said: “I accept that it is not really
economical to keep the hospital going and I like the idea of the new health
centre but I am concerned about that gap.”
And Cllr Tim Palmer said: “We must express to the health
board that while the investment is very welcome, we have to ensure that no
services are lost.”
Summing up the response to BCUHB, the mayor said: “We need
to make sure that services we already have are, as an interim measure,
guaranteed.”
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