Government Must Come Clean Over Post Office Hit List

25 Apr 2007

Ahead of the local elections on May 3rd, Liberal Democrats in Chesterfield are asking, "Will the government publish their post offices hit list?"

The government's consultation has finished and a list has been compiled of post offices threatened with closure. The government were supposed to respond to their consultation by the end of March, but have shelved their response until after the local elections.

Liberal Democrats in Chesterfield have been campaigning to save local post offices from closure and recently launched a petition against post office closures in Hollingwood. Paul Holmes, Liberal Democrat MP for Chesterfield said: "The government should publish their post office hit list before the local elections on May 3rd.

This is the last chance people in Chesterfield will have to tell the government what they think of their plans to close at least 2,500 post offices across the country.

We do not know which post offices in Chesterfield are under threat as the government has not published their post office hit list.

Local people should have the chance to voice their concerns over the government's closure programme.

One in three post offices in Chesterfield and Staveley have already closed under the Labour Government. Nationally the Labour Government have shut down 4000 post offices and now Gordon Brown's policies will close another 2500.

The Conservative party are no better. Under their watch they let 3,500 post offices close and 10 years later they still don't have a plan to stop more local post offices closing.

Between them, Labour and the Conservatives will soon have closed at least 10,000 post offices.

We are the only party that has a plan to stop the post office closures and bring new business to the post office and services to local communities."

The Liberal Democrats are the only party to have a plan to save the Post Office.

The Liberal Democrat five-point plan would see:

£2 billion invested in post office branches;

New branches opening where needed;

Government services continuing to be available at the Post Office;

The Post Office freed from Royal Mail restrictions to let it develop new business;

A new legal requirement for the Government to maintain the local Post Office network.

8 post offices have closed in Chesterfield between 1999 and 2006. Under the government's plans an average of three to four more post offices per constituency will close, but no definite figures can be known until the government publish their hit list.

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