Published by The Guardian
The communities
secretary, Eric Pickles, has announced that any local authority planning to
increase Council Tax by 3.5% or more will be required to hold a referendum
asking local people to endorse the move. Pickles described the
move as a radical extension of direct democracy, but it is also likely to deter
many councils from risking the judgment of their council-tax-payers.
The government says
it has set aside £675m for a second year of council tax freezes. The Department
for Communities and Local Government said if councils agree to the freeze,
local taxpayers living in an average band D home in England could save up to
£72 a year in council tax.
The power to trigger
referendums was contained in the Localism Act and in some ways replaces the
power to impose caps. Parliament will be asked to endorse the final vote threshold
before councils set their annual budgets in the spring. Pickles said: “Since
1997 people have seen their council tax more than double, pushing typical bills
to £120 a month.
“We are getting to
grips with this with another council tax freeze deal and by radically extending
direct democracy over big bill increases with a new local tax-lock.
“Councils have a
moral obligation to help hardworking families and pensioners with the cost of
living. “If they want to hike
taxes on their local residents above 3.5% they’ll now need to get a direct
democratic mandate to do it.”
The government also
set out its provisional second-year funding settlement for English local
authorities as announced a year ago. Councils will have an average spending
power of £2,186 per household at their disposal. £27.8bn will be
distributed in 2012-13 in a fair and sustainable way across all parts of the
country, the department said.
For example, the
average spending power per household in Hackney will be £3,050, compared with
£1,537 in Windsor and Maidenhead, reflecting the fairness of the settlement, it
said. Overall, the average
spending power reduction for councils in 2012-13 is expected to be limited to
just 3.3%, or £75 per household, less than last year’s comparable figure of
4.5%.
“The second year of
our fair and sustainable settlement will mean councils still have on average
£2,186 for every household they serve, enough to safeguard the most vulnerable,
protect taxpayers’ interests and the frontline services they rely on,” Pickles said.
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I support Council Tax Rebates in assisting home owners and tenants in getting a rebate on their over-paid Council Tax.