First Published By BBC
The Council is planning to cut a total of £170m over four years
Cornwall artists fight 'disastrous plans' to cut library
hours
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Cornwall councillors have
approved £40m of cuts for the coming year and frozen Council Tax. The majority of members on the
Conservative-Independent controlled council voted to accept a one-off grant
from the government to Council Tax freeze
the tax.
The budget, set at £451.7m for
2012/2013, is the second year of a four year plan to save £170m. The Cornwall Council element
of Council Tax for a Band D property
will remain at £1,244.
Recommendations include
£700,000 to fund a Cornish Bursary to help young people stay on at college or
university.
Bus fears:
The council has also earmarked
£62m to build 4,125 new homes within the next four years, 3,000 of which will
be affordable homes to rent. The unitary authority also
plans to bring 520 empty homes back into use, improve 700 existing homes, and
adapt 2,200 homes to make them safe for older and disabled people.
Adult care and support has
also received an extra £7m.
Leader Alec Robertson said:
"It is not being done by cutting services; it is being done by doing
things differently such as delivering services in different ways, using arms
length organisations.
"We are procuring more
smartly and buying more for less. "It is about how you do
business, not what you do." Jeremy Rowe, leader of the
opposition Liberal Democrats, said details of the cuts had not been finalised,
but he feared cuts to rural bus routes. He said: "We are being
told to take a lot on trust.
"I suspect that the
cabinet themselves do not know the detail in a lot of cases. "But I think by and large
the officers of the council have put together a pretty good budget."
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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.