First Published by: BBC
Council Tax freeze splits Tories
The government's drive for a Council Tax freeze has brought
tensions with council leaders to the surface.
Tory council leaders have long been privately voicing their
exasperation and that's putting it politely - with Local
Government Secretary Eric Pickles and his handy hints and tips as to
how they should be doing their jobs.
This centres on what they would see as his overly optimistic view of their ability to maintain
essential public services in the face of dwindling finances.
The government's drive for a country-wide Council Tax freeze
next year has brought these tensions to the surface. Mr Pickles is offering councils a one-off payment -
equivalent to a 2.5% rise in their Council Tax - if they agree to a freeze for
the coming financial year.
Ministers, of course, have no power to enforce a freeze. Indeed there are few things they like talking about more
than all the decision-making powers they are returning to local communities.
Balancing act.
At the same time Mr Pickles - and his lieutenant Local Government Minister
Bob Neill - are making it quite clear that in their opinion councils
have a "moral duty" to take the money and freeze the Council Tax. Not to do so, they say, would be a "kick in the teeth
for Council Taxpayers" and to "treat the local electorate with
contempt".
So it's not a great time to be leading a Conservative
council which takes the view that it can't balance the books without putting up
Council Tax. South Hams District Council leader John Tucker is one of
many council chiefs facing new challenges
Most Tory councils are toeing the line. But authorities like Surrey
County Council and South Hams District Council in
Devon are kicking back. Surrey is implementing a 2.99% increase. So councillors
there clearly don't feel the government's 2.5 will even cover this year - let
alone the longer term.
South Hams is putting Council Tax up by just 2.5%. On the face of it, this is more puzzling: wouldn't it be
cleverer to accept the government's generous offer, give your electors a little
Council Tax holiday and then put up Council Tax the following year if you
really felt you had to?
It's not that simple, though, for councils like South Hams
or Surrey.
They clearly see Council Tax as something which - like hot
air - has an inexorable tendency to rise.
Accordingly, their financial planning is obviously based on
at least a vague presumption of cumulative increases in the years to come. South Hams' 2.5% increase will roll over automatically into
the council's base funding in the following year and the years after that.
Taking Uncle Eric's short term shilling would have thrown
things into disarray because the money simply wouldn't be there to roll over
into the next year.
A council could, in theory, simply whack up the Council Tax
the following year to fill the hole. This, though, would present a major
headache in practice. Maintaining the funding level provided by the expired
government grant would mean a 2.5% Council Tax rise just for starters.
Throw in the additional rise calculated for that year itself
(let's say another 2.5% or so for the sake of argument) and the council would
be in real trouble.
Demanding an increase of 5% or more from taxpayers at one
fell swoop would have run the risk of capping under Labour. Now, councils face an even more formidable obstacle: any
increase above 3.5% would have to be subject to a local referendum. And the government has made it clear that threshold could
change in future.
Eric Pickles reportedly told the Local
Government Association's finance conference that refusing the Council Tax freeze
money because it would not be part of the base funding in future years was a
"ludicrous argument". Not because the proposition is untrue, but because the
"whole idea" of the freeze is to get councils' financial bases down.
That would seem to leave those Tory councils with their
hearts set on year on year tax increases in direct ideological conflict with
their colleagues at Westminster. That's one of the points I put to South
Hams District Council leader John Tucker this week in the film below.
We also touched on a general feature of the government's
much-trumpeted localism agenda.
On the one hand, ministers going out of their way to bang on
about local authorities having the freedom to make the judgements they see fit.
But, on the other, making it emphatically clear what they
think those decisions should be and publicly excoriating those councils who
dare to use their freedom to disagree.
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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.