First published by: This is Money
Council Tax payers are to get a greater say over how their money is spent.
Residents will be able to vote to
axe unpopular fortnightly rubbish collections or use a 'community kitty' to
build new school playing fields. Communities Secretary Hazel Blears promised it
would herald a 'real shift' in power to neighborhoods away from centralised
state control.
But exactly a week after the
Government pledged an end to the era of spin, the plans were trailed in a
pro-Government newspaper before they were announced to MPs and the wider
public. It was claimed residents would have control over £20m of local
government funds but it later emerged the money will be spread over four
years and across ten pilot areas in England.
This means £500,000 will be in
the kitty every year, scarcely enough to buy one playing field or weekly
rubbish collections for around 40 streets. The pilot schemes will take place in
Birmingham, MoD pays its civil servants Merseyside, Lewisham, Bradford,
Salford, Sunderland, St Helens, Newcastle, Southampton and Nottinghamshire.
Miss Blears said local people
would receive training on how council budgets work. Within five years, the
powers will be extended to every local authority in the country. Residents will
be nominated to sit on panels, which will draw up suggestions for spending the
money. A shortlist will be put to every local Council Tax payer. The Minister told the Local
servants £41m in Government Association's annual conference in Birmingham
yesterday: 'Democracy should be about much more than casting a vote every few
years. 'It should be a daily activity, not an abstract theory. Local people
know the needs of their area better than anyone. This Government is delivering
a real shift in power to town halls, and ensuring town halls pass this on to
local communities.
'We want to bring devolution to
the doorstep, giving communities a direct say over how to tackle the things
that matter most to them - from improving playgrounds, to tackling litter, to
making their street safer.' Ed Cox, director of policy for the independent
Local Government Information Unit, said empowering communities with spending
had been widely adopted in South America.
He said: 'By making some aspects
of council finance a neighbourhood issue I have witnessed large community
meetings in Brazil where there is positive, proactive dialogue about local
spending priorities where councillors are recognised as the true community
champions.'
In a speech to the same
conference, Mr Cameron promised a Tory government would introduce more elected
mayors and give councils more freedom to spend their cash by ending ring-fenced
budgets. He added: 'This is a ridiculously over-centralised country and I stand
before you a convinced localist. A decentralised country, with local people in
direct control of the decisions which affect them, is a more free country.
'A Minister has announced that
she is giving people a little bit of power to spend a little bit of money. By
contrast, we would give people a lot of power to spend a lot of money. 'It is
one of the great tragedies of our politics that local government is so little
regarded by the public.' The Tories also seized on the way
the proposals were leaked to the Guardian before they were published - despite
the Prime Minister's promise that all new policies will be unveiled to voters
or Parliament first. The party's spokesman Eric Pickles said: 'It
looked for a week like government Brown was making an effort to do away with
spin but it seems like a case of old habits die hard.'
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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.