First Published by: BBC
TWIN
SUFFOLK DISTRICT COUNCILS BABERGH AND MID SUFFOLK TOOK COUNCILTAX DECISIONS YESTERDAY WHICH SET THEM ON
DIFFERENT TRACKS.
Babergh decided to increase its Council
Tax by 3.5% while Mid Suffolk
chose to freeze its demands after a lively debate. Babergh has no overall
political control and Mid Suffolk has a Conservative majority. Last year a
referendum on a full merger of the councils was lost (a majority of Babergh
voters were against). But the integration (we have had joint refuse collections
for some time) of services and administration goes ahead.
So both councils had similar advice on which to base their
decisions. After a strong debate, Mid Suffolk decided to take community
secretary Eric Pickles’s shilling. The government has offered
a one off grant, equivalent to a 2.5 per cent tax rise, this year to councils
that freeze their demands. That means that a 3.5 increase results in a 1 per
cent rise in spending power. And any rise of more than 3.5 percent would trigger a costly
referendum.
A report from the joint management board to the Executive
Committee of Mid Suffolk in January suggested that accepting the
Government’s offer could result could higher rises in the
future. Like all local government finance it is a complicated
issue, but that report puts the issues as clearly as as I have seen anywhere.
Here is the relevant section (full
report):
Earlier in the year, the Government announced its intention to
offer local authorities a grant to enable Council Tax to be frozen again in 2012/13. The
grant will again be equivalent to a 2.5% increase in Council
Tax but will only be a
one-off (whereas the 2011/12 grant is for 4 years).
Unlike 2011/12, not all councils are likely to take the grant
due to the ‘knock on’ financial implications in future years
of only receiving a one-off grant. Although the main options appear to be to
either take the grant or increase Council Tax by 2.5% (or slightly more), it is
important to understand the impacts in future years of different percentage
increases in 2012/13.
A further announcement has been made that any Council Tax
increase of more than 3.5% will be subject to a local referendum. A 2.5%
increase equates to £3.78 a year for a Band D property (3.5% = £5.29). If the
one-off Government funding is accepted, that will have the same overall impact
on the 2012/13 budget as a 2.5% Council Tax increase.
The reasons for having a Council Tax increase in 2012/13 and not accepting
the Government’s grant of £136,000 are as follows: As the Government grant
is a one-off, that amount would then have to be added to the savings that are required in 2013/14. A
2.5% increase in Council Tax just to stand still in 2013/14 would then be
needed A 5% Council Tax increase would be needed in 2013/14 or subsequent
years to ‘catch up’, but this would be subject to a local referendum, which
would be costly.
Not increasing the Council Tax by 2.5% in 2012/13 would mean that
there is a lower tax base for future years and the £136,000 is lost each and
every year in the future – unless that can be recouped through higher than
normal increases in subsequent years, either as indicated above or by gradual
year-on-year phased increases e.g. of around 0.8% a year over 3 years.
Suffolk County Council and Suffolk Coastal District Council have
also decided to freeze their taxes. But every Council Tax payer in the county faces increases
because the police authority precept is increasing by 3.75 per cent and many
town and parish councils are pushing up their shares (average rises of nearly 4
per cent in Mid Suffolk).
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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.