First published by: This is Money
A CYNICAL MOVE BY COUNCILS TO RAISE TAX BY 3.49 PER CENT
This means that many families
will need to find £50 extra to pay their bill as the move will not trigger a
local vote on proposals. Dozens of town halls are planning a ‘cynical’
rise in their Council Tax bills
this year in defiance of the Government. Many of the planned rises are
being pitched at levels just below a new trigger for a local
referendum. Under rules brought in at the end of last year, any authority
trying to push through a hike of more than 3.5 per cent must have it approved
by voters.
Most households will have to find
an extra £40 to £50 on top of the average £1,200 a year bill in England. Communities
Secretary Eric
Pickles said: ‘We are seeing a number of councils acting as referendum
dodgers who quite cynically are raising Council
Tax by 3.49 per cent in a naked move to dodge the public
vote. ‘These councils are treating the electorate with contempt. They
should have the courage to put their hikes to the vote and justify the tax
rises. Instead they are running for cover. ‘Councillors have a moral duty
to sign up to keep down the cost of living. Anything less is a kick in the
teeth to hard-working, decent taxpayers.’
Last year virtually every
authority observed a freeze in Council
Tax demanded by the Coalition government as it started its austerity
drive. They have been asked to do the same again next year, and have once again
been offered extra Treasury funds, this time of £650million. Several
councils look set to return to the same practices that saw the average Council Tax bill almost double in
the preceding decade.
Among those planning 3.5 per cent
increases are Green-led Brighton and Hove and Labour councils in Chesterfield,
Darlington, Leicester, Middlesbrough, Preston, Redcar & Cleveland and
Stockton-on-Tees. Stoke-on-Trent is proposing a 3.49 per cent rise. A number of
Tory-led authorities are also planning increases close to the referendum
threshold.
Surrey is aiming for 2.99 per
cent while Cambridgeshire county council and the district councils of East
Cambridgeshire and Peterborough are looking for 2.95 per cent. So far 18
councils have said they want increases up to the referendum threshold. Some 181
have so far signed up to Mr Pickles’s pledge
of a Council Tax freeze.
The remaining councils – half of the national total – are yet to declare.
Councils must set their bills by
the middle of next month in time to land on doormats at the beginning of April.
Many are struggling following the Council
Tax freeze last year and insist the £650million on offer is too
little. But Emma Boon of the TaxPayers’ Alliance said: ‘It is astonishing
that some local authorities have the cheek not only to hike Council Tax, but to do it just below the
threshold at which they will need to hold a referendum.
‘With the Government
offering financial help to councils to freeze the rates this year there
is no excuse for these town hall tyrants to put extra pressure on already
struggling households.’ However, Sir Merrick Cockell, chairman of the
Local Government Association, the umbrella body for councils, said: ‘Times are
tough and councils across the country want to help families by keeping Council Tax down. ‘All local
authorities froze Council Tax in
this financial year and the vast majority plan to freeze it again next
year. ‘The extra government support will help them do that, but this is a
one-off grant that won’t be there in 2013 or beyond.’
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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.