FIRST PUBLISHED BY: LOCAL GOVERNMENT CHRONICLE
KEEP TRACK OF WHICH COUNCILS HAVE REJECTED THE GOVERNMENT’S FINANCIAL INCENTIVE TO FREEZE COUNCIL TAX NEXT YEAR
Brighton & Hove City Council, the
country’s first council to be run by the Green party, were the first to
announce they would reject the governments’ funding for a Council Tax freeze
and instead ask residents for 3.5% more next year.
Ever since the chancellor announced last
Autumn that there would be funding for a second Council Tax freeze
there have been mutterings about the financial pitfalls of the deal.
Instead of the four years of funding
offered in 2011, and which was snapped up by every council in the land, this
year’s offer is for one year only, leaving councils quickly facing a financial
cliff edge which will have to be smoothed by spending cuts/savings or an even
larger Council Tax increase
in 2013-14.
Sensing this disquiet, LGC surveyed
councils and found that as many as one in five were seriously considering
turning down the financial incentive. Soon after our survey, it emerged that
Teeside leaders had been discussing the issue and in a united front, bar
Hartlepool BC, four of them announced they would increase Council Tax by 3.5%
Nottingham and Leicester City Councils
weren’t far behind, and since then we’ve also heard from Gedling BC and
Stoke-on-Trent City Council. So far, all likely suspects as councils run
by national opposition parties, but would any Conservative and Liberal Democrat
councils take a stand and turn down their government’s not very enticing
one-year offer?
Interestingly all the Tory councils
declared so far have kept their increase below 3% while the Labour and Green
councils have opted for as large an increase as they can get without triggering
a referendum.
More councils - of all colours - are
expected to announce increases in the weeks before budgets must be set, so it
will be interesting to see whether any Tory council breaches the 3% mark.
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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.