From 1 April, 129 of 137 councils in England which have revealed their budgets are growing council tax by the utmost 4.99% allowed, or have a particular dispensation to go greater.
Only eight are sticking under the utmost threshold, although not by a lot. The lowest rises are Hartlepool at 2.99% and Rotherham at 3.5%.
Use the under desk to see how a lot council tax is growing in your space, and what this implies for council tax payments for folks dwelling in Band D properties.
The information applies to councils with accountability for social care.
This time final yr, round one in three of the identical councils raised tax at or above 4.99% – in comparison with greater than 9 in ten this yr.
This additionally means a big variety of households might be experiencing a second consecutive yr of will increase at this stage.
The County Councils Network (CCN), which collected this information, is an area authorities organisation representing 2,600 councillors throughout England.
They say rises are in response to growing value pressures, together with demand for care companies.
The authorities offered £600m in extra funding for councils final month, however there may be nonetheless an general deficit in funding.
Vice-chair of the organisation Cllr Sam Corcoran says: “County authorities still face a £1.1bn budget shortfall over the next two years.
“With council tax now accounting for two-thirds of the common county authority’s funding, we’ve got little selection however to take the tough however mandatory resolution to lift council tax by 4.99% to proceed to guard companies and keep at bay the specter of monetary insolvency sooner or later.
“No council leader takes the decision to raise council tax lightly as we know this will add to the cost of living for residents, but councils have had little choice but to put up council tax due to the increased demands, particularly in children’s services.
“The subsequent authorities should set out a long-term funding plan for councils whereas additionally endeavor a complete reform programme to assist drive down prices, particularly for youngsters’s companies and residential to highschool transport.”
This financial strain can be seen in a number of insolvencies declared in recent years, most recently Nottingham Council for a second time, and in September 2023 Birmingham City Council – the largest local authority in Europe.
Since 2020, six English councils have issued Section 114 notices – declaring effective bankruptcy – compared to six in a 30-year period spanning from 1988 to before the pandemic.
In such cases, drastic cuts to council services, which include adult social care services, may be implemented as well as in many cases higher than average increases in council tax for local residents.
Birmingham City Council increased council tax by 4.97% last year, and just announced increases of 9.99% each year over the next two years.
This means for a mid-value Band D property, over a three-year period, there will have been an increase of £420 in the annual council tax bill.
Birmingham has a £300m budget shortfall to make up over the next two years and has outlined plans for savings to make up the deficit.
At £115.5m, the biggest cuts are to spending on children and families services, of which £2.3m comes from youth services including services tackling youth unemployment and knife crime prevention and a further £16.8m cuts to ‘early help’ services for children, young people, and families.
Adult social care services are facing cuts of £76.6m, and other cuts include ‘dimming and trimming’ street lighting, reduced spend on highway maintenance, moving to fortnightly bin collections, and cutting homelessness funding by £288,000. The council also anticipates, subject to consultation, as many as 600 employees may be made redundant across the council.
Leader of Birmingham City Council Cllr John Cotton said: “I wish to apologise unreservedly for each the numerous spending reductions and this yr’s substantial council tax enhance. We don’t have any various than to face these challenges head on…
“Our situation has been made much worse by a national crisis in local government finance. A combination of austerity and underfunding – Birmingham has lost over £1bn in funding since 2011 – added to a rising demand for services and inflation mean that, across the country, local authorities are facing some of the biggest budget challenges in living memory.
However, Cllr Robert Alden, leader of the opposition Conservative group at Birmingham City Council, said: “The actuality is that the council has a bigger finances now than it did 5 years in the past. Birmingham Labour have to cease blaming others for the errors of their failures.
“While we all want to see more money for local government, [the cause of budget issues in Birmingham] is Labour’s failure to pay staff correctly, causing a £760m equal pay liability. A botched IT rollout causing £140m to be spent on a £19m budget and rising, and a failure to get a grip of their budget crisis of their own making quickly enough.
“What the Labour councillors right here in Birmingham are proposing is a devastating assault on front-line companies. They are going to go away Brummies with a double-whammy of upper taxes for fewer companies.”
Tim Andrews, co-founder and chair of LoveBrum, an umbrella charity for small volunteer organisations in Birmingham, told Sky News how he thought the changes would affect people in the city.
“We will not know what the complete results for persons are going to be till the cutbacks begin to come by way of, we’d not see them [the effects] for ten years or extra, however what we do know is that the town is already hurting in lots of locations.
“We are at the top of all the wrong charts – knife crime, gun crime, the number of under-8s that can’t read or write English – these are all really bad statistics. Any further cutbacks affecting any of that are going to be bad news.”
Thurrock Council, which can be bancrupt and is aiming for finances financial savings of £18.2m within the coming yr, has raised council tax by 9.99% final yr and might be elevating it once more by 7.99% this yr.
Current finances cuts into consideration embrace £2.2m financial savings in healthcare, though a last finances won’t be introduced till later this month. Sky News approached Thurrock Council for remark.
Two different councils with permission to extend council tax above 4.99%, Slough and Wokingham, have but to announce their deliberate council tax rises or publish budgets for the 2024/25 monetary yr.
The most 4.99% annual rise solely applies to councils in England which have accountability for social care. For these that don’t, the utmost hike and not using a referendum is 2.99%.
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Source: information.sky.com”