Argyllshire Advertiser

Argyll and Bute Council agrees budget in ‘challengin­g times’

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ARGYLL and Bute Council last week agreed a budget promising ‘security, stability and success’.

Twenty councillor­s voted for the administra­tion’s budget motion, proposed by council leader Dick Walsh, defeating the oneyear budget proposed by SNP group leader Councillor Sandy Taylor, which drew nine votes, and Councillor Michael Breslin’s Reform group amendment, which attracted three. The introducho­use tory report, presented by head of strategic finance Kirsty Flanagan at a full council meeting at Kilmory Castle, Argyll and Bute Council’s HQ in Lochgilphe­ad, on Thursday February 23, stated more than 1,700 people responded to a consultati­on on which services matter most and where savings could be made.

Councillor Walsh said: ‘We have succeeded in balancing a budget, despite a reduction in Scottish Government funding of £6.3 million. We have secured a surplus of £193,000 that will help to fill the funding gap anticipate­d next year of £3.6 million.

Savings

‘We have delivered another £1.4 million of efficiency savings this year without impact on communitie­s.

‘We are in a better position than many other councils.

‘However, the harsh facts of drasticall­y reducing funding mean that we need the help of our communitie­s to protect the services they use.

‘We are protecting jobs and services in challengin­g times when our economy most needs them.’

The opposition SNP group proposed a oneyear ‘community empowermen­t budget’, which Councillor Taylor said would allocate funding across local areas via a ‘participat­ory budgeting strategy’ and hand decision-making responsibi­lity to local people.

 ??  ?? Councillor Dick Walsh: a balanced budget despite a reduction in Scottish Government funding.
Councillor Dick Walsh: a balanced budget despite a reduction in Scottish Government funding.

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