Burton Mail

Near 5% council tax increase is given backing

LEADER SAYS STAFFORDSH­IRE RATE IS THIRD LOWEST IN ENGLAND AND IS GOOD VALUE

- By KERRY ASHDOWN kerry.ashdown@reachplc.com

STAFFORDSH­IRE County Council’s budget plans – which include a tax hike of almost five per cent from April – have been backed by senior members.

The 4.99 per cent increase, which includes a three per cent rise to meet social care costs, would mean residents in Band D properties paying an extra £1.24 a week in 2021/22.

But the authority’s leader, Councillor Alan White, told fellow cabinet members at their meeting on Wednesday that Staffordsh­ire residents paid the third lowest county council tax in England.

The presentati­on of the 2021/22 revenue budget and the latest Medium Term Financial Strategy (MTFS), which covers the next five years up to 2026, is the start of the process, Councillor White added.

“There are a number of stages to go through yet, including taking it to scrutiny, listening to their comments, bringing it back to cabinet and then presenting it to full council for sign-off”, he said.

“With this we remain the third lowest county council tax-charging authority in England and that’s a record we can be proud of. I hope that the residents of Staffordsh­ire understand that they get value for money.

“As Staffordsh­ire works to recover from the effects of the pandemic, this council is directing all of its resources to help people and business get moving again. In the year ahead we will be listening to Staffordsh­ire people to act on the issues that matter most to them, while continuing to invest time and money in those things in our communitie­s that support people to help themselves and one another.

“The county council continues to invest in physical and electronic infrastruc­ture and promoting Staffordsh­ire, so that our economy can prosper and generate more jobs and opportunit­ies. This investment will also ensure growing communitie­s have everything they need including school places, transport links and superfast broadband connection­s.

“At the same time, we are determined to keep improving education and training in Staffordsh­ire so that people can flourish at school or later in life, support families so that they can remain together safely and inspire residents to live healthy, independen­t lives.”

Councillor Mike Sutherland, cabinet member for finance, said the latest strategic plan had been shaped by a number of factors including the Covid-19 pandemic and tackling climate change. In 2021/22 the authority is set to spend £346 million – approximat­ely two thirds of its budget – on social care and child protection.

A balanced financial position has been reached for 2021/22 – but “significan­t budget gaps” remain for the years to come, cabinet members were told.

“This council has allocated over £83m since March on tackling the pandemic and supporting our communitie­s through the crisis”, Councillor Sutherland said.

“This includes over £3m on personal protective equipment for care homes and schools, £11m on testing, tracing contacts and general outbreak control, £36m on supporting care homes and providers of care to ensure they continue to care for vulnerable residents safely and £2.5m has been spent on additional safety measures to ensure children travelling to and from school are kept safe.

“Ten million pounds has been spent on a multitude of measures such as business start-up loans, food parcels, payments to nurseries, child minders and foster carers and emergency business payments.

“The pandemic has had an impact on our planned savings programme and this has resulted in a cost of £10m in delayed or unachieved savings. It has had a severe impact on finances across the country at all levels.”

Planned investment­s for 2021-22 include continuati­on of the Lichfield Southern Bypass, replacemen­t of convention­al bulbs in street lights with LED lighting to save energy and cut costs, extra money for the roads budget to deal with winter weather and more funding to tackle weeds and kerbside maintenanc­e,creation of cycleways and improvemen­ts for pedestrian­s in urban areas, the opening of a new primary school in Tamworth and work starting on two new schools in Uttoxeter and Fradley.

 ??  ?? Alan White is leader of Staffordsh­ire County Council
Alan White is leader of Staffordsh­ire County Council

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