Roads and economy at centre of budget
Parking fees frozen and funeral video fee scrapped
Perth and Kinross councillors have voted to reject proposals to bring in unpopular crematorium webcam charges and increase the price of parking.
A proposed 10p increase in the cost of school meals has also been deferred until next year.
The Conservative budget was ultimately backed by the Liberal Democrat group and independent councillors after incorporating some of the rival groups’ proposals.
Prior to the virtual meeting on Wednesday last week, it had been feared a £60 charge for the use of the crematorium webcam, a further £ 24 for a webcam recording of the funeral and £30 for a personal USB would be introduced – as well as other revenue-raising ideas such as the mooted meals increase and a parking fee hike – as the local authority sought to plug a £17 million funding gap.
The 2021/ 22 budget proposed by the Conservatives pledged to invest a record £14m in roads, £1.3m in business recovery, £550,000 in education and over £1m in communities.
Local authority leader Murray Lyle said the spending plan focused on recovery, supporting businesses and roads.
He told councillors: “The unknowns caused by the Covid-19 pandemic are unparalleled.
“Rather than make knee-jerk reactions without all the facts, we will continue to adopt a prudent approach to our revenue budget setting in keeping with the reputation of this administration.
“This is why we are recognising over £8m of financial pressure on the revenue budget on a non-recurring basis for one year only.
“This covers additional expenditure, reduced income, delayed savings and some, as yet unknown, demand pressures.”
The Conservatives announced an additional £4m in road maintenance to deal with the backlog of issues carried over from last year – bringing the total roads maintenance budget to £14m.
Highland Perthshire Conservative councillor John Duff said: “I want to see our roads services move ahead at top speed to catch up and overtake where the condition of our roads needs to be.
“With the potholes of the previous winter unable to be properly addressed during 2020 due to the pandemic and the restrictions imposed on road works last year, this has naturally affected present road conditions.
“I hope that this significant additional investment will speed up repairs and resurfacing now that the better weather is approaching.”
The approved motion pledged £200,000 over the next two years to “provide targeted resources aimed at getting all children disadvantaged by long periods of home learning back on track with their studies”.
There will also be a further £136,000 invested in PKC’s virtual campus.
Cllr Lyle told councillors they were working with neighbouring Angus and Dundee City councils to provide a Tayside-wide education initiative.
The Liberal Democrats removed their amendment after council leader Murray Lyle conceded to incorporate Lib Dem proposals into the Conservative motion.
This included increased funding – from £20,000 to £35,000 – for community gritting initiatives, upping their investment in digital, financial and social inclusion to £ 150,000, £ 70,000 for a voluntary/befriending wellbeing service and £80,000 to support and train volunteers.
After the meeting Lib Dem group leader councillor Peter Barrett, who represents part of Perth, said: “The impact the Liberal Democrats have exerted on the final council budget is amply evidenced today. Every single line of our amendment has been incorporated into the budget.
“We highlighted where the Conservatives’ budget fell far short of
supporting the most vulnerable members of our community.
“It is to the council leader’s credit that the Conservatives recognised these shortcomings and made the changes required.”
Cllr Lyle also incorporated two independent/Labour group proposals – £40,000 for community safety measures in Crieff and a £480,000 investment over the next two years for a community ranger service.
After the meeting Cllr Lyle said the community ranger service would “enhance” their visitor management funding put in place in response to the dirty camping and visitor issues in the region.
He said: “I am aware Cllr [ Xander] McDade has seen this work in the Cairngorms National Park and it has worked in Loch Lomond and the Trossachs.”
When the independent and Labour group’s amendment failed to be voted through to the final stage, all three independent councillors supported the Conservative motion, while Labour councillor Alasdair Bailey – his party’s sole representative within the local authority – abstained.
The SNP amendment was only supported by the party’s 13 elected members.
SNP group leader, Strathtay representative Cllr Grant Laing, said their amendment had “people as its driving force” and aimed to “give residents financial breathing space”.
Fellow nationalist Andrew Parrott, a councillor for part of Perth, said: “The main Tory thrust is promoting a prosperous sustainable and inclusive economy area. The SNP thrust is in supporting people to live independent, healthy and active lives.”
The Conservatives pledged £1.3m to support economic recovery.
Cllr Lyle said he was “surprised” at the “omission” of support to business recovery in the SNP budget.
He said: “That’s probably why they did not get support anywhere else.”
The SNP had countered the proposed 10p increase to school meals with a 20p decrease to the cost of a school meal.
SNP councillor, Fair City representative John Rebbeck, said: “It reflects the potential direction of travel – if there is electoral success for the SNP in May then all primary school meals will be free by August next year. That’s lunch and breakfast.”
The combined independent and Labour group put recurring funding in place for breakfast clubs and after-school clubs in their amendment.
Carse of Gowrie elected member Cllr Bailey said: “This is the only budget that secures the future of breakfast clubs in our schools.
“Yes, the Scottish Government might fund them but we must not make assumptions about the outcome of May’s election.
“This budget gives kids and parents the certainty that Perth and Kinross Council is ready to support their breakfast clubs in years to come regardless of what central government does.”
Cllr Bailey also said, while he supported the SNP’s proposal to invest £250,000 in social prescribing, he was “really surprised” at the “measly” £ 80,000 additional funding the SNP proposed for a feasibility study for the PH20 project to create a new swimming pool and ice rink in development in Perth.
He said: “PH20 doesn’t need another feasibility study, it needs capital funding – that’s why we’re putting £5m in the bank to support the build.
“I was shocked that after their previous very vocal criticism of the Tories for kicking this project down the road, the SNP only proposed a measly £80,000 for the project.”
A total of 25 independent, Liberal Democrat and Conservative councillors supported the Conservative budget as it was voted through following the lengthy discussion.
SHE has dressed everyone from royalty to red carpet A-listers, working her sartorial magic on high-profile figures from the Duchess of Cambridge to Angelina Jolie, Adele and Kate Winslet.
So it’s no surprise that fashion designer Jenny Packham, best known for her crystal and sequin-embellished evening wear and wedding dresses, has not embraced the loungewear habit during lockdown.
“I’m not enjoying it, I like to feel quite smart,” says the London-based designer. “I dress up for work every day. I don’t love loungewear or casual dressing. In the summer I found it easy. I love prints – jeans with nice shirts. In winter, I still make an effort. It’s important. You have to keep things quite smart in the workplace.”
The glamorous dresses might have remained in the wardrobe, given there have been no special occasions to attend, but Jenny and her husband, Mathew Anderson, CEO of the business, have a big online presence and customers in the UK, US and China.
“I’ve been incredibly surprised at the sales we have done,” says Jenny. “Bridal has been the biggest fallout. But they haven’t cancelled their weddings – they will happen and the business will come back. People will want to celebrate and dress up and get married.”
For more than 30 years, Jenny has been immersed in designing beautiful clothes, creating collections for stars and royalty alike, with a flagship store in Mayfair.
There have been highlights – Sandra Bullock in soft pink tulle at the 2011 Golden Globes, Jenny’s first A-lister on the red carpet; Kate Winslet in black at the Titanic 3D premiere in 2012; Bond Girl Caterina Murino, who wore a stunning coral dress in Casino Royale.
But Jenny, 56, has never felt able to relax. “You’re only as good as the season you’ve just had,” she notes.
There was a point in her career when she suffered from show burnout. “I’d done a lot of shows in New York and the whole social media thing had cranked up. One show I couldn’t move. There were so many beauty press there with photographers that I couldn’t get near my team.
“Nobody seemed to know it was my show. I couldn’t do my job. What happens on the catwalk is reliant on how well organised everything is backstage. It wasn’t a place I wanted to be anymore.” She returned to the UK at the right time, she says.
She has now written memoir How To Make A Dress, which unpicks how fashion design has shaped her life and charts her inspirations.
The Southampton-born designer had a creative bent and an eye for detail from an early age. The daughter of a marine engineer and a legal secretary mother who was creative and made all her clothes – as well as two grandmothers who were great needlewomen – the young Jenny was drawn to the intricacies of Victorian clothing she saw in a museum and mesmerised by the costumes worn by Anne Boleyn (played by Genevieve Bujold) in the 1969 film Anne Of The Thousand Days.
Later inspiration came from second-hand shops, vintage clothing and portraits in art galleries.
Jean Harlow and Marilyn Monroe also provided ideas, she recalls. “I’ve always been interested in the more glamorous side of dressing. For me, it’s a privilege to design something for someone who’s having a moment, rather than a dayto-day experience.”
She designed shirts for her older brother, naturalist and TV presenter Chris Packham, in his early days of The Really Wild Show. He still has them, and clearly the siblings remain close. She gently ribs him in the book about his foibles, including his passion for Prada, but it’s all good humoured.
“We’ve always got on well and have a lot of mutual interests. We’ve always been there for each other, spurring each other on and supporting each other. I’m very proud of everything he’s done. We both enjoy what we do and we have integrity about it,” she says.
Jenny and her husband, whom she met while a fashion student at Saint Martins School of Art, where he was a sculpture graduate, have been together more than 30 years, linked in both their personal and professional life.
There have been highs and lows – over the years she has received her share of poor reviews and they hurt, she says. “Creative people are sensitive and I wouldn’t like to have a thick skin. That would be detrimental to my creativity. You need to decide which bits are valid. Some of the times I’ve been most upset after a show when comments have been hard, have actually been some of the best things that have happened. You move on and maybe you’ve got to do something about it.”
She says in the book there’s a lack of sisterhood in the fashion business. At one show, she asked the then British Vogue editor Alexandra Shulman what she thought of her collection, to which she says Shulman replied, ‘I liked the music’.
She thinks that type of attitude can be inherent in the fashion industry.
“I like the idea of holding some people in esteem. I was disappointed that I felt someone who was at the top of our world would be like that. Sometimes I’ve felt very under supported by the British fashion establishment. A lot of it is about being an evening wear niche brand.”
Jenny writes acerbic fantasy letters to her detractors in the book, detailing the sort of things she wanted to say but never did.
Away from the catwalk, she and Mathew, who have two grown-up daughters, married five years ago. She designed her own wedding dress, a lacy dove grey number. Why did they leave it so long?
“We were just too busy. We started the business when I was 23 and
Mathew was 25, and the first 10 years were hard-going. Then we had kids. It was on my 50th birthday when we went away together and started joking about it and then said, ‘Why don’t we?”’
Yet two years ago they broke up for four months, which she puts down to the stress of the business.
“The pressures of our little world had caused cracks in our relationship and we were lost,” she writes in the book. She moved into the spare room, talking ceased at home. But the reality of prising apart decades of creative togetherness would have been a step too far, she notes.
“That co-dependency of what we’d built together pulled us back. We had four or five months when things were tough,” she says now. “We just made that extra effort and I’m very pleased we did. We are very happy. Our relationship is much better now. We are much more understanding.”
She’s looking forward to the return of red carpet events and believes people will still want to shop for clothes in stores in the future, despite the inevitable spike in online shopping.
Her own most recent purchase goes some way to explaining how she feels about the future.
“The last item of clothing I bought was a pair of Missoni espadrilles in the sale – they are zig-zag, black, red, orange and yellow. The things I’ve bought during this time have been about the future.
“I’m thinking about brighter days. I’m going to wear those this summer’.”
We both enjoy what we do and we have integrity about it,
On her brother, TV naturalist Chris Packham