The Daily Telegraph

Council staff earning more than £100,000 now at nine-year high

- By Daniel Martin

THE number of town hall bosses paid more than £100,000 is the highest in nearly a decade, as council tax rates soar.

A total of 3,106 council staff received six figure salaries, up 347 in just one year, according to an analysis by the Taxpayers’ Alliance (TPA).

The figures emerged after council tax rose by more than five per cent at the start of the month, with some paying £5,000 a year for the first time. It comes as local authoritie­s make deep cuts to services, and after a string of councils declared effective bankruptcy with more expected to follow.

The highest-remunerate­d staff member identified in the analysis was a departing official from Hampshire council, which has warned it may go effectivel­y bankrupt this year and has already announced cuts to museums, waste tips and services for the homeless. Greenwich council in London has announced plans to cut street cleaning and get rid of lollipop ladies – despite having the second-highest number of staff on more than £100,000.

Sir Iain Duncan Smith, the former Conservati­ve leader, said: “Instead of cutting youth services as always seems to happen, these councils should review the inflated salaries of so many officials and start there.” John O’connell, the chief executive of the Taxpayers’ Alliance, said: “Residents can use these figures to ask whether precious funds are really going towards frontline services, or whether town hall bosses can get better value for money.”

Council tax rose by more than 5 per cent across England this year, with the average Band D bill reaching £2,171, an extra £106 a year. This increases to £4,342 in expensive Band H homes. In four authoritie­s, typical bills now exceed £2,500, or £5,000 for Band H.

Last year dozens of town halls were forced to bring in service cuts, such as making bin collection­s fortnightl­y or dimming streetligh­ts. Others – most

notably Birmingham – have had to declare effective bankruptcy by issuing a section 114 notice.

The number of council staff on more than £100,000 in 2022-23 was the highest since 2013-14. Of these 3,106 people, 829 received at least £150,000, 108 more than the previous year. At least 175 received more than £200,000.

Some 59 councils did not provide accounts in 2022-23, the TPA estimates the number of staff on more than £100,000 could therefore be as high as 3,637. In 2013-14, 3,483 council staff were on six figure salaries, although the TPA noted more councils provided them with their accounts. The highest-remunerate­d council employee last year was Felicity Roe, the former director of culture, community and business services at Hampshire council.

She received £651,158 including salary, a loss of office payment and a oneoff pension payment. Hampshire has warned it may go effectivel­y bankrupt this year, and has already announced cuts to services for homeless people.

The TPA list shows that the local authority with the most employees receiving at least £100,000 in total remunerati­on was Westminste­r in central London with 60 staff, 10 more than the previous year. Next came Greenwich with 47, and Southwark with 46. The highest outside the capital was Essex, with 45, and Glasgow with 42.

Glasgow Council has the most people earning more than £100,000 in Scotland, despite planning to cut 450 teacher jobs over the next decade.

A spokesman for Hampshire council said: “The total remunerati­on allocated to Ms Roe, in Hampshire county council’s Statement of Accounts 2022-23, details both the salary (including allowances) she received up until 31 Dec 2022, the compensati­on for loss of office she received when she left the local authority’s employment, following a restructur­e, as well as a pension contributi­on that was made to the Hampshire Pension Fund and was not a payment made directly to Ms Roe.”

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