The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Council tax bills set to soar £500

Politics: Less affluent bands A-D householde­rs should escape increases

- BY IAIN RAMAGE

TENS of thousands of Highland householde­rs face hikes of up to £500 on their council tax as local authority chiefs try to claw extra cash into their coffers. Residents of properties in bands E to H– more than a quarter of all Highland homes – will have to find the funds to pay anywhere between 10% and 25% more on their current annual charge.

Although bands A to D may remain unchanged or rise by no more than 3%, and the highest increase will only affect top-end homes, many hardworkin­g families who have managed to secure homes in good catchment areas will be hit. Highland Council chiefs warned last night that next year’s expected 4% government funding cut, on top of the current financial strains, is likely to reduce services by 25% over three years and cost jobs“from one end of the Highlands to the other ”.

And raising council tax for 30,000 of

the region’s 116,0000 homes is at the top of the agenda, the Press and Journal can reveal.

The end of the SNP’s nine-year freeze on council tax next April is welcomed by Highland councillor­s who have long called for the financial freedom to preserve local services.

A report from Highland finance director Derek Yule to next week’s full council meeting in Inverness will recommend holding tax bands A to D at their current level or increasing them by no more than 3%, while increasing bandsEto H by up to 10.4% and 26% respective­ly.

It equates to an extra £120 per year for band E householde­rs and £523 for band H homes.

The report highlights

“Administra­tion must protect the vulnerable, the poor and the elderly”

“unpreceden­ted uncertaint­y” over the level of council funding when the Scottish Government has indicated priorities to give theNHSan above-inflation boost, maintain police numbers, increase funding to devolved social security powers, and maintain the basic rate of tax a llowance.

Council leader Margaret Davidson, pictured right, admitted that a likely 1% staff pay rise and new apprentice­ship levy – a new UKtax – would swallow up 1% of the authority’s revenue budget next year, taking the overall budget loss to at least 5% and “possibly more.”

The council reckons it will need to find savings of £26million in 2017-18 and £72million of savings by 2020-21. Without increasing council tax, Mr Yule says those figures would rise to between £69million and £ 93million. Mrs Davidson said it was inevitable that many more jobs would go, but hopefully without a need for compulsory redundanci­es.

“The public sector shrinking 25% – that’s jobs from one end of the Highlands to the other,” she said. “It’s quite an impact on the local economy.”

Highland finance chiefs calculate that the region will lose by at least £ 2million when the government effectivel­y ring-fences the rise from the unfreezing of council tax to put it into schools. Councils will find out before the end of the year exactly how much cash they will receive from government. A spokeswoma­n for the government said: “It is the Scottish Government which is seeking to protect Scottish households from Westminste­r austerity. “Every council area will have more funding as a result of our council tax reform. Local authoritie­s will keep every penny of the council tax tha t is raised in their areas and there will be no change for three out of four Scottish households in terms of how much council tax they pay.”

Opposition SNP group leader on the council, Maxine Smith, said: “The council yet again faces amassive challenge in terms of funding gaps. It’s becoming all too common, due to the grant cuts to Scotland from Westminste­r.

“We’ll keep a close eye on where the administra­tion decide to go for these savings as we must insist that they protect the vulnerable, the poor and the elderly.

“Regarding the extra income from higher bandings of properties, I understood from ministers that money raised in Highland will stay in Highland.”

“A proposed budget cut would shrink services by 25% and cost jobs across the Highlands”

The true state of a financial crisis facing local authoritie­s across Scotland was laid bare by Highland Council, where council tax could rocket by more than £500 a year as jobs are slashed.

A proposed budget cut next year would shrink services by 25% and cost jobs “from one end of the Highlands to the other,” council chiefs warned.

The blame game was underway following these dire warnings, with the council accusing the SNP Government of short-changing it over funding, while Holyrood pinned it all on West minster. It was the usual scenario thatwe have heard for years in the wake of the SNP’s nineyear council tax freeze.

Put a freeze on any recurring charge which increases with inflation or other economic pressures, and it is almost certain that nine years of withheld increases will come back to haunt you all in one go.

It served a purpose at a time of severe recession, but pressure from councils to lift the freeze had reached breaking point. Now the gloves are off, Highland householde­rs in bands E-H face paying between 10% and 25% more in tax when it resumes next year, while services reduce.

The Highlands, in common with other local councils, claims it faces the additional ignominy of being forced to contribute local cash to the Scottish Government’ s policy to close the attainment gap in performanc­e levels in the country’s schools.

You do not need to be amathemati­cal genius to figure out that something does not add up about local government funding in Scotland.

 ??  ?? HOME ECONOMICS: Top of the agenda as the council balances its books is raising council tax for 30,000 of Highland’s 116,0000 homes
HOME ECONOMICS: Top of the agenda as the council balances its books is raising council tax for 30,000 of Highland’s 116,0000 homes
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