The Scotsman

Council staff falls to lowest level since devolution onset

- By SCOTT MACNAB

The number of staff working in Scotland’s councils has fallen to its lowest level since devolution, prompting fresh fears over lifeline services being “stripped back”.

Fewer than 200,000 Scots now work in local government, a fall of more than 30,000 over the past decade, as public satisfacti­on falls in services like local schooling, social care and bin collection­s.

The Scottish Government is now facing calls to undertake an urgent investigat­ion into the impact of the cuts on vulnerable Scots to see how they contribute to growing poverty levels. Councils have suffered a near 10 per cent cut in their budget since the turn of the decade, a stark report by the Accounts Commission warned last week, with reductions in school staff and across other services.

In 1999 there were 210,000 local government employees, excluding police and fire staff. This grew to 230,000 in 2007 before the financial crash hit and the climate of austerity emerged, with numbers since falling to 198,000, a 14 per cent drop. Labour communitie­s spokeswoma­n Monica Lennonsaid­thatminist­ersshould be ensuring that “vital local services that people rely on are properly resourced”.

But she warned: “Instead, the SNP government has taken Tory austerity and passed it straight on to Scottish councils and the communitie­s they serve.

“Council services are crucial in the fight against poverty and inequality and these job losses hurt the poorest the hardest with lifeline services stripped back year after year because of the cuts.”

The Scottish Government says the £10.7 billion budgets which councils will receive from Holyrood this year will deliver a real terms increase.

A spokeswoma­n said: “In spite of continued UK govern- ment real terms cuts to Scotland’s resource budget, we have treated local government very fairly.

“In addition, as all 32 local authoritie­s have chosen to use their powers to increase council tax, by the maximum allowable 3 per cent, they now have an overall increase in the funds at their disposal of almost £342 million compared with 2017-18.

“Staffing levels for local government are matters for individual local authoritie­s. However local government employment has increased by 720 (0.3 per cent) over the year to December 2017, with 18 local authoritie­s increasing staffing levels.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom