The Scotsman

Scottish councils need £1bn extra funding to ‘survive’, Cosla warns

- By JANE BRADLEY jane.bradley@scotsman.com

Urgent extra funding of more than £1 billion is needed for councils in the coming Scottish Budget for local authoritie­s to “survive”, Cosla has warned.

The umbrella body for local authoritie­s in Scotland said councils needed an increase of £720 million“just to stand still ”, and warned mandatory pledgesmad­e by the scottish government would have to be abandoned if more money was not provided in december’ s budget.

It also called for councils to have tax raising powers, such as local council tax, the workplace parking levy or a visitor tax in tourist areas, to provide more flexibilit­y in their budgets following real-term cuts to the core budgets of scotland’ s 32 councils in recent years.

A report published by Cosla on Monday said to “survive”, Scottish councils need a total of £12.07bn – more than a billion pounds more than the £11bn provided by the revenue settlement in 2020/21.

The document warned local government could no longer continue to be the “poor relation” it has been in recent Budgets. Finance secretary Kate Forbes is due to deliver the Scottish budget on december 9.

Cosla’s resources spokespers­on,councillor gail mac greg or, said initiative­s promised by the Scottish Government, such as free musical instrument tuition in schools, were something that councils had previously funded, but had to cut. she warned communitie­s are“starting to show the neglect of an under-funded local government”.

Cllr Macgregor said: “At what point do you have to go back to government and say‘ we can not deliver on this policy initiative – we simply can’ t afford it ’? music instructio­n and school clothing grants are good things for Scottish Government to be funded, but they are things we were funding before and we would have continued to fund if we’d had sufficient budget to do so.”

Cllr Macgregor said roles which had previously been cut due to a lack of revenue reduction, such as environmen­tal health officers, were having to be backfilled to deal with the coronaviru­s pandemic, as the same time that councils were losing revenue at facilities such as leisure centres. she said :“we have ongoing loss of income. We know the confidence of peoplegoin­g back to leisure centres and community facilities is lower than it was .”

Cosla president, Cllr Alison Evison, said: “Enabling people to live well locally is something that a modern, civilised country should be able to do automatica­lly, but takes, of course, funding. Only properly funded local government can make this possible at a local level .”

Cosla also pointed to the difficulti­es faced by councils of one-year Budgets, when officials had to prepare for a range of different possible budget cuts on an annual basis and called for more long-term clarity from the Scottish Government.

Scottish Conservati­ves local government spokesman Mile Briggs said: “Councils can illafford another year of having to choose between what crucial day-to-day services to cut, or be forced into raising people’ s council tax bills.”

A Scottish Government spokespers­on said: “Decisions on local government budget allocation­s for future years are subject to the outcome of the ongoing negotiatio­ns with COSLA, the results of which will be confirmed in the Scottish Budget on 9 December.”

 ?? ?? ↑ City of Edinburgh Council, like authoritie­s across the country, has had its budget cut by the Scottish Government in recent years
↑ City of Edinburgh Council, like authoritie­s across the country, has had its budget cut by the Scottish Government in recent years

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