Western Morning News

Torbay councillor­s stick to council tax increase

- EDWARD OLDFIELD Local Democracy Reporter edward.oldfield@reachplc.com

COUNCILLOR­S in Torbay rejected a call to cut an increase in next year’s council tax. The Conservati­ve group on Torbay Council asked for the core tax to be frozen because of the financial hardship caused by the pandemic.

Tory leader Dave Thomas said he had worked out that the council had £13 million “sloshing around” in its bank accounts, but the majority partnershi­p of Liberal Democrats and Independen­ts voted down the objection and approved a 1.99% in the core tax and 3% to go on adult social care.

Councillor Thomas said the spare money included a £7 million underspend on this year’s budget and a £1.8 million windfall from council tax payments. He said the council had a £2.5 million surplus from central government funding for Covid19 and claimed the council’s Liberal Democrat leader Steve Darling had told a meeting that it had money “sloshing around”.

The Conservati­ve leader said at the meeting last Thursday: “Businesses have closed and jobs have been lost. This is not the time to increase our council tax.”

Cllr Darling responded later that his comment referred to the Government’s Covid support funding, which was ring-fenced, but would be used for the health and wellbeing of the community.

The Liberal Democrat council leader said next year’s budget would see the council’s reserves increased to a “financiall­y prudent” level and investment­s to support the community, including a £1.6 million fund to respond to Covid-19, £300,000 for a hardship fund for the hardest hit, and £1 million for housing and homelessne­ss. He explained the £7.1 million underspend was largely due to the success of work to control increased costs pressures in children’s services, which the meeting heard had doubled over ten years to £46 million this year.

The council’s deputy leader, Darren Cowell, said the council had lost half a billion pounds in government funding due to cuts during ten years of austerity. The Independen­t councillor said the partnershi­p was seeking to restore the investment in services “savagely cut” by the Conservati­ves in previous years.

The budget included restoring bus subsidies, lights for Paignton seafront, sport, economic regenerati­on including a freeze on car parking fees, and investment­s in events and town centres. Cllr Cowell said: “We are preparing for the future as well as investing for today.” Conservati­ve Andrew Barrand, backing the call for a freeze on the core tax, said many people were struggling to pay their council tax this year, and some were being put under pressure from recovery action for non-payment. He said: “How can you look people in the eye when they are in a financial hole, and say we are going to dig it deeper by putting your council tax up? It’s wrong.”

Independen­t Cabinet member Mike Morey said a freeze on council tax by previous Conservati­ve administra­tions had “devastated” the council’s finances and services that people relied on had been cut.

The council also approved a £301 million five-year capital investment programme, with £125 million due to be spent next year, including investment­s at a series of schools, affordable housing projects, and the regenerati­on of the Crossways shopping centre in Paignton.

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