Yorkshire Post

Cost of care to soar for councils by 2020

Chancellor urged to plug funding gap in Budget

- ALEX WOOD Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

ALMOST 60P in every £1 paid in council tax looks set to be spent caring for children and adults by 2020 – leaving ever smaller amounts to fix potholes, clean streets and run leisure centres, councils are warning.

The Local Government Associatio­n is urging Chancellor Philip Hammond to use the autumn Budget to allow councils to keep “every penny” of taxes raised locally. It says an extra £1.3bn is needed “right now” to stabilise the “perilously fragile care provider market”.

The cost of caring for the elderly, vulnerable adults and children is set to soar from 41p in every pound spent on council tax to 56p by 2020, according to forecasts. That will leave just 6p in every pound on collecting rubbish and recycling, 5p on roads and 2p on bus services.

Coun Claire Kober, chair of the LGA’s resources board, warned there was a “real and growing uncertaint­y” about how council services will be funded beyond 2020.

It comes after Government plans to allow councils to keep all of their business rates income were left in doubt after the Local Government Finance Bill, which was passing through parliament before the election, was not reintroduc­ed in the Queen’s Speech. Coun Kober said: “Local government in England faces a £5.8bn funding gap by 2020.

“Even if councils stopped filling potholes, maintainin­g parks and open spaces, closed all children’s centres, libraries, museums, leisure centres, turned off every street light and shut all discretion­ary bus routes they still would not have saved enough money to plug this gap in just two years.”

In addition to the surge in social care costs, almost half of councils in England will no longer receive any core central government funding in the form of the Revenue Support Grant by 2019/20.

Leader of Hull Council Coun Steve Brady said “strong leadership” was needed to find a crossparty consensus on an adult social care policy, which would survive changes in Government. But he had “no faith in politician­s as a whole” in finding a solution.

He said people couldn’t avoid paying, either through personal finances or through the tax system, adding: “The wealthier people have the ability – they may not like it – to pay for that care.

“But if you look at a place like Hull, I don’t think most people have the ability to provide much at all in terms of payments.”

Coun Michael Harrison, executive member for adult social care for North Yorkshire County Council, said the county already had an age profile five years ahead of everywhere else. He said: “We are approachin­g (the point where) 43 per cent of everything we have to spend is on adult social care. We need an honest conversati­on (about paying for care). We were denied that at the election. I think the message was lost. We need to have an honest conversati­on about the realities of the costs and how we want to balance that through central, local government and private contributi­ons.”

Local government in England faces a £5.8bn funding gap by 2020. Coun Claire Kober, chair of the LGA’s resources board.

IF THE Government is to survive, much now hinges upon this month’s Budget which will set the country’s economic parameters prior to Brexit. Theresa May, for one, will be hoping that it doesn’t unravel as quickly as Chancellor Philip Hammond’s first speech in March.

Yet, while expectatio­ns, and faith, in Mrs May’s government diminish, ‘hoping for the best’ is not sufficient at this – Mr Hammond will need to be both authoritat­ive and ambitious while championin­g the social justice agenda that the Prime Minister promised to champion. The NHS and social care is a case in point. Even though spending on health has never been greater, community care is creaking – it has not been spared cuts to local government spending – and there are new warnings that an extra £1.3bn is needed to maintain services.

Though Mr Hammond has limited room for financial manoeuvre, investing in social care does, in fact, ease pressure on NHS hospitals and lessen the likelihood of beds being occupied for prolonged periods by elderly patients waiting to be released when there’s suitable provision in the community for their needs. As such, this is, potentiall­y, a small price to pay if it enables the NHS to withstand the forecast winter pressures. If not, the Government’s own survival hopes will be even weaker than at present.

 ??  ?? STEVE BRADY: Leader of Hull Council said he had no faith in politician­s finding a solution.
STEVE BRADY: Leader of Hull Council said he had no faith in politician­s finding a solution.

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