Bangor Mail

Crackdown for council tax ‘living alone’ fraudsters

SPECIALIST­S BROUGHT IN TO FIND THE CHEATS

- Gareth Williams

GWYNEDD Council is preparing a crackdown on any residents who fraudulent­ly claim to be living alone to pay less council tax.

A report presented to the Audit Committee confirmed that Gwynedd is currently investigat­ing the issue after research showed that one in three Welsh people knew someone or had personally committed such fraud.

Figures revealed to councillor­s on Thursday showed that almost 18,000 Gwynedd households are currently claiming the 25% council tax single person discount – awarded when there is only one adult living at a property.

But in a bid to clamp down on any fraudulent claims – potentiall­y costing the authority several thousands of pounds in lost revenue – Gwynedd Council will now be working with an expert in the field to identify such cases and then try to recoup any losses.

The report noted, “(We) will be working with Datatank, a leading service provider which specialise­s in these types of reviews and has worked with the Council in the past.

“The review will confirm the discount for genuine claimants and identify those people who are claiming a 25% single persons discount on their council tax when they are not entitled to it.

“Where incorrect claims are identified, the council will terminate the claims, writing to the taxpayer and seeking to reclaim the discount.”

The authority has been outspoken in its frustratio­n over current laws which allow the owners of second or holiday homes to exploit “a loophole” by switching to paying business rates in a bid to avoid paying the 50% levy on such properties.

Since April 2014, more than 1,250 properties in Gwynedd have transferre­d from council tax rates to business tax rates – meaning they can potentiall­y avoid paying anything to the council as long as their holiday home is available to let for at least 140 days a year.

Both councillor­s and officers have been critical of this “gap in the law”, but members were told during Thursday’s meeting in Caernarfon that while single person discount fraud is something that can be controlled by Gwynedd Council, switching to business rates was a matter for the Valuation Office Agency, which comes under the UK’s HM Revenue and Customs.

However, there was some better news for council coffers, with income from the authority’s investment­s policy is set to far exceed expectatio­ns.

For 2019/20, the authority had budgeted for an income of £180,000 as a result of interest accumulate­d from its strategic investment­s – including loans to other bodies, banks, local authoritie­s, money markets and pooled property and equity funds.

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