Edinburgh Evening News

Sigh of relief but funding is still a problem

- Ian Swanson

The Greens were anxious to be seen as honest players after the “shenanigan­s” of last year

Many Edinburgh residents will be breathing a sigh of relief that their council tax bills won't be increasing after councillor­s agreed a freeze for next year.

Threatened cuts to school budgets and possible closures of leisure centres were thankfully averted. And the city's budget for 2024/25, approved last Thursday, includes record spending of £12.5 million on roads and pavements.

But the council's finances remain under severe pressure. City leaders warned that maintainin­g school budgets and preserving leisure services beyond the next 12 months would mean council tax rises of 1.5 and 1 per cent respective­ly. And council leader Cammy Day has said a "worst case scenario" could see the authority's financial black hole grow to £200m in the next five years. Last week's budget meeting of the council proved more straightfo­rward than a year ago, when tactical voting by the Greens saw the rejection of the package put forward by the minority Labour administra­tion and the approval of the Lib Dems proposals instead. The Lib Dem budget did not, in the end, seem to cause too many problems for Labour, but it was an embarrassm­ent they wanted to avoid this time.

So there were careful discussion­s with other parties in advance and Labour accommodat­ed some of the spending priorities of both the Lib Dems and the Tories in return for their votes, allocating more money to schools, subsidised bus services and a new scheme to clean up streets.

The Greens were anxious to be seen as honest players this time, with finance spokespers­on Alys Mumford admitting to "shenanigan­s" last year but promising there were no plans to "shenan-again". The SNP likes to portray the administra­tion as a Labour-Lib Dem-Conservati­ve coalition. But, while the budget was passed by a combinatio­n of Labour, Lib Dem and Tory votes, when it came to setting council house rents, it was Labour, the Lib Dems and the Green who voted together to approve the 7 per cent rise.

Big cuts are still expected in health and social care when the Edinburgh Integratio­n Joint Board, funded jointly by the council and NHS Lothian, sets its budget next month.

Because the Capital remains the lowest-funded council per head of population out of all 32 local authoritie­s in Scotland.

 ?? ?? Councillor­s in Edinburgh have agreed to freeze council tax
Councillor­s in Edinburgh have agreed to freeze council tax
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