Llanelli Star

Costs help decision due next month

- RICHARD YOULE Senior Local Democracy Reporter richard.youle@walesonlin­e.co.uk

LEADERS in Carmarthen­shire will decide next month who will benefit from a £1.55 million cost-of-living support scheme which was announced in February.

Councils in Wales shared a £25 million pot of Welsh Government money that month which they could use to target those they felt needed help the most.

Ministers issued guidance the following month about how it could be spent, along with a larger £152 million scheme providing £150 for all council tax band A, B, C and D households in Wales, to help with soaring costs.

The guidance said: “The schemes are intended to provide immediate support as Wales recovers from the pandemic and support households to deal with the impact of increasing energy and other costs.”

Asked what its share of the £25 million fund was and whether a decision had been taken about how to spend it, a Carmarthen­shire Council spokesman said it hadn’t decided how to spend the £1.55 million sum yet, but that cabinet would so next month.

Council elections took place in May, but Swansea Council allocated its share of the £25 million fund before voters went to the polls. Payments in Swansea included an extra £28 for all council tax band A to D properties. Some councils in Wales haven’t decided what to do with their share yet, others have.

Councils are also administer­ing the wider £152 million scheme to hand out £150 for council tax band A to D households. Asked for an update on progress in Carmarthen­shire, the council spokesman said just under 58,000 households had received the £150 payment, with some 4,800 eligible households invited to apply for it. Carmarthen­shire’s share of the scheme was £9.4 million.

Cllr Alun Lenny, cabinet member for resources, said the council’s priority had been distributi­ng the main £150 scheme for band A to D residents, and that the Welsh Government hadn’t given detailed guidance.

Cllr Lenny said: “It’s crucial that every penny of the £1.55m allocation goes to those in the most desperate need – and the A-D council tax band tactic might not necessaril­y be the best yardstick.

“This must be done in as reasonable a timescale as practicall­y possible. That’s the most responsibl­e approach to distributi­ng the extra money.” Options, he said, were being prepared.

He added that “it is not alarmist to say that we face an economic tsunami” as the cost-of-living crisis deepens.

The energy price cap rose in April this year by 54% to £1,971 and is set to rise considerab­ly more in October – and possibly again next January.

The UK Government has announced support including a £400 energy bill reduction for every household. This will be applied in monthly instalment­s between October and March. In addition a £650 payment will be made to eight million lowest income households, £300 for eight million pensioner households, and £150 for six million people receiving non means-tested disability benefits.

 ?? DOMINIC LIPINSKI ?? Carmarthen­shire Council leaders will decide next month how £1.55m to help those in need will be distribute­d.
DOMINIC LIPINSKI Carmarthen­shire Council leaders will decide next month how £1.55m to help those in need will be distribute­d.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom