Southport Visiter

Hike in taxes as Sefton budget given go ahead

- BY LISA RAND

PEOPLE in Sefton will soon be paying more for council tax to park their car in council-owned spaces and to visit their local leisure centre after the council’s budget plans were approved.

At a meeting of Sefton’s full council held at Bootle Town Hall, councillor­s from across the borough met to settle the budget for the coming year.

Proposals on the table included cuts to the borough’s highways budget and a large increase in spending on children’s services - with the ruling Labour group proposing a full council tax rise of 5% as well as increased fees for parking charges and at the borough’s leisure centres.

Leader of the opposition and Liberal democrat leader Cllr John Pugh said his party would not be proposing any amendment to the budget this year.

He said that given the lack of detailed breakdown in budget proposals, it was “impossible” to put forward options, stating: “What we have is global savings decided by chief officers with some inputs from cabinet members quietly and unobtrusiv­ely.”

He added: “Without the right data it is a very uneven battle.”

Cllr Pugh questioned the £40m additional spend on children’s services from four years ago to the present.

He said: “These are stark, demanding figures and we should really have further investigat­ion and more detail” but councillor­s “will not find the answers here tonight.”

Declaring the proposed budget a “pig in a poke”, he stated his councillor­s would not be voting for it.

Conservati­ve leader Cllr Mike Prendergas­t said: “I’m sure in due course we’ll hear how all the problems of Sefton Council can be laid at the door of the Conservati­ve government”, claiming the council had received “unpreceden­ted support “from the government.

He said “external factors” including inflation, energy price rises and the war in Ukraine were behind pressures on budgets.

Speaking on Sefton council’s children’s services, Cllr Prendergas­t said there had been “10 years of failings from Labour” which he said had led to a £17m budget overspend in the department, “one of the largest” in the council’s history.

Cllr Prendergas­t also referred to Bootle Strand shopping centre and council companies including Sandway Homes, slamming what he described as “secrecy and lack of transparen­cy” over decisions being made.

He said the Conservati­ve group would not be supporting the council tax rise, which he described as “masking the failings” of the Labour-run council.

Leader of the community independen­ts group, Cllr Patrick McKinley declared his group would vote for the budget, but only if £350k of unallocate­d funding was earmarked for Maghull Town Council to help “mitigate” some of the pressures residents are facing due to a huge growth in house building in the area.

Leader of the council and the ruling labour group Cllr Ian Maher said there had been a “sustained attack on local government” in recent years but the council “will continue to do all we can to protect public services from the ravages”.

He said that while the budget contained no job losses or service reductions, he proposed it “with sadness”.

The Conservati­ves proposed one amendment to the budget, suggesting councillor­s take a 25% pay cut to fund extra provision for care experience­d children.

He said the measure would show the council “could take the tough decisions” needed to improve its failing children’s services.

This was met with accusation­s from Cllr Maher that Cllr Prendergas­t was turning children’s services into a “political football” before a vote was taken.

Liberal Democrats and Conservati­ves voted in favour of the proposal while Labour councillor­s and Independen­ts voted against, meaning motion failed.

On to the main budget, Liberal Democrat Cllr Simon Shaw spoke first, repeating a line of questionin­g about the huge increase in children’s services expenditur­e, which has gone up by 120% in four years.

Cllr John Fairclough said children’s services was “demand led” with a huge increase in the number of children in care in recent years.

Cllr Maher said that Liberal Democrat complaints of not having enough data to make amendments was “show boating” as the budget papers had already been to scrutiny before coming to council.

He described Cllr Prendergas­t’s remarks as “fairytales” and said local councils were the “fabric of society in this country.”

He spoke of councils being “held to ransom” by private social work companies, feeding into the huge increase in costs for children’s services, alongside an extra 200 children in care.

A vote was then taken and with all opposition opposed, but the ruling Labour group voting in favour, the budget proposals were approved. the

 ?? ?? John Pugh
John Pugh
 ?? ?? Sefton Council leader Ian Maher
Sefton Council leader Ian Maher
 ?? ?? Cllr Mike Prendergas­t
Cllr Mike Prendergas­t

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