The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Urgent action needed to find £17m savings amid bleak forecast

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Highland Council must find £17.7 million in savings this year alone, as it battles to close a projected £50m budget gap.

A report for the corporate resources committee sets out the bleak figures, together with a warning that cash reserves are well below recommende­d levels.

In the first three quarters of this financial year, Highland Council has spent £438.1m.

By that trajectory, council services will face a £3.27m overspend by the end of the year.

It’s actually an improvemen­t on previous projection­s, which put the figure closer to £9m.

A freeze on recruitmen­t and tight spending controls have reduced it considerab­ly.

However, when you factor in inflationa­ry pressures and the staff pay award, council finance bosses say they must find savings of £17.7m this year.

Currently, service heads are reviewing every penny of spend, with a target to make 15% cuts across the board.

Rising inflation, fuel, energy and labour costs have also hit councils hard.

Highland Council’s communitie­s and place budget covers things like bin collection­s, community services, environmen­t and public toilets.

That service is forecastin­g a £1.2m overspend mostly due to the cost of petrol and vehicle components.

On the same theme, increased costs for bus contracts have resulted in a £2.7m overspend in the economy and infrastruc­ture budget. There’s also a deficit relating to the Corran Ferry.

And housing bosses have been forced to halt all non-urgent repairs as labour and utilities costs create a £2.59m overspend.

The ongoing teacher strikes have contribute­d to a £1.72m overspend on education budgets. Going forward, the broader staff pay award is creating a £4.1m budget pressure, because the council had only budgeted for a 2% increase.

Some services have come in under budget but every department is feeling the pressure.

The finance report states that the vast majority of these overspends are recurring – they will continue and increase into 2023-24.

Yet some of the savings the council has already identified are one-offs.

So to balance the books, the council will need to deliver nearly £18m savings this financial year, and up to £50m in the medium-term.

The revenue budget report will go to the corporate resources committee on February 22.

However, for now, councillor­s are just being asked to note the content.

The real crunch time will be the revenue budget meeting on March 2, when the full scale of cuts and savings will be up for debate.

 ?? ?? Highland Council is facing a £50m budget gap.
Highland Council is facing a £50m budget gap.

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