The Scotsman

Burial and swimming costs soar under cuts

● Local authoritie­s use new ways to raise money such as parking fees

- By CHRIS GREEN chris.green@jpimedia.co.uk

Scots are being forced to pay more to bury their loved ones, park their cars and take their children swimming as councils struggle with budget cuts, according to the public spending watchdog.

Local authoritie­s are turning to new ways of raising money to cope with a real terms funding fall of 6 per cent since 201314, the Accounts Commission said in a report today.

Its annual assessment showed that as well as making cuts to some services and raising council tax by the maximum allowed, some are also levying new charges or increasing existing ones.

Local authoritie­s have increased 11 types of charge by greater than the rate of inflation over the past three years, it said, with the highest increases in relation to burials.

The cost of a graveyard or crematoriu­m plot rose by an

0 The cost of council services, from swimming pools to burials, as soared as spending cuts bite

average of 20 per cent over this period, while the cost of burial services also increased by 12 per cent. The price of home meals provided for the elderly increased by 6 per cent, while at-home care also rose by up

to 6 per cent per hour. Weekly charges for in-home alarms climbed by 8 per cent.

The average cost of a residentia­l parking permit increased by 6 per cent, while charges for the collection and disposal

of bulky items from people’s homes grew 8 per cent.

Leisure services were also affected, with swimming pool entry fees for children up 11 per cent and the cost of hiring out sports courts and school halls both up by 9 per cent. The watchdog also highlighte­d other discretion­ary ways councils were hoping to raise money, including through “tourist taxes” and charging businesses that provide parking places to employees. Council umbrella body Cosla said the Audit Commission’s report showed most local authoritie­s were continuing to deliver essential services to communitie­s despite “substantia­l cuts in funding”.

Resources spokeswoma­n Gail Macgregor said: “The current financial treatment of local government is not sustainabl­e nor in anyone’s interests, especially our communitie­s who rely on vital services.”

Holyrood’s opposition parties criticised the increases to burial costs, blaming the Scottish Government for cutting council funding.

“It’s simply horrifying that the cost of burying a loved one is soaring because of brutal cuts to councils,” Labour’s financespo­kesmanjame­skelly said. A Scottish Government spokesman said ministers had already acted to remove burial fees for under-18s and had published an action plan to tackle funeral poverty.

He said: “We recognise there are challenges, but we have continued to treat local government very fairly.”

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PICTURE: GETTY IMAGES

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