RATE CAPPING WRONG
The Local Government Association said it
would be wrong for ministers to use their capping
powers to limit council tax rises. The average
tax rise is expected to be 6% but some councils
are likely to set rises of above 10%. Ministers
have said "excessive" rises may be
capped but the LGA said independent checks would
be unlikely to find evidence of unreasonable or
excessive spending.
It argues that the rises are even lower than
Chancellor Gordon Brown's forecasts of 7.2%.
Pensioners in many parts of the UK have been
conducting a high-profile campaign against big
rises in council tax, with some risking jail if
they fail to pay up. Local Government Minister
Nick Raynsford said he was encouraged by evidence
that some councils have listened to calls to
lower their council tax increases to an average
of around 6% but he said there was no room for
complacency.
He added, "There are still authorities whose
increases are significantly above this
average." He pledged that the government
would use capping powers where an
"unreasonable burden" was placed on
council tax payers. "With the kind of levels
being talked about in some areas, which are in
double figures and imply quite large budget
increases, then I think it is likely we will be
using our capping powers," he said. |
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RATE CAPPING THREAT 2
Ministers are preparing to battle local
councils across the country who plan inflation-busting
increases in council tax of up to 23%. The Deputy Prime
Minister, John Prescott, and Nick Raynsford, the local
government minister, have warned councils that they face
being capped if they raise council tax rates by more than
10%. A survey of nearly 50 local authorities has found
that at least 10 councils propose double-figure
increases, placing them in danger of government action.
Many more are considering rises of at least twice the
rate of inflation, including Peter Mandelson's Hartlepool
constituency, Leicester, Middlesbrough, Islington in
north London, Southend-on-Sea, and North Somerset.
In several major towns and cities, the rises will mean
council tax increases of £150 a year or more. But
ministers believe most of the offending authorities will
be Liberal Democrat or Tory-controlled, and are putting
Labour councils under pressure to squeeze spending and
services to ensure rises are below 5%. After decades of
Tory jibes that Labour councils are profligate, ministers
believe they will be able to turn the tables on
opposition parties. Ten years ago, average charges for a
band D property were £225 higher in Labour areas than in
Tory authorities. That gap has now narrowed to £40, and
current council tax rises may eliminate it outright.
Mr Raynsford, who sent warning letters to 31 councils
about their council tax proposals, said, "A number
of local authorities have talked about council tax
increases in double figures, but in most cases they are
coming right down. We have made it clear that we expect
councils to reach low single figures. We will use our
capping powers on councils that propose unreasonable
increases." Leicester, controlled by a joint Lib
Dem-Tory administration, is planning increases of up to
14%, taking the band D charge to over £1,100 a year.
Labour-controlled Brighton will increase by up to 12%,
leading to a band D rate of roughly £1,200.
Some councils are spoiling for a fight with the
Government, claiming they are being forced to put up
local taxes to meet demands from ministers to spend fixed
amounts on education and more on homelessness and social
services. Tory-controlled Medway council in Kent, which
is planning a 15% rise to £903 for band D, claims it has
to raise local taxes because it has been ordered to meet
higher spending demands. But ministers will face
difficulties in capping some very low-spending councils
that plan high percentage increases, since the cost of
the rise will remain modest.
Rates in Tory-run Rother in East Sussex could go up as
much as 21%, but that will still leave band D rates at
just £139. However, the battles over council tax rates
will increase pressure on ministers for wholesale reforms
of local government finance. Some experts have suggested
introducing a new local income tax, which will reduce a
council's reliance on grants from central government. Sir
Brian Briscoe, chief executive of the Local Government
Association, said his organisation wanted councils to be
given a fixed share of the income tax raised by the
Inland Revenue to give councils much greater financial
independence.
He said ministers should be keen to avoid a clash over
council tax rises, and also insisted the vast majority of
councils would rather not impose huge increases. "I
don't think ministers are keen for a fight over
this," he said. "If Labour learned anything
from the period of Margaret Thatcher's capping of
authorities, they would know it's not a very clever idea.
It makes the Government responsible for everything,
council tax rises and the delivery of services." (Source: The Independent)
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