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Monday, 2nd November 2009 Change Date Latest Issue

Council tax freeze still on despite shortfall warnings

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Published Date: 29 November 2008
FINANCE chiefs have insisted Edinburgh is still on course for another council tax freeze, despite other local authorities threatening to rebel against Scottish Government policy.
A number of councils around Scotland have warned they cannot deliver on a second year of the SNP's flagship policy of council tax freezes without extra government funding.

Inflation, bigger pay settlements and greater demands due to the recession
are all cited as reasons for the need of a bigger council tax settlement.

City finance convener Gordon Mackenzie warned that without the £7 million being offered by the Scottish Government to pay for the freeze then city residents would be facing at least a three per cent rise in council tax costs.

However, city leaders are still pressing the Scottish Government for extra money to cover the expected £8m rise in energy prices, as well as other initiatives including free school meals and reducing class sizes.

Opposition leaders today expressed concern that the freeze is not being properly funded, which they warn is having a direct impact on frontline services.

Councillor Mackenzie said: "We are working on the assumption that there will be a freeze again this year and, although the situation is very fluid, I think we are odds-on for the freeze.

"The difficulty is that if we don't go for the freeze then you will be giving up the best part of £7m, which means you would then need at least a three per cent rise just to stand still.

"I would be very surprised if any of the other local authorities don't go with the freeze, but we are coming to the crunch time now so it will be interesting to see what happens."

The Scottish Government's offer is that councils must freeze their tax levels to receive a share of the £70m provided nationally for the purpose – enough, it says, to make up for councils foregoing a 3.2 per cent tax rise.

Edinburgh Labour group leader Andrew Burns said: "Any council tax freeze will obviously be welcomed by the public but it has to be properly funded.

"The evidence from the last 12 months shows us that the city did not get adequate compensation and it did have an effect on frontline services.

"The budget process has started and is meant to be settled within weeks, but we still don't know all of the details of the offer from the Scottish Government."

The Scottish Government yesterday claimed that the council tax freeze last year had in fact cost local authorities a total of £58m, £12m less than the original £70m allocated for the initiative.





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  • Last Updated: 29 November 2008 11:52 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Council tax
 
1

alex paterson,

edinburgh 29/11/2008 12:14:58
A council tax freeze is still on course,so what will be going up to compensate,liars.
2

ochone,

Sauchie, clack's 29/11/2008 12:39:37
Most of us still remember how many times unionists said that John Swinney wouldn't get the first freeze through!

Scotsman how about an article on those councils who bleat about financial difficulties, mentioning the Scottish government when it's all down to their own mishandling of their money.

You could do worse than start with Clackmannanshire council who are down to their/our last £60,000 and are going to get rid of lollypop ladies and men to save money.

Labour controlled of course.
3

Hugh Roscombe,

29/11/2008 12:46:19
2

Jejune.
4

Mallory,

Edinburgh 29/11/2008 13:58:26
Council tax needs to stay high to pay for all the pension fund losses
5

,

29/11/2008 15:54:20
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
6

subrosa,

29/11/2008 15:57:59
Another labour press release. zzzzzzz
7

,

29/11/2008 16:54:03
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
8

Stuntman Mike,

29/11/2008 18:10:59
This all reminds me of the days of one Michael Forsyth: I could just see him freezing CT and then taking flak for the resultant cuts, if he were still in power on the Scottish political scene, bless him!

A staunch Tory cousin of mine was recently speaking of his admiration for Salmond (as against that lefty Labour lot who were in before). The Nats are to the right of the Scottish comfort zone, and voters in Glenrothes twigged it. How long until the rest of Scotland really starts to wise up to what the Nats are really about as well?

Tick! Tock!
9

bully wee alba,

Edinburgh 29/11/2008 19:45:24
#9
You are no really very well clued up on Scottish political issues are you?

You claim that “The Nats are to the right of the Scottish comfort zone” without being able to quote any evidence for this somewhat bizarre analysis.

Examine if you will, the differences in SNP and nu-lieboor policies towards the public ownership of major public assets.

Who owns the new Edinburgh Royal Infirmary, (built under the previous lie-boor regime), and who will own the new Southern General Hospital,(that’s in Glasgow by the way)?

Consider the differing attitudes towards foreign wars, id cards, immigration, tax increases (10% rate) for the lowest paid, provision of social housing, free tertiary education, free school meals, public ownership of the transport infrastructure, removal of tolls on our estuary bridges, RET fares on our remote island ferry routes......................................

Your labour/tory crew have been found out, and are being chased.
10

,

30/11/2008 07:43:53
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
11

Duncan in Edinburgh,

01/12/2008 08:13:21
#11 I'm glad you think you are "nobodies fool" suchaparcel. Don;t you realise that the SNP includes both a left and a right wing? Or is your grasp of history that weak? If you support a party, you'd do well to try to understand it.

 

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