Published Date:
25 June 2008
THE city council ended the last financial year with money in the bank for the first time in five years, new figures have revealed.
The Lib Dem/SNP administration managed to balance the books and underspent by £600,000 in 2007-8. This compares to an overspend of £5.6 million by the previous Labour administration in 2006-7.
But Labour councillors today said the turnaround was only achieved after the new administration introduced "more cuts than Thatcher".
The £600,000 surplus was reached after a crackdown was launched on people falsely claiming single person council tax discount, which – along with more houses being built – helped bring in £5m more council tax than expected.
The administration also benefited from a reduction in loan charges, otherwise its general fund would have overspent by around £8m.
City finance leader Gordon Mackenzie said: "Had the administration not taken prompt action we would be facing a massive overspend with disastrous effects across council services."
New Labour group leader Andrew Burns said: "They slashed services left, right and centre – but after all that pain, they would still have gone over-budget."
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Last Updated:
25 June 2008 10:25 AM
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Source:
Edinburgh Evening News
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Location:
Edinburgh
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Related Topics:
Edinburgh Council