KCC set to reveal council tax increase
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by political editor Paul Francis
Your county council tax bill is set to rise by less than two per
cent this year - but only if the Government agrees to pay back
Kent County Council more than £7million owed for looking after
asylum seekers.
Kent County Council has announced a hike of
1.86 per cent this year, meaning average bills for
homes in Band D will increase to £1,045.
But final bills will be considerably higher after the
inclusion of the tax charged by district councils, Kent Police and
Kent Fire.
If approved next month, it would be the lowest increase ever set
by the county council.
Dull with a bit of sabre rattling - read
Paul's blog on the KCC budget>>>
But the ruling Conservative administration has warned there
could be a sting in the tail because it has not yet recovered more
than £7million owed in grants to meet the costs of looking after
asylum seekers.
If the money is not recouped, bills will have to rise by just
under 2.6 per cent, meaning an increase to £1,053 for the average
householder.
The KCC element accounts for the largest slice of council tax
bills.
The council has also announced there will be a pay freeze for
thousands of employees and about 460 job losses over the next two
years, some of which will be compulsory.
At the same time, it says that despite some £60million of
savings, its spending plans will spare key frontline services.
Council leader Cllr Paul Carter said he did not want to stoke up
resentment against asylum seekers but it was wrong for Kent
taxpayers - to pick up the tab.
He said: "Asylum is a national issue and we believe it is
morally right that these costs are met nationally and not by Kent.
I have been involved in protracted talks with the immigration
minister Phil Woolas and I am hopeful we will resolve the issue of
these unmet costs before we set the budget."
While vital services could be safeguarded this year, potentially
painful cuts were more or less inevitable in the following two
years, he added.
"We are all going to have to start talking about what it is we
will have to stop doing - that is an inevitable conclusion if you
look at what is happening in the public sector."
KCC said that despite the Government increasing grants by 3.2
per cent, it was not enough to meet unavoidable costs. Among them
is an extra £4million to deal with the fallout from the Baby P
scandal, which has seen child protection referrals rocket by 40 per
cent.
Opposition Labour spokesman Cllr Les Christie said the only
reason KCC was out of pocket over asylum was because it had failed
to provide the evidence needed to prove its claims.
"The Government is paying for the asylum service provided that
the claims are backed by proper documentation. No Government would
hand out taxpayers' money without full verification. If the
Conservatives cannot provide what is needed, then the fault lies
with them," he said.
Tuesday, January 05 2010
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