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Labour councillor calls on Kent County Council to use £6m windfall to save youth services

The largest local authority in the country has received a windfall worth millions from the government - sparking calls for lost youth services to be reinstated.

Rates rebates to Kent County Council (KCC) will amount to nearly £6m but the real figure will settle at £1.6m as much of the money had already been drawn from reserves.

Young people protesting outside County Hall in Maidstone over youth service funding cuts
Young people protesting outside County Hall in Maidstone over youth service funding cuts

The details of the cash boost are laid out in papers to tomorrow’s cabinet meeting.

Labour councillor Barry Lewis (Thanet) claimed the money should be used to restore services due to be cut to save cash.

The windfall of £5.9m came from three business rates pots and special grants.

But Conservative-run KCC, which faced a 2024-25 budget deficit of £80m in the face of falling government funding and rising costs, had already borrowed £4.3m from a contingency fund to help balance the books.

The entire windfall will be sunk into reserves ahead of another anticipated tough year.

Labour Kent County Councillor Barry Lewis
Labour Kent County Councillor Barry Lewis

The money did not come through in time for the council's budget being finalised on Feruary 19.

Cllr Lewis said: "KCC has closed a load of youth services all over the county to bring in the family hubs model. They should reinstate that funding, if they have got the extra money.

"It's a total false economy to lose those services - it will cost us all a lot more in the longer run. But the Tories won't listen - they never do."

Critics agreed that pulling funding for a host of youth-based faciities could harm young people's mental health and even drive them into gang crime.

But deputy cabinet member for finance Cllr Harry Rayner said: "I note Mr Lewis's comments but KCC has to show prudent budget management."

Labour Kent County Councillor Barry Lewis
Labour Kent County Councillor Barry Lewis

The documents for the meeting said: "The changes set out in this report are as a result of late announcements which could not have been known at the time budget papers for county council were prepared.

"Some of these late announcements have become common in recent years. We will be undertaking a review during 2024 of the processes surrounding late but necessary changes to the final budget to ensure that it aligns with the formal executive decision process."

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