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2 Apr 2003 : Column 919continued
Tony Baldry (Banbury): I beg to move,
Thumping council tax increases in Oxfordshire and Cherwell are not the responsibility of local councillors, but are the result of a sleight of hand by Ministers. A few months ago, Ministers at the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister restructured local government finance, creating what they call a fair funding formula. The result is neither a fair formula for Oxfordshire nor for much of the south of England; nor does it provide adequate funding for Oxfordshire.
Put simply, the Government are transferring investment from local authorities in the south of England to councils in the midlands and the north. That is not my judgment; it was the assessment of the Chartered Institute of Public Finance and Accountancy, which found that council tax in southern councils outside London will increase by, for example, 17 per cent. in Cheltenham and 19 per cent. in Guildford. By contrast, council tax is scheduled to rise on average by just 4 per cent. in Scotland, and many local authorities in the north get off lightly, with increases below 10 per cent.
In Manchester, for example, bills will rise by only 5 per cent. Manchester is, of course, a Labour-held council. Indeed, I have discovered that of the 10 lowest
council tax rises taking place, seven are in Labour councils. That is a reflection not of their skills at financial management, but of Ministers giving more money to their friends in the north. My Bill would establish an independent commission that is required to find fairness, balance and impartiality in local government financing, in line with the purpose of other independent commissions.The Bill would bring another benefit. It would offer an opportunity for genuine transparency in local government funding. The Office of the Deputy Prime Minister's recent local government settlement followed an opaque consultation, obfuscated by Ministers, who refused to meet local authorities to listen to their concerns. Such financial gerrymandering would not happen under an independent commission.
The ODPM's consultation was meant to replace the standard spending assessment of grants to local authorities with a fair funding formula, but no one could say whether the settlement was fair when it was announced, because not all the announcements on local authority funding were made at the same time. It is impossible to compare last year with this year. That would not happen under an independent commission.
The changes announced in that ODPM settlement affect every service provided by every local authority, yet the Government have deliberately left councillors compromised by lack of information and explanation. Consider Oxfordshire. Only two things are certain: the first is that council tax will have to rise by at least 12.8 per cent., so band D homeowners in Cherwell will pay £25 more. The second is that local councillors who provide the services on which so many local people depend have no idea what will be the exact amount that they receive from the Government. The imposition of the grants, ceilings, floors and resource equalisations that are now part of local government finance settlements are still being absorbed by local authorities, including Oxfordshire.
Lack of information creates uncertainty, and uncertainty leads to instability. Such uncertainty would not occur under an independent commission. The extent of existing instability can be gauged from a letter to ODPM officials in December 2002, in which Oxfordshire county council explained that the proposed settlement
Under an independent commission, local government and local people could clearly see what funds were being allocated to which councils on a clear and transparent
basis. An independent commission would also allow us to move away from a situation where, in the Government's own words, the local government funding formula
I have referred to the council tax, but there will be no less an impact on business rates in Oxfordshire. The business rate rise there is bad news for smaller businesses in Oxfordshire and elsewhere in the country. The council tax rise is bad news for everyone living in Oxfordshire. We are told that the Government grant floors will delay the impact of the changes to grant in Oxfordshire, but that is not a solution. Floors do not produce fairness, and delay does not enhance stability. It is therefore imperative that an impartial public body be given the opportunity to say whetherafter all the ministerial talk of floors, ceilings, resource equalisation, and area cost adjustmentit is fair that 21 competent councils have to redistribute their resources to the 13 worst-performing local authorities. My Bill would also allow an independent commission to look at local government finance in the round.
I do not want to bombard the House with statistics, but to help me to explain what is happening in Oxfordshire county council's budget, it is well worth looking at the following facts. The council's spending is set to increase this year by £42 million. Of that, only £14 million is due to the normal effect of inflation. Most of the rest is made up of demands placed on the council by the Government. Some £2.5 million will be consumed by paying the increased national insurance contributions of the council's staff and contractors when the Chancellor's 2002 Budget comes into effect this month. Another £300,000 is needed to pay the Government's landfill tax. A nationally agreed above-inflation pay
increase for white collar workers will account for £1.7 million. A further £1.9 million is required to satisfy the Government's diktat on fair pay for low pay workers.It will also cost Oxfordshire county council £600,000 to store redundant fridges, which at present can be neither dumped nor recycled because the Government have been unable to satisfy EC directives. In addition, Oxfordshire council tax payers will have to stump up a £500,000 fine to the NHS if legislation goes through on local authorities blocking beds by failing to provide enough care home places for elderly people. Yet the reason why the council cannot find enough places is that it does not have the funding from central Government to invest in increasingly stretched local social services, which brings us full circle to the reason for the increase in council tax bills.
No one in a vulnerable group that depends on the support of social services provided by counties such as Oxfordshire can feel reassured that their life will be made more stable or secure by the seemingly far from impartial local government funding formulae. Let us consider their impact on pensioners in Oxfordshire. The council tax increases prompted one elderly couple to put it to me in a recent letter that
Bill ordered to be brought in by Tony Baldry, Mr. John Bercow, Mr. David Cameron, Mr. Boris Johnson, Mr. Robert Jackson, Richard Ottaway and Mr. Ian Taylor.
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