Wednesday, 27 November 2013

Local government cuts unfair to north-east, say councils

The average council in the north-east will lose £665 per person against £305 in the south-east by 2017-18 
Councils in the north-east of England will lose more than twice as much funding per person as those in the south-east over the next five years, according to a local government lobby group which says government cuts are widening England's economic divide.
A group of mainly urban councils says its calculations, based on cuts already pushed through and changes in local funding to come, suggest the average council in the north-east will lose £665 per person, compared with £305 in the south-east, by 2017-18.
Sigoma, the Special Interest Group of Municipal Authorities, representing large towns and cities in the northern, Midlands and south coast regions of England, accused the government of pushing some councils to breaking point and warned: "Any economic recovery may bypass parts of the UK."
But the government rejected the calculations and pointed to other figures suggesting some northern councils have considerably more spending power than the national average.
Sigoma, which is part of the Local Government Association, said its report took into account new funding structures and welfare changes. It argued that the changes meant councils suffering the largest cuts were often those facing the highest costs.
Its report, timed to coincide with an opposition day debate on the cost of living, said: "The government has failed to consider the cumulative impact of their reforms on councils, only assessing one change at a time. The large number of changes means that the same councils are being hit again and again with cuts in funding. Following years of disproportionate funding cuts councils have had to find significant savings so far; with opportunities for further savings now harder to find and given the rising cost of adult social care, some services are now at breaking point."
The councils are calling on the chancellor, George Osborne, to heed their warning that services will suffer as he prepares to present his autumn statement next week, when he will outline government tax and spending plans.
Steve Houghton, Sigoma chair and leader of Barnsley council, said his group's assessment "shows the government's complete disregard for the mounting pressure faced by certain councils and the pain it is causing their residents".
He added: "The government must make fair funding a key priority to allow councils to provide essential services without the growing distraction of a service failure."
However, local government minister Brandon Lewis rejected the report. "This crude lobbying exercise is based on made-up extrapolations designed to scaremonger rather than inform public debate. Council funding is fair to north, south, rural and urban areas. It is distributed to ensure the smallest reductions for the councils most reliant on government support," he said.
He referred to documents from the House of Commons library that showed that north of England councils have more spending power per household than their southern counterparts. "This year Newcastle has a spending power per household which is £300 more than the national average and £700 more than Wokingham, for example," Lewis added.
Labour says it will use its opposition day – when opposition parties can choose a topic for debate – to highlight a "growing cost of living crisis" across Britain caused by prices rising faster than wages. The party says London, Yorkshire and the Humber, the North West, Wales and the East of England have seen the biggest falls in real wages since 2010.
A separate report warns of a growing north-south divide in the jobs market as a southern construction boom fuels demand for workers in the south.
The focus on homebuilding and infrastructure projects like Crossrail in the South has seen almost half of the 55,663 construction vacancies advertised in October fall in London and the South East, according to a monthly labour market report from jobs search website Adzuna. Only 6% of advertised vacancies were in the North West and 3% were in the North East.
Across all sectors of the economy nine of the top ten cities to find a job are in the South, where there are twice as many vacancies as jobseekers, Adzuna said. Nine of the worst ten cities to find a job are in the North, with more than 20 jobseekers for each vacancy in Salford, the Wirral, Sunderland, and Hull
Article Source : http://www.guardian.co.uk
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