We need to mobilise again: Anti-Austerity March July 2015 (Photo: Daily Mirror)
In a paper written before the General Election result was known Brent Cabinet are warned at their meeting tomorrow that the financial outlook for the Council is dire. They are facing cuts of £16m in 2025-26 and £30m in 2027-28:
Without intervention, we will enter freefall, heading towards the ground, with no easy way to pull back. Plainly, this will mean the functions that this council will be able to perform will be changed irreversibly, allowing for only the most vital services to remain.
Unfortunately, despite warnings from London Councils LINK and councils of every political hue across the country the incoming Starmer administration is sticking to its self-imposed fiscal rules and an improvement in the financing of local government and reform of the regressive council tax do not appear to be on the cards. The papers before the Cabinet repeat warnings made by the Brent finance chief last year LINK with increased intensity. This is from the Lead Cabinet Minister, Mili Patel's, Foreword to tomorrow' report LINK:
While our financial monitoring is robust and an area of pride to this council, the picture that these reports paint is much more sobering. If central government is the body entrusted to preserve the health and condition of the nation, it is local government that is left to deliver it. Since 2010, Brent Council has made at least £210m of cuts and the impact continues to be felt by everyone that lives and works in this borough. In the same period, our core funding from central government has decreased by 78%.
We have made it clear at each Council Tax setting budget meeting, this has meant that the funding burden for Brent Council has been derived principally from Council Tax, Business Rates and Fees and Charges. In other words – local Brent residents.
In this period, the number of council employees has also reduced by at least 50%, shifting more work onto fewer people. As a council, we have innovated, we have identified efficiencies and we’ve continued to generate more income than ever before. These measures alone are not enough in the long-term though, but for now they are enough to keep this council on borrowed time.
In this financial year (25/26) officers and members will be asked to identify a staggering £16m in cuts if this council is to continue standing still as we are today. There is no doubt, these cuts will be challenging for residents and for officers and members alike.
It is therefore unconscionable to consider that things could still get worse. If things remain the same, the best estimate for 27/28 is that we will need to find in the region of £30m in savings.
Without intervention, we will enter freefall, heading towards the ground, with no easy way to pull back. Plainly, this will mean the functions that this council will be able to perform will be changed irreversibly, allowing for only the most vital services to remain.
Sadly, we are not alone in this position. There were more section 114 notices in 2023 than in the 30 years before 2018, with a survey from the Local Government Association showing that almost one in five councils “think it is very or fairly likely they will need to issue a section 114 notice this year or next due to a lack of funding.
Local authorities like Brent have become the government’s emergency provider of last resort, delivering more services than ever, patching over political paralysis; from adult social care reform to the housing crisis; it is local government left picking up the price.
Residents are rightly angry – as the compact between council and citizen creaks more with every year. Residents rightly expect that by paying into the system that they should see a positive dividend. It is far harder to explain to residents that they are paying not just for their bins; but for looked after children, for whom the council is morally and legally obliged to support.
Under the Homelessness Reduction Act, we are also compelled to support those at threat of losing their home. The common thread between the Medium Term Financial Strategy (MTFS) our Q1 report and the Financial Outturn is the enormous pressure our Housing teams are under.
Over 150 families per week are presenting at the Civic Centre as homeless, and this report sets out a further £10m overspend on Temporary Accommodation. The housing crisis did not begin in the council – and until there is fundamental change; things will only get worse before they get better.
We have many housing schemes that remain shovel ready, but without an increase in subsidy, the borrowing required means the numbers simply don’t stack up, even over the multiplier of decades. In the meantime, i4B and our New Council Homes Programme remain our only shot, but with over 30k households registered on the housing wait list, it will take a generation to put right.
We also continue to be subjected to macro-economic factors outside of our control. The challenges facing any incoming government will be stark – from a public sector in managed decline; to the ongoing conflicts in the Middle East and Ukraine, and the climate crisis which will continue to alter our way of life forever.
Compared to our European counterparts, councils in the UK have significantly fewer powers over local spending and taxation. It can perhaps be of little surprise that over the past 15 years the average British household has become £8,800 poorer than its equivalent in five comparable countries, according to research prepared by the Resolution Foundation. Sluggish growth and a “toxic combination” of poor productivity and a failure to narrow the divide between rich and poor has resulted in a widening prosperity gap with France, Germany, Australia, Canada and the Netherlands, leaving us struggling to compete internationally.
Without a wholesale reset, our hands remain tied, and the status-quo will prevail. We should never forget, Council Tax is based on values that are now more than thirty years out of date, and the rate structure is so heavily regressive that Buckingham Palace pays less council tax than a 3-bed semi- detached home in Blackpool. That is the reality we exist within in.
At time of dispatch, we will not know who will form the next government. If we are to avoid more reports like the following, something has to give. Given the opportunity, Brent Council stands ready to rebuild and renew our public services. Until then, we will use our voice wherever we can to fight for the reform’s we desperately need. For now, officers and members will continue working hand in hand to protect our residents – breathing life into the services we offer and the change we can make today.
A 'wholesale reset' appears unlikely at present.
Brent will no doubt be banking on intensifying its brutal zonal planning cast system to ride this one out, where its population intensive growth zones have all public services provision systematically removed to grow even more full social excluded population poor build quality towered, tenanted and red line zoned in (or should that be zoned out).
ReplyDeleteYet, in Georgia Gould South Kilburn Tall Buildings Housing Zoned has its MP representative to Parliament sitting at the Cabinet table in number 10 in her new role as Parliamentary Under Secretary for the Cabinet Office.
If Brent Council have no money how can they possibly agree to Wembley Stadium having more 'major' events???
ReplyDeleteWe need urgent clarification regarding:
- who exactly pays for the clean up costs after the Wembley Stadium events???
- who exactly pays the salaries of Brent Council Enforcement Officers controlling the PSPO orders at Wembley Stadium??? The events run late into the evening and are also are often at weekends so do they get paid overtime???
- what exactly is the impact of having Brent Council Enforcement Officers working at Wembley Stadium events? Clearly if they are there then they are not working in the rest of the borough which gets neglected.
Do they get time off in lieu for the overtime worked at Wembley Stadium events??? If so this means their normal day to day work loads are impacted which then means the rest of the borough is further neglected.
- who exactly pays for the Parking Enforcement on Wembley Stadium event days???
The London Borough of Bankrupt B~ent
ReplyDeleteIn Brent we have a Labour run Council, Labour GLA Member, a Labour London Mayor, 2 and a bit Labour MPs and now a Labour Government. Surely all these Labour people should be able to get together and sort out this mess.
ReplyDeleteWhy should the Council Taxpayers have to pay to house homeless people - surely this (or at least the paying for it) should be the responsibility of the Government to pay for through national taxation.
The Brent Council Budget was fixed only 5 months ago - how is it that the Leader of the Council and the Director of Finance failed to identify the £10 million deficit identified just 5 months later? Are they up to the job?
Does the Cabinet Report make any realistic proposals to address the latest financial crisis?
Very good questions. The answer is 5 months ago was before the Parliamentary election.
DeleteBrent council is doing a very bad job at collecting money which is one of their biggest duties. They fail to collect enough council tax and business rates, as there are too many managers in those departments and not enough staff doing the actual work.
By not collecting the set target, the council budget gets penalised. That’s how it works.
Then there are the outsourced business rates collection to Capita and possibly someone has high vested interests to outsource council tax collection to their mates that’s why they are doing such a bad job at collecting it.
Anonymous makes some valid points and as Labour Councillors were claiming that a Labour Government was needed to get them out of the current mess it will be interesting if a Labour Government is any more supportive than the previous Tory one.
ReplyDeleteThere is one sensible way of easing Brent Council's (and many other Council's) financial pressures and that is:
Easing the restrictions on the use of accumulated CIL (Community Infrastructure Levy) so that it can be used for a wide range of Council needs - both capital and revenue.
I wrote to the Conservative Government suggesting this a few months ago but received a waffle answer from Michael Gove.
The point is simple. Local Government faces bankrupcy. YET Brent (and many other Councils) have tens of millions of pounds of unspent CIL in their reserves and face major restriction on how to spend it.
In the case of Brent the recent Budget predicted that by 31 March 2025 Brent Council will have a staggering reserve of £250 million - with more large amounts being added every year.
If the rules were eased so that Councils could sped CIL on temporary accommodation, upgrading pavements, fixing potholes, cleaning up their area, energy conservation etc etc - and in the case of Brent just £50 million of the £250 million Reserve a lot of good could be achieved and CUTS and worsening services avoided.
I am now writing calling for this to the Labour PM hoping that he recognises the urgency and responds more positively than the former Tory Government did.
The question is whether local Labour will support this Lib Dem initiative and campaign.
The CIL (Community Infrastructure Levy) pot would be even bigger if Labour run Brent Council hadn't handed £17.8million if our CIL money to multibillion pound developer Quintain to build their 'vanity project' steps outside Wembley Stadium!!!
DeleteQuintain applied for planning permission to do this in 2007 and would have budgeted the funds to do this so why exactly did Brent Council hand over this large sum of our CIL money??? That money could instead have been spent on so many vital local projects!!!
Revaluing homes that have been extended for council tax would also help!
ReplyDeleteHow is it fair for example that a family or landlord buy a house then put on extensions all around adding extra bedrooms and tens of thousands of pounds to the property value yet they still pay the same council tax as the house next door that hasn't been altered???
If Brent Council have no money how can they possibly agree to Wembley Stadium having more 'major' events each year???
ReplyDeleteWe need urgent clarification regarding:
- who exactly pays for the clean up costs after the Wembley Stadium events???
- who exactly pays the salaries of Brent Council Enforcement Officers controlling the PSPO orders at Wembley Stadium??? The events run late into the evening and are also are often at weekends so do they get paid overtime???
- what exactly is the impact of having Brent Council Enforcement Officers working at Wembley Stadium events? Clearly if they are there then they are not working in the rest of the borough which gets neglected.
Do they get time off in lieu for the overtime worked at Wembley Stadium events??? If so this means their normal day to day work loads are impacted which then means the rest of the borough is further neglected.
- who exactly pays for the Parking Enforcement on Wembley Stadium event days???
None of these costs should come from our hard earned council tax!!!
Paul Lorber says "If the rules were eased so that Councils could spend CIL on temporary accommodation, upgrading pavements, fixing potholes, cleaning up their area, energy conservation etc...a lot of good could be achieved and CUTS and worsening services avoided" BUT not sure our CIL money should be spent on these things as it will only put pressure on the Brent Council planning department to basically fund Brent Council services by granting planning permission for tower blocks to be built on absolutely every little space absolutely everywhere!!!
ReplyDelete@Paul Lorber - If CIL is used as a slush fund by Council's to dip into whenever they like, how will the much needed infrastructure requirements to support new development be funded? Surely this would just exacerbate the problem we are seeing with development coming forward without supporting infrastructure?
ReplyDelete@anonymous 15 July 22.07 - I think you need to get your computer serviced, the ! and ? keys seem to be sticking.
ReplyDeleteIf the council cannot get their sums right we have little or zero hope!
ReplyDeleteA claim circulating in news that Buckingham Palace pays less council tax than most English households is missing important context. In addition to council tax the palace is also subject to over £800,000 in business rates.
The councils maths are dire, they do not appear to make any recognition of the amount of new flats all subject to Council Tax that will be completed by 2027.
ReplyDeleteThey need independent Government auditors to go through their books, records and forecasts....
Do you think all these new flats will all be sold and pay council tax??????
DeleteThe council auditors are useless. They don’t spot any irregularities or fraud. They are all sitting there happy to take their salaries doing nothing. Or maybe because Brent council expects one person in each service area do the whole job previously done by 20 people. There is also a lot of waste and fraud going on. Quintain are too cosy with Brent council, building hotels and short lets buildings and avoiding business rates.
DeleteAusterity is always zoned by administrators and politicians.
ReplyDeleteLocal Labour went with Build Hyper Austerity Tall, Poor Quality and Red Line Zoned, will National Labour continue that reckless approach from 2024 onwards?
South Kilburn Hyper Austerity Zoned (no primary health services anymore and its 70 years old 2ha park under developer 'site allocation' threat since 2010) is now being represented at UK Cabinet meeting level by its new MP (earmarked to be a future PM)- should be the time for CHANGE, but will it be?
Just balance the books and use CIL monies after all this is called Community Infrastructure Levy is it not to be used for improving the lives of the local community? Why is it sitting in a bank account when if put to good use, and correctly dispersed Wembley should be an area of outstanding beauty, perfect roads no potholes, green flag parks with lots of facilities, plenty of doctors and dentists to serve the dense population. Brent should not be cutting services and scatting around to save pennies.
ReplyDeleteCIL is supposed to be used for new projects to help the community - it should not be used for things that the council should be funding themselves.
DeleteIf the council got out fining fly tippers they would make a fortune at £1000 per fine.
If only it were so simple. The question that should be posed is, why are there so many families being evicted every day by private landlords? Has it anything to do with local private landlords boasting to friends that they have increased their rents by 30% this year already? Why are there so many rentals and HMOs in Brent, well, because there are so many transient workers on the building sites and of course all the very low paid jobs supporting them. Basically, these people have no skin in the game in Brent, therefore its demise is accelerating.
ReplyDeleteBrent urgently needs to be where it is with strong cross borough boundary initiatives and total linkage into Inner London's wealth systems- at South Kilburn, at Kensal, at Harlesden....
ReplyDeleteWhy does Brent forever turn its back on wider regenerations south?
Lock Brent folk, life and wellbeing fully into Inner London's wealth systems and then Brent's bankruptcy drift would suddenly become a serious issue for oh so cosy Camden, Westminster, K&C and H&F.
How many student accomodation blocks have been built in Brent when we don't have any universities or major colleges here??? The students don't pay council tax and the building owners don't pay council tax either - yet they are all using our depleted local services!!!
ReplyDeleteThat is why there is no national social care reform bill ever being put before Parliament, which would of course massively help Brent to avoid bankruptcy.
ReplyDeletePopulation under caste tenanted tower GROWTH ZONES. Plantations/ machines all about intensive extraction and no public services facilities....
Where even an existing 2ha park being protected and invested in for a 45 ha Housing Towers Growth Zone is too big an ask in 2024. It would signal community, when parks are all brownfield sites in massive population Growth zones....
No wonder its best for government to keep on with no-plan on social care, as so many "brakes off" Growth Zones will be administered as post-social, post-care, no-community, total extraction economies zoned.
The trash dumping and neglect always allowed streets in year 23 of population growth zoned say it clear in city terms and that will never GHANGE.
In response to David waltons comment, what would be nice if we could replicate what the surrounding boroughs do for children and young people in providing play and sports facilities, centres for rhe elderly and disabled and spend our CIL monies providing things that will give the community facilities they can be proud of, that are valued and have longevity.
ReplyDeleteWas it not the Coalition Government of David Cameron (tory) and Nick Clegg (Lib Dem) that introduced the NCIL as a 'sop' to the Lib Dems so that they could claim that a levy on local building projects could be used by the local community to fund local projects? Or is that just history now?
ReplyDeleteDoesn't matter who introduced NCIL - what matters is that it's not being spent on what it should be spent on!
DeleteIt's a disgrace that Brent Council gave £17.8 million of our NCIL money to multi-billion pound developer Quintain for their vanity project steps outside the stadium - that money could have funded so many local projects helping us residents.