Audit
Scotland has published a report on local government charges for services. If
the subject sounds familiar, it should. UNISON Scotland published its own work
on the subject in May of this year, showing how charges appeared to be plugging
the gap caused by the Council Tax freeze.
This
report confirms that the income that councils raise from charges has risen over
the last decade and is estimated at some £1.3 billion, or approximately 7% of a
council’s overall expenditure. That’s equivalent to over
50% of the amount
they raise through council tax. And this doesn’t include rents or fines.
The
proportion of income from charges rose from 5.6% in 2003/04 to 7.4% in
2013. The implementation of the council tax freeze in 2007/08 altered the
relative proportion of councils’ income from charges as the chart below
demonstrates.
Councils
are facing continuing financial pressures through increasing costs and demands
on services. The Scottish Government funding settlement to local authorities
for 2013/14 is £9.9 billion, a decrease of about 2.25% in real terms. As a
consequence there is an increasing need for councils to examine potential
sources of income, including charging more for their services.
Councils
do not have complete freedom to charge for services. Many council services are
provided with no direct charge to the service user like children’s education
and street cleaning. Councils do however have discretion to charge for other
services such as planning consents and building control certificates, the use
of sports facilities, licensing and burials and cremations. Councils may also
offer price concessions to certain service users based on, for example, their
age, employment or financial circumstances.
Councils
apply charges to a wide range of services, but the biggest service area is
social work, followed by roads and transport (see below)
As
locally elected bodies it can be expected that councils' charging policies will
differ. The report recommends that councils should be transparent about their
charges and set them in the context of wider service objectives. Councils
should be aware of any unexplained inconsistencies and be able to explain why
their charging policy differs from other authorities, including the use of
benchmarking.
As we said in May, charges are cutting deep into people’s pocket and are often regressive. Freezing the Council Tax will not reduce poverty or inequality. Councils need resources to continue providing vital services rather than impose damaging cuts or punitive charges.
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