Pressat

Millions of rural residents face 'chronically unfair’ postcode lottery on funding for their local services

Monday 20 November, 2017

Embargoed until 00.01 Monday, November 20, 2017



Millions of rural residents receive almost 50% less funding for their public services compared to their neighbours in England’s largest cities, leading to calls for an end to the postcode lottery of government funding and for a ‘new deal’ for county areas.


Collectively, England’s 37 county areas received £3.2bn less than the English average (including London and towns and cities outside rural areas) this year, new statistics reveal.


This means that on average, county councils received £650 per person in 2017/18 for public services such as adult social care, buses, libraries, bin collections, pothole repairs, and children’s social services. In contrast, a city or metropolitan borough resident receives £825 for their services, whilst those in inner London enjoy £1,190 per person.


Leaders of England’s largest rural councils are gathering today and tomorrow at the County Councils Network Annual Conference, where they will tell government ministers in attendance that they need a new deal for their rural areas and communities otherwise frontline public services will have to be cut.


This is because county authorities face a funding black hole of £2.54bn by 2021, due to austerity and these funding inequalities between rural and urban areas.


Just days before Chancellor’s Autumn Budget, Cllr Paul Carter, Chairman of the County Councils Network and Leader of Kent County Council, will tell delegates today:


“Our services are threatened and under pressure like never before. Unless these inequalities are addressed, many of the highly valued services to our public will diminish or disappear.


“For too long now, the 26 million people in England’s shire counties have not received a fair share of national resources.


“This means our shire heartlands are receiving an eye-watering £3.2bn less than other parts of the country for services.


“This impacts on the daily lives on our residents, all whilst they unfairly subsidise services enjoyed in other parts of the country through higher council tax bills. This is outdated and chronically unfair.”


He will warn the gathering of predominately Conservative councillors that there are growing concerns that the government’s review of local government finance will not resolve historical inequalities, and ‘fudge’ the issue, a situation he argues, will not be tolerated by county MPs.


These historical inequalities have led to a number of geographical quirks where residents are playing a postcode lottery in funding for their local services.


For example, a rural taxpayer in Leicestershire gets £428 per person for their public services, but those living, in some cases, less than a mile away in Leicester (a unitary city council) receive £1,107 per person for their services – 61% more.


With county leaders having little choice but to raise council tax to make up the shortfall, they warn that their residents are unfairly subsidising the services enjoyed in other parts of the country.


The average county council tax bills is now £1,661; whilst councils such as Westminster and Kensington & Chelsea have been in a position to freeze their bills, last year offering residents in multi-million pound homes rates as low as £669 and £1,059 for average Band D properties.



ENDS


Notes to editor




National and regional breakdowns of funding per local authority type/area:






























Council type



Average funding per head



Inner London



£1,190



Outer London



£944



City/Metropolitan Borough



£825



Non-county unitary council



£675



County areas



£650




East Midlands


































County



Funding per head



Derbyshire



£748



Nottinghamshire



£577



Lincolnshire



£564



Northamptonshire



£530



Leicestershire



£428



Average



£574



East of England






































County



Funding per head



Essex



£581



Suffolk



£568



Norfolk



£643



Cambridgeshire



£531



Hertfordshire



£698



Central Bedfordshire



£898



Average



£627



South East










































County



Funding per head



Buckinghamshire



£910



East Sussex



£636



Hampshire



£720



Kent



£655



Oxfordshire



£524



Surrey



£589



West Sussex



£656



Average



£662



South West


































County



Funding per head



Cornwall



£591



Devon



£609



Dorset



£742



Gloucestershire


Somerset




£640

£541






Wiltshire



£555



Average



£610



West Midlands


































County



Funding per head



Staffordshire



£592



Warwickshire



£602



Worcestershire



£554



Herefordshire



£557



Shropshire



£655



Average



£597







North West






























County



Funding per head



Lancashire



£892



Cumbria



£729



Cheshire West & Chester



£827



Chester East



£532



Average



£800







North East






















County



Funding per head



Durham



£895



Northumberland



£762



Average



£845






Yorkshire & Humber






















County



Funding per head



North Yorkshire



£836



East Riding



£671



Average



£794




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