Written statement by , Secretary of State for
Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government, on
Local Government Finance update
I wish to set out to the House the financial support my department
has provided to local government so that it can fulfil its
essential role in the national response to covid-19.
Additional Funding
In total I have announced over £3.2 billion of additional funding
for councils to support their continued efforts to address the
impacts of the coronavirus pandemic in their communities, both
through increased expenditure and those budgetary pressures that
arise from falls in income during the lockdown period.
Recognising that councils are best placed to decide how to meet
pressures in their local area, this funding has not been
ringfenced; however, we expect councils to prioritise spending in
those areas where we asked them to carry out extra work and new
tasks, in particular, in relation to adult social care,
children’s services, public health services, shielding the
vulnerable, homelessness and rough sleeping, supporting the NHS,
and managing excess deaths.
An initial £1.6 billion of funding was announced on 19 March, and
allocated based on a mixture of the Adult Social Care Relative
Needs Formula; and the 2013-14 Settlement Funding Assessment,
which is a measure of general service needs – both of which are
familiar formulations to local councils. Further details of this
allocation, broken down by individual local authority, can be
found on the government website.
On 18 April I announced a further £1.6 billion to support
councils in their continued response to the pandemic. Full
details of the allocation of this further funding were announced
on 28 April 2020 and have, once again, been made available on the
Government website. These additional allocations have been made
on a per capita basis, using the latest ONS population
projections. This reflects that this is a national emergency and
there are a range of pressures across local government. For
two-tier areas, the split of this funding between county and
district authorities will be 65:35. This provides significantly
more funding to district councils than the first round of
allocations reflecting the impact that a reduction in incomes
from sales, fees and charges has had, particularly on these
councils. However, this formulation also continues to reflect the
acute pressures on social care.
Of the additional funding, £28.5 million will support standalone
fire and rescue authorities (including Greater Manchester Fire).
In addition, the Home Office will launch a £6 million Fire
Covid-19 Contingency Fund specifically to support fire and rescue
authorities who incur significant costs as a result of additional
duties during the covid-19 outbreak.
Cashflow Support
On 16 April, I announced measures to provide cashflow support to
authorities. These were intended in part to mitigate the impact
of temporary delays in tax payments. These measures include
deferring the payment of the central government share of business
rates by councils: payments collectively worth £2.6 billion; and,
bringing forward central government payments of social care
grants worth £850 million, so that they are paid entirely in
April rather than in April, May, and June.
Future Reform
I am committed to reforming the funding framework for local
government so that it is simpler, more up to date, and more
transparent. However, in order to ensure that we get these
reforms right, both the Government and councils need to work
together to arrive at the right approach. Neither we nor councils
currently have the capacity, nor the necessary degree of
financial certainty, to engage properly with these reforms now.
As such, I have announced that we will be suspending
implementation of the Review of Relative Needs and Resources and
the planned increase to 75% business rates retention in 2021-22.
These decisions will allow councils to focus on meeting the
immediate public health challenge posed by the pandemic.
The Government will work closely with local councils as it
determines how best to treat accumulated business rates growth
and the local government finance settlement in 2021-22.