Mr Deputy Speaker (Mr Nigel Evans) Mr Clive Betts, the Select
Committee Chair, will speak for up to 10 minutes, during which no
interventions can be taken. At the conclusion of his statement, I
will call Members to ask questions about it. These should be brief
questions, not speeches. I should also emphasise that questions
should be directed to the Select Committee Chair and not to the
relevant Minister. Front Benchers may take part in questioning.
3.24pm Mr Clive...Request free trial
Mr Deputy Speaker ( )
, the Select Committee Chair,
will speak for up to 10 minutes, during which no interventions
can be taken. At the conclusion of his statement, I will call
Members to ask questions about it. These should be brief
questions, not speeches. I should also emphasise that questions
should be directed to the Select Committee Chair and not to the
relevant Minister. Front Benchers may take part in
questioning.
3.24pm
(Sheffield South East)
(Lab)
It is a great pleasure to make this statement on behalf of the
Levelling Up, Housing and Communities Committee about its report
“Financial distress in local authorities”. Let me first thank the
Leader of the House for tabling the business motion that has
allowed the statement to be made. Our Committee Clerk is excited
about the fact that we have apparently set a procedural precedent
today; I was certainly not aware of that, but I am now. Let me
also thank the Backbench Business Committee for originally
providing the time for the statement.
Our inquiry looked into the extent of the funding gap in local
authorities’ finances, and some of the main spending challenges
that they face: social care, special educational needs and
homelessness. The report brings attention to key issues ahead of
the upcoming local government financial settlement. It makes
recommendations not only for urgent action to resolve the
immediate crisis, but larger reforms for the Government to
consider after the next election.
Everyone recognises that the financial crisis in local
authorities across England is out of control. In recent months an
alarming number of them have issued section 114
notices—admissions that their spending is exceeding their
income—thus effectively declaring bankruptcy. In the last six
years, eight authorities have issued such notices; in the
previous 18 years, none did. It is no longer the case that a
small number of individual councils with particular issues are in
financial distress. We are now seeing widespread financial
distress across large parts of local government, and the
situation is only getting worse. The Committee has heard evidence
from the Local Government Association that one fifth of councils
may be in financial distress within the next year.
At the heart of this crisis is a multi-billion-pound funding gap.
The income available to local authorities from council tax,
retained business rates and government grants has not kept pace
with the increased demand for their services and the effect of
inflation. As a result, the Local Government Association
estimates that authorities face a funding gap of £4 billion over
the next two years to maintain services at their current
levels.
Witnesses have told us that the current funding system is
“broken” and “not fit for purpose”. Successive Governments since
2010 have reduced the level of central Government grants awarded
to local authorities by about 50%. This has been partly offset by
a 20% increase in council tax, which has therefore led to an
overall reduction in local authority core spending power of 26%
in real terms between 2010 and 2021.
In the short term, local authorities need immediate additional
funding. Our report recommends that the Government must include
additional funding in the local government finance settlement for
2024-25 to fill the gap. Last week the Government announced £600
million of extra funding, and I give credit to the Minister, who
has been assiduous in listening to the views of Members on this
subject. However, although those measures are welcome, they are
not sufficient.
Our report recognises that the Government have recently begun
consultations on other methods of increasing the funds available
to local authorities. We have cautiously welcomed the fact that
they are considering giving authorities additional capital
flexibilities to fund day-to-day costs, but we have recommended
that those additional flexibilities should be considered
carefully and limited to extending flexibilities over
invest-to-save activity. We do not want to store up problems for
future years.
Our report also recommends other ways in which the Government can
improve funding for local authorities in the medium term. We have
repeated the recommendation, which our Committee first made in
2021, that the Government must urgently reform council tax. This
would involve undertaking a revaluation of properties and
introducing additional council tax bands. Finally, we have once
again called for the Government to implement the business rates
reset and fair funding review, to which they committed themselves
in 2016 but which they have yet to deliver, and to reintroduce
multi-year settlements.
Our inquiry asked witnesses what had caused the sharp rise in
council expenditures. It identified three particular areas where
costs have risen significantly: adults’ and children’s social
care, special educational needs, and homelessness. On adults’
social care, the increasingly complex needs of a changing
population continue to drive up costs, and long-term workforce
shortages and inflationary pressures have made the position
worse. As the Committee recommended back in 2022, the Government
need to recognise that local authorities will need several
billion pounds of additional funding each year to continue to
deliver and improve adult social care, and should plan a
sustainable mechanism to deliver this funding that does not
simply rely on increasing council tax.
On children’s social care, our inquiry found that councils are
facing rising demand for residential care placements and a poorly
functioning market for providing them. That has driven
significant cost increases. Our report recommends an urgent
comprehensive reform of the children’s social care system. As
part of that, the Government should help local authorities
consider greater collaboration so that between them they can
deliver more children’s care services directly, instead of
through private suppliers. Our inquiry also found that local
authorities face significant financial pressures in providing
services for children and young people with special educational
needs and disabilities—SEND. The number of education, health and
care plans has “skyrocketed” since they were introduced in 2014,
which has significantly increased demand for more expensive forms
of SEND provision and home-to-school transport. Funding is
provided to local authorities through the dedicated schools
grant, but it is not enough to meet the demand and does not cover
home-to-school transport.
The Government have already been forced to take temporary
measures to prevent SEND costs from forcing a large number of
councils into bankruptcy. In 2020, the Government introduced a
“statutory override”, allowing local authorities to exclude any
deficits on their DSG spending from their main revenue budgets.
Local government faces a potential cliff edge of section 114
notices whenever the statutory override comes to an end. The
question is: will the Treasury write off that extra borrowing
when the time comes? Our report recommends, therefore, that in
the short term the Government should provide additional funding
for home-to-school transport. In the long term, there needs to be
a fundamental reform of the EHCPs, based on a cross-Government
review.
Finally, our report makes it clear that rising homelessness has
increased costs for councils. A big cause of the increase has
been the Government’s decision to freeze local housing allowance
rates in April 2020, so our report welcomes the Government’s
recent announcement that they will increase local housing
allowance rates from April 2024. However, it also raises concerns
about the Government’s decision to then re-freeze the rates in
2026. Instead, we recommend that local housing allowance should
be retained at at least the 30th percentile of local market
rents. In the longer term, the best solution, as the Committee
has recommended repeatedly, is to build more social housing,
which will always be cheaper than paying for temporary
accommodation.
These problems require a long-term solution. That is why the
Committee has made recommendations in this report for whichever
Government are elected after the next election. The next
Government, regardless of their political persuasion, must embark
on a fundamental review of the systems of local authority funding
and local taxation, both council tax and business rates. In doing
so, they must be clear about what local authorities are for and
how they can best co-ordinate with delivery of the Government’s
wider objectives. We have recommended that the next Government
should consider many options, which may include land value taxes
and others, and wider fiscal devolution. They must also explore
all options for reforming the funding and delivery of social care
services, to address the underlying causes of the acute funding
and delivery pressures currently faced by local authorities. It
is my hope that the need we have identified for additional
funding will be properly reflected in the local government
financial settlement we will debate next week, and that our other
recommendations will be carefully considered by this Government
and whoever form the Government after the next election. I
commend this report to the House.
Mr Deputy Speaker ( )
Thank you very much for your statement, Mr Betts. I call . I intend to call the Front Benchers at the end, if
everybody is happy with that.
(Harrow East) (Con)
I thank the Chairman of the Select Committee for what he said.
Clearly, one problem is that adult social services, children’s
social services and homelessness services are all demand led, so
it is very difficult for a local authority to predict the number
of people involved and how much money will be required. Does he
agree that what the Government and the Department need to look at
now is how we can enable local authorities to have a pool of
money nationally that could be used by a particular local
authority when these demand-led services have dramatically
increased the burden on it?
Mr Betts
I thank the hon. Gentleman—I call him my Select Committee
Friend—because he has been part of all these debates and always
the Committee report was unanimous. He is absolutely right: we
have to find a way of funding social care in the specific parts
and for the general social care issues. Council tax simply cannot
meet that burden; we cannot keep putting council tax up to cover
it. That leads on to the additional challenge that most people do
not receive social care and what they are seeing every year is
their council tax going up but the services they do get—the
libraries, parks, buses and road sweeping—being reduced. They are
paying more and getting less, and that is not sustainable in the
long term.
(Birmingham, Perry Barr)
(Lab)
I commend my hon. Friend on his brilliant work. On local
government funding, he will know that Birmingham City Council is
under special measures having issued a section 114 notice, and
other services have been hugely hit by the lack of funding. One
reason councils have been forced into this position is that there
has been a lack of funding to the reserves that keep them out of
bankruptcy, so the lack of proper funding for local authorities
is a real issue.
Mr Betts
I recognise the particular problems in Birmingham. Some councils
that have issued section 114 notices have specific problems; we
know about the equal pay issues in Birmingham, for example. Some
councils—I am referring generally—have perhaps brought those
problems on themselves. However, as we say in the report, the
challenge is no longer just individual councils with particular
problems, but the generality of local government being under
pressure, as set out by all our witnesses from the sector. In
that situation, any challenging problem that comes to a council
on top of a general problem can tip it over the edge.
(Barnsley East) (Lab)
I thank my hon. Friend for his report. Barnsley Council’s budget
has seen some of the biggest cuts in the country, which makes it
even more impressive that it has been given two awards for being
council of the year. To date, my constituency of Barnsley East
has received no levelling-up funding, although such funding is a
drop in the ocean compared with the figures my hon. Friend was
discussing. We are awaiting the decision on our final bid, which
was made to the cultural fund. Does the Chair of the Select
Committee know when that might be announced? I note the Minister
is in his place and I hope he will look on the Elsecar Heritage
Centre bid favourably.
Mr Betts
If it was in my gift, of course I would give Barnsley the money
it is asking for today, but unfortunately it is not. In another
report, the Committee was fairly critical of the individual pots
for levelling up, which are not joined up together. It is
unsatisfactory that some councils can get bits of money from all
these pots, while others get nothing at all. To address those
problems, we have suggested a move towards single pots for local
authorities, reflecting their needs and giving greater discretion
and freedom to decide on spending at a local level. We are quite
a long way off that at this stage. In principle, the Government
recognise that is the way to travel, but they have not got a road
map about how we are going to get there.
(Nottingham East) (Lab)
I thank my hon. Friend for all his work on this important report.
It is a privilege to serve on the Levelling Up, Housing and
Communities Committee under his chairship. He does not need me to
tell him that, like many local authorities, Nottingham City
Council is in a perilous financial position. Our council’s
spending power has been cut by a huge 28% compared with 2010,
despite high levels of deprivation in our city. This is
considerably higher than the average, still devastating,
reduction of 19% among councils. How important does he believe it
is to make the local government funding system fairer?
Mr Betts
I completely agree that it should be made fairer. The only caveat
I would add is that one authority’s system of fair funding is
another authority’s unfair funding, which is always a challenge.
Everyone accepts that the funding system must be brought up to
date. The current funding system has data in it that goes back to
the last century, which is not a reasonable way to allocate money
in the current age, so yes, it needs to be revised.
On the funding cuts and the council tax increases, the biggest
funding cuts have tended to be made to those councils that used
to receive the most grant, which tend to be the poorer councils.
The council tax increases have disadvantaged councils with a low
council tax base, which tend to be those councils who received
the biggest cuts. We have not gone into that in detail in this
report, but I know we have had evidence to that effect in the
past.
(Leeds East) (Lab)
I thank the Chair of the Select Committee for this important
report, which makes sobering reading for Members across the
House. Does he agree that the reason his measures are so
necessary in Leeds is that Government funding to Leeds City
Council has been cut by the Conservative Government by £2.5
billion since 2010? That has left Leeds City Council, an
excellent Labour-run council, with a shortfall of £65 million for
the 2024-25 financial year. The £2.5 billion of cuts to
Government funding since 2010 equate to about £75 million per
ward, leaving the council struggling to deliver essential
services for some of the most vulnerable people in our city. Is
that not why everyone here, regardless of their political party,
needs to support the measures set out in this report?
Mr Betts
I thank my hon. Friend for his question. We clearly set out that
the problem is due to a cut in funding. That is the result of a
reduction in the central Government grant, with council tax
increases only partly, but not wholly, replacing the funds. That
issue needs addressing if we want councils to continue not only
performing social care functions, but doing everything else that
our communities rely on. We need fundamental reform; that is what
we are calling for in the longer term. That is a challenge for
any Government—I look at both Front Benches here—because if we
reform local finance, some people will have to pay more and some
will have to pay less. I always say that those people who pay
more never forget about it and continue to blame the Government
for years to come. Those who pay less will thank the Government
and then forget about it next year. There is always a challenge
when it comes to spreading the tax take around differently. But
we will have to do it differently, because these council
services—not just social care, but the parks, the buses, the
libraries, the roads, the environmental services, the planning,
and the economic development, which has almost fallen off the
scale in some councils—are really important.
(Bradford East) (Lab)
The reality is that 14 years of ideological austerity cuts have
left many authorities on the brink of bankruptcy. From 2015 to
now, Bradford Council has had £100 million-worth of cuts, which
has left our services decimated and our communities devastated
and deprived of much-needed services. I thank the Chair of the
Select Committee for his report. I particularly welcome the call
for much-needed and immediate funding for local authorities. Does
he agree that the much-needed funding must be given, and if it is
not given, any blame for section 144 notices should lie directly
and squarely at the door of this Government?
Mr Betts
I thank my hon. Friend for his question. The report says that not
every section 144 notice can be blamed on the Government. There
will be circumstances in which councils get themselves into
difficulty, but what we have said is that there are general
problems coming down for councils, which have been created by a
shortage of funding. We did make reference to Bradford.
Bradford’s problem is the young age of its population—the number
of children. Children services are run by trustees appointed by
the Secretary of State for Education. That body has demanded from
the council an amount equivalent to about 50% of its council
budget. We could get the ridiculous situation in which the
Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities
sends in commissioners to run services to try to find the money
to pay the trustees who are appointed by the Secretary of State
for Education. That does not seem a great way for local
government to operate.
(Oldham West and Royton)
(Lab/Co-op)
I thank the Chair of the Select Committee for what I think is a
very important report. I also thank the Committee members who
have spent a significant amount of time getting under the skin of
the issue. First, does he agree that, ahead of the scheduled
finance settlement next Wednesday, the Government need to finally
take responsibility for the financial crisis in local government?
Secondly, does he share my concern that the breakdown in local
government audit is contributing to the removal of the early
warning system?
Mr Betts
I thank my hon. Friend for that question. Yes, it certainly is
doing so. I have just produced a report about local government
audit. There is a real problem there. If accounts have not been
audited for three years, as in most cases, but probably longer in
other cases, how on earth do we know what is happening in local
council finances? Certainly, getting local audit on an even keel
by the end of this year is very important, but where accounts are
qualified, as they will be, councils should not be blamed for
that; it is the problem of the local audit system, and we really
must sort that out.
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Levelling Up,
Housing and Communities ()
On behalf of the Government, I thank the Chair of the Select
Committee and all his colleagues on it for the work that they do
in general, and for the report in particular. I will obviously
study it with great care, and respond in the usual way. He made a
number of points. I think we can all agree that certainty and
security for the local government sector are important, and I
concur with his view that there is clear merit in multi-year
settlements. I also agree that whoever is standing at the
Dispatch Box in the role of local government Minister after the
next general election—I pray to God that it will be me, and I
hope that my prayers will be answered—reforms will always be
difficult and complex. I would be interested to know whether the
hon. Member for Sheffield South East (Mr Betts) sees any merit in
establishing some cross-party working and blue-sky thinking on
the issue, in order hopefully to land something that can deliver
certainty and security for five, 10, 15 or 20 years ahead, to
give comfort to local government leaders, section 151 officers
and others.
Mr Betts
While I might not completely agree with the Minister’s prayers, I
agree that if we are to sort this out for the long term,
particularly social care funding, we need a system that has
general support. The Committee has called for that in the past.
What we did on pensions reform a few years ago, cross party, has
stuck, so there is merit in that suggestion. Whether we can
achieve it, I do not know, but we ought to try.
(Barnsley East) (Lab)
On a point of order, Mr Deputy Speaker. This morning, my hon.
Friend the Member for Wansbeck () asked the Secretary of State for Environment, Food
and Rural Affairs what owners of XL bully dogs who have missed
the registration deadline for genuine reasons can do to ensure
that they keep in line with guidance. A constituent who missed
the deadline contacted my office today. They were unable to get
their dog neutered in time for genuine reasons. The advice of the
Secretary of State was to register as soon as possible; however,
the Government’s website says that the service is now closed. I
seek your advice on how things can be corrected, and the website
can be reopened, if that was the intention of the Secretary of
State, so that dog owners who want to do the right thing and
register their pet can do so.
Mr Deputy Speaker ( )
I thank the hon. Member for her point of order and her forward
notice of it. Clearly, the Chair is not responsible for the
accuracy of Ministers’ remarks, but at the same time we want them
to be accurate. I hope that those on the Treasury Bench have
heard what she has had to say, and will ensure that the Secretary
of State has it brought to his attention. At the same, given that
she is a diligent Member of Parliament, I am sure that she will
bring it directly to the notice of Ministers.
Further to that point of order, Mr Deputy Speaker. I have heard
what the hon. Lady said. It is a serious point. I will ensure
that my officials raise it with the office of the Secretary of
State this afternoon to ensure that the situation is clarified.
It is a sensitive issue, and her constituent and others will want
to have clarity.
Mr Deputy Speaker
I cannot do it quicker than that, can I?
(Oldham West and Royton)
(Lab/Co-op)
You have set the bar now.
Mr Deputy Speaker ( )
It is a very high bar. I should quit now. Thank you very much
everybody.
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