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New cash squeeze on councils ‘targets poor’

Councils’ spending power will drop on average by 1.8 per cent

Nigel Morris
Thursday 18 December 2014 15:14 EST
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Kris Hopkins, the Local Government Minister, speaks in parliament
Kris Hopkins, the Local Government Minister, speaks in parliament (PA)

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Ministers have been accused of targeting the poor through a fresh squeeze on council spending in England and by scrapping a crisis loans scheme.

The row broke out after the Government detailed a budget settlement which councils warned would force them to make savings of £2.5bn. It also confirmed the abolition of a Whitehall scheme to provide emergency help for vulnerable people facing one-off costs such as a broken cooker or cleaning up after flooding.

Kris Hopkins, the Local Government Minister, said councils’ spending power would drop on average by 1.8 per cent, falling to 1.6 per cent when other grants are factored in, with no council suffering a loss of more than 6.4 per cent. Mr Hopkins said the Government had “yet again delivered a settlement that is fair to all parts of the country, whether… urban or rural”.

However, analysis by the Local Government Chronicle suggests the load is not evenly spread. It says that spending power would drop by 0.6 per cent in shire areas and 3.8 per cent in metropolitan areas.

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