fbpx

My name is Rhys, a first time dad blogging about my adventures and experiences of being a parent. [email protected]

Newport City Council agrees new council tax level for the city

Newport

Newport City Council has agreed the council tax level for the city and the resulting total revenue budget for 2023/24.

Following an extensive consultation with the public and partners, Cabinet discussed feedback on the draft savings proposals at their meeting earlier this month and announced an additional £5m of investment in services the public said were most important.

The proposed council tax increase was reduced by Cabinet to 8.5 percent rather than the proposed 9.5 per cent. With the majority of Newport households being in bands A to C, this means a rise of between £1.39 and £1.85 per week. This was supported by full Council today.

Even with this increase, Newport expects to remain one of the lowest council tax rates in Wales.

Since the draft budget was announced in December, a number of changes and updates including a positive Welsh Government settlement, reductions in pressures, additional savings and confirmation of other grant funding meant the Cabinet could allocate an additional £2.5m.

The decision was also taken to re-purpose some of the council’s reserves, meaning an overall additional investment of £5m in 2023/24.

Councillor Mudd said: “We are very pleased to be able to invest in some of the areas our residents felt were most important. The decisions made by Cabinet will mean that key services can continue, some cuts will not have to be made and others will have additional time and opportunity to consider how we can change and deliver services more efficiently in the future.”

Taking into consideration the views of residents about what services are most important to them, balanced with a challenging gap between the money available and the increasing costs of delivering services, some of the key decisions agreed by Cabinet included:

Investment in schools

In the draft budget, funding for schools had already increased in real cash terms, but there were still challenges including increasing pupil numbers, pay-related pressures and increasing costs – so an extra £2.8m has been allocated to help further, and has increased the overall investment to £9m.

Services for our most vulnerable

More than a quarter of the council’s budget is spent on social care – you wanted us to prioritise services that help our most vulnerable residents, so we’ve invested almost £1m into key adult and children support services.

This includes maintaining the short break provision at Oaklands respite and residential care home, and reducing the savings required within adult day opportunities, also known as the short break service at Spring Gardens. Additional money will also allow additional services to continue at Spring Gardens while a further review is carried out with the aim of setting the service on a stronger footing and working more efficiently in the future.

As well as this, £150k of existing reserves will be used so that changes to our services for people with a learning disability can be reviewed and tapered over the coming year.

Work has also been carried out to remodel the service delivered through the Cwtch Centre and the Barnardo’s partnership using radical reform grant funding. The current staff and all their experience and skills will be part of this remodelling. This means, in effect, that the savings proposal will be delayed by two years.

Other proposals removed by Cabinet include car parking charges at countryside locations (Glebelands, Christchurch viewing point, Morgan’s Pond and Bettws Lane) and charges for replacement residual waste bins.

By re-purposing reserves, the council will also provide temporary support to mental health service provider Growing Space for the next two years.

The Education Achievement Service (EAS) will also receive temporary support with a partial deferral on the proposed saving on the council’s annual contribution.

These will allow for service reviews and changes to take place which will provide better and more sustainable services in the future.

There will also be a one-off investment in the city centre to ensure continued support for businesses and recovery following the pandemic. This will include business rate support for eligible city centre businesses in 2023/24.

The full results of the budget consultation, information on where the councils funding comes from and how money is spent is available at newport.gov.uk/budget