Councillors accuse government of rural cash cuts

Joshua Aitken
Political Reporter, BBC Radio Newcastle
Getty Images An aerial view of the village of Warkworth in Northumberland. It is surrounded by a river and countryside. There is a castle in the village.Getty Images
Northumberland County Council, which covers the village of Warkworth, received the rural services delivery grant to help with costs to provide services to sparsely populated areas

County councillors have accused the government of reducing funds for rural services.

In November, the government confirmed it was "repurposing" the rural services delivery grant as it "does not properly assess rural need".

But Northumberland Conservative councillor Nick Oliver said the grant, worth £3.5m to the county in recent years, was "taken away overnight".

Liz Twist, Labour MP for Blaydon and Consett, claimed local government funding had increased.

The rural services delivery grant provided funding to authorities in recognition of the possible additional costs of delivering services in sparsely populated areas.

Head and shoulder shot of Nick Oliver short light brown hair and a trimmed beard, streaked with grey. He is wearing a dark jacked, white shirt and a blue tie and seated in front of a background featuring different shades of blue.
Northumberland councillor Nick Oliver said pressures on councils were continuing to build

Speaking on BBC Politics North, Oliver highlighted that pressures on councils were continuing to build.

"I've been a councillor for almost eight years now and this year feels worse than any other year since I started," he said.

"We've had the rural services grant just taken away overnight, no warning whatsoever.

"In rural areas, it costs more to deliver council services.

"That rural services grant is being replaced with this recovery grant and, guess what, Northumberland is the only council in the North East that isn't getting any recovery grant.

"It's also the only Conservative council."

Head and shoulder shot of Liz Twist who has blonde bobbed hair. She is wearing glasses, a red jacket, with a dark dress or blouse underneath, and a necklace featuring small white disks. The back of a red sofa can be seen behind her, against a background in shades of blue.
Liz Twist said Labour was looking at longer term financial settlements

Labour MP Twist rejected any suggestion this was a party political decision and defended the government's action on council tax.

She said: "We have increased local government funding by £5bn this year and we've invested in additional things like homelessness funds and other specific grants.

"We do recognise the pressure local government's under, in fact I think there was actually a lot of consensus about the fact that local government has been hammered over the last 10-12 years so we're looking to recover from that."

This week many authorities announced rises in council tax, with authorities across the North East opting for just under 5%.

Head and shoulder shot of a balding Rob Potts. He is wearing glasses, a dark blue jacked with a small lapel badge, a white shirt and a dark blue tie with thin red and yellow stripes. The background to his left is red, with blue and purple patches on his right.
Reform UK councillor Rob Potts said County Durham had lost millions from its transport budget

Speaking on behalf of Reform UK, Durham County Councillor Rob Potts said: "We were given £48m in County Durham only then to find out at the same time we lost £49.8m of our transport budget.

"We make the cuts that we have to and it may be that we have to make further cuts in the future, but unfortunately the money that we were given is nowhere near the money that we need.

"We were promised that there would be no increases in council taxes, only to receive an amount of money which wasn't enough not to raise council taxes."

Twist also rejected this and said the Labour administration was committed to helping councils and taxpayers plan for future financial changes.

She added: "This is a one-year settlement of course.

"We've come in midway through the financial year, we've had to produce for this year and what we're looking at for the future is longer term funding settlements, multi-year settlements, so that people know what they're getting."

BBC Politics North airs on BBC One on Sundays at 10:00GMT. Catch up with the latest episodes on BBC iPlayer.

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