Tory MP blames Tory government and Tory councillors for Tory council collapse

“A Conservative MP has said ministers need to urgently “learn the lessons” from the financial collapse of Tory-run Northamptonshire county council if they are to prevent more councils slipping into insolvency.

Andrew Lewer, the MP for Northamptonshire South, said that while mismanagement had fuelled the Northamptonshire crisis, the council was also a victim of underlying financial pressures affecting all local authorities with social care responsibilities.

Lewer’s comments will be seen as a breaking of ranks both with the government and with his six fellow Tory MPs in the county, who have up to now sought to present the council’s problems as unrelated to wider funding issues.

His intervention came as Northamptonshire county councillors prepare to take further steps towards drawing up a drastic cuts plan that they hope will close a £70m black hole in the accounts over the next few months.

Lewer has written to the secretary of state for housing, communities and local government, James Brokenshire, and the secretary of state for health and social care, Matt Hancock, to request a meeting to discuss the council funding crisis and ensure the wider lessons of Northamptonshire are heeded.

“A culture of poor performance and decision-making in Northamptonshire county council fuelled the current crisis, but there are bigger, national drivers that also have a significant bearing on the position of not only Northamptonshire, but other local authorities too,” said Lewer.

“Adult social care demand from a rapidly increasingly elderly population is the big elephant in the room. We need to have a discussion on how future local government is structured, financed and delivered, especially for this crucial and costly sector.”

Council social care bosses in England warned earlier this year that care services for older and disabled adults were on the brink of collapse because of funding pressures. The Local Government Association (LGA) estimates that adult social care faces a £3.5bn funding gap by 2025.

Lewer, who became an MP at the last general election, is a former leader of Derbyshire county council, and a vice-president of the LGA.

Northamptonshire councillors will discuss a proposed action plan which calls for “radical service reductions and efficiencies” in areas including children and adult social care, as well as a programme of staff redundancies, at a council meeting on Thursday morning.

Although it is anticipated no precise details of the cuts will be put forward at the meeting, councillors are expected to approve a “hierarchy of priorities” approach to the cuts which will see some services restricted to the legal minimum, and non-core services eliminated altogether.

Councillors will also vote to formally accept a section 114 letter from the council’s director of finance, published last month, which sets out in humiliating detail the extent of Northamptonshire’s financial problems, and the poor decision-making that led to it being declared technically bankrupt in February.

The meeting comes amid growing concern in local government circles that more councils – many of them Conservative-run – could follow Northamptonshire into draconian cuts to try to stave off huge budget shortfalls, with Somerset and Lancashire among those reporting financial stresses.

Last week it emerged that East Sussex county council was drawing up plans to move to a bare legal minimum level of services – which it called a “core offer” – to cope with a growing budget shortfall that if not addressed would see it bankrupt within three years.

A spokesperson for the LGA said: “More and more councils are struggling to balance their books and others are considering whether they have the funding to even deliver their statutory requirements.”

https://www.theguardian.com/society/2018/aug/08/tory-mp-breaks-ranks-on-northamptonshire-council-crisis

“One in four HS2 workers on six-figure salaries”

“Almost one in four HS2 employees are being paid more than £100,000 a year, it has been revealed.

The news comes despite the government insisting it is “keeping a tough grip” on the cost of the controversial project.

Some 318 people – out of the 1,346 employed on the new high-speed railway – are earning at least £100,000 in salary and perks, according to a information given to The Times under the Freedom of Information Act.

This number is an increase compared with the 155 who were paid six figures in 2015/16, the newspaper reported.

Some 112 people are receiving more than £150,000 annually and 15 have pay packets topping £251,000.

An HS2 Ltd spokeswoman said: “In a highly technical project of the scale and complexity of HS2 it is necessary to employ the right level of expertise and knowledge to deliver the programme successfully.

“As the project moves increasingly towards construction, as does our need for highly technical support increase.

“HS2 Ltd is committed to controlling costs and take our responsibility to taxpayers money very seriously, and the programme remains on track and within our funding envelope.”

The pay figures include salaries, bonuses and pension contributions. …”

https://news.sky.com/story/quarter-of-hs2-workers-on-pay-deals-over-100k-11465148

“High Court dismisses legal challenge to local government reorganisation in Dorset”

Owl says: Christchurch – wealthy, elderly Tories with high-value properties and the notorious ultra-right wing MP “Sir” (earned for nothing) Christopher Chope – the guy who killed the upskirting bill, killed the bill to protect police dogs, tried to stop the minimum wage, stopped a bill to give carers free parking at hospitals, etc. etc. Presumably, they didn’t want to subsidise the “oiks” in neighbouring Bournemouth and Poole!!!

“Under the proposals, backed by former Communities Secretary Sajid Javid, Christchurch is due to become part of a new unitary through a merger with Bournemouth and Poole councils.

Another ‘rural’ unitary would be established from East Dorset, North Dorset, Purbeck, West Dorset and Weymouth & Portland. The county council would cease to exist.

Christchurch had argued that the Secretary of State acted beyond his powers in passing the legislation to allow the reorganisation to go ahead.
The judicial review challenge was heard in the High Court on 30 July.
Cllr David Flagg, Leader of the Council, Christchurch Borough Council, said: “We are disappointed by today’s judgement. We have been advised that a number of points set out in the judgment are still arguable in law and therefore we will be responding to the judge on these. Depending on his response we will consider whether an appeal to the Court of Appeal would be appropriate or not.”

A statement issued on behalf of Bournemouth Borough Council, Dorset County Council, Borough of Poole, East Dorset District Council, North Dorset District Council, Purbeck District Council, West Dorset District Council and Weymouth & Portland Borough Council said they were “delighted but unsurprised” by the judgment.

It added: “A huge amount of work has already been undertaken, and we are making excellent progress towards creating the two new councils. Christchurch Borough councillors and their officers have always been welcome at the various meetings that have taken place, working to form the two new councils.

“We respect the choice of Christchurch Borough Council to challenge the Secretary of State’s decision, through a judicial review on a procedural point of law. In doing so, we note that the validity of the case for creating two new councils was not the basis for this judicial review challenge.

“Christchurch Borough Council has spent a very significant amount of council tax payers’ money in pursuing this legal action. The High Court has rejected that challenge and we hope that all Christchurch Borough Councillors will now accept that judgment, and fully take part in planning for and making decisions about the new council.”

The statement continued: “We are optimistic this matter is now behind us, and we can look forward to working together to create the best new local councils we can, to protect public services as much as possible, and to secure future growth and prosperity for our areas.”

http://localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=36287%3Ahigh-court-dismisses-legal-challenge-to-local-government-reorganisation-in-dorset&catid=59&Itemid=27

Tory payment to DUP for shoring them up props up NI local government spending

“Northern Ireland’s public services incurred the biggest spending per head in 2016-17, according to figures released by the Office for National Statistics.

The data also showed Northern Ireland had the highest net fiscal deficit per head at £5,014 in the last financial year while London had the highest net fiscal surplus per head at £3,698.

London also raised the most revenue per head in 2016-17 at £16,545, according to the ‘experimental data’ released by the ONS last week. …”

https://www.publicfinance.co.uk/news/2018/08/northern-irelands-public-services-spent-most-head-last-year

“Social consciousness is rapidly disappearing”

“… In the heart of London’s theater district opposite the Savoy Hotel, with rooms for up to $800 a night, scores of people are lingering patiently on a balmy summer evening.

The snaking line near a branch of Coutts & Co., the bankers to the Queen, displays a portrait of contemporary London: men and women of all ages and ethnic backgrounds, some speaking English and some Polish amid a cacophony of other languages. Some are dressed smartly in shirts and trousers, others in jeans and baseball caps. One man is wearing a food delivery company uniform.

But they’re not there for a deal on tickets to a West End show or a table at Gordon Ramsay’s joint. They’re there for food handouts from a local charity. …

Public spending in Britain has fallen to about 38 percent of gross domestic product from 45 percent in 2010, according to figures from the Office for Budget Responsibility.

Research by charity Shelter found that 55 percent of homeless families in temporary accommodation are working. The 33,000 families represent an increase of 73 percent since 2013, according to the research based on freedom of information requests.

“Everybody’s fighting for themselves now,” Mohammed Nazir, the cabinet member for housing in Slough Borough Council on the fringes of London, said after a meeting in the U.K. Parliament about homelessness. “Social consciousness is rapidly disappearing.”

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-08-06/brexit-noise-drowns-out-london-s-cry-for-help?cmpid%3D=socialflow-facebook-brexit

Council profligacy – a primer

A comment on the post on Northamptonshire County Council financial mismanagement:

“Copied from TaxPayers’ Alliance:

Northamptonshire County Council

Earlier this week many news outlets reported that Northamptonshire County Council may have to cut essential services as they need to find £70 million worth of savings.

It is worth highlighting some of the wasteful spending that has led to this dreadful situation.

• £53 million on a new HQ, which they then sold and leased back
• a course on how to wear a scarf ‘more effectively for their personal style’
• £350,000 payouts to staff on ‘injuries from poorly fitting outfits’
• £95,000 golden handshake for chief exec, just for leaving his job
• 23 councils executives on more than £100,000

Residents of Northamptonshire are unfairly paying the price of financial mismanagement. The TPA has always maintained that councils must focus their spending on frontline services and not frivolous non-essential expenditure. We hope other councils will take heed and that similar disasters can be averted in future.”

Another (Tory) council bites the dust …

“Fresh evidence of the funding crisis facing local government has emerged after a second Tory-run council said it was preparing to cut back services to the bare legal minimum to cope with a cash shortfall that could leave it bankrupt within three years.

East Sussex county council said growing financial pressures and rising demand for social care were forcing it to restrict services to the most vulnerable residents only. Under this “core offer”, many of its services will be severely cut or shut down completely.

It said families and neighbourhood voluntary groups would have to take increasing responsibility for supporting those older people who would no longer qualify for social care support from the council under the new arrangements.

Northamptonshire council plans cuts to all services and workforce
East Sussex’s outline of its strategic approach, revealed in a council paper last month, appears to have been adopted wholesale by Tory-run Northamptonshire county council, which this week adopted an emergency cuts plan to reduce services to skeleton levels as it attempts to close a £70m black hole in its budget during the next few months.

Northamptonshire’s financial collapse has been portrayed by ministers as being down to chronic mismanagement rather than lack of government funding. However, East Sussex is regarded as a stable and well-run council, giving authority and credibility to its shock warnings of the consequences of underfunding.

East Sussex said that without more government funding, stripping services back to a core offer would be the best it could afford to deliver, although it added that without a sea change in local authority finances even this most basic model of municipal service might be unaffordable by 2021. …”

https://www.theguardian.com/society/2018/aug/03/local-council-funding-crisis-east-sussex-cuts-services

“Northamptonshire’s financial woes are just the tip of the iceberg”

“… All councils in Britain are required to match annual day-to-day spending with income: unlike the Treasury, local authorities cannot fund current spending from borrowing. They can, of course, borrow to spend on capital items such as land and buildings. Northamptonshire’s difficulties derive largely from a failure by councillors to address the need to match spending to income. But the wider context of relentless reductions to council spending cannot be ignored.

The Treasury has been attempting to reduce the UK government’s deficit since the coalition took office in 2010. But populist pressure to protect state pensions and the NHS, along with decisions to increase international development spending, have meant that the burden of lowering the deficit has fallen on unloved sectors and services, notably provision within the oversight of the Home Office and the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government. Grants to councils in England fell by almost 50% between 2010-11 and 2017-18, and spending in real terms has tumbled by almost 30% on average.

Councils themselves, within falling budgets, have chosen to protect social care for children and adults. No chief executive or leader wants to face the dire consequences of even a single childcare failure, so money has (just about) continued to reach children’s social services. For older people’s care, the picture has been grim. Entitlements have been reduced and services cut back. Fast-rising numbers of over-75s mean that demand is growing while resources shrink.

Even the government came to realise that with rising demand and falling real resources, adult social care was unsustainable. It is a measure of overall government priorities that between 2010-11 and 2017-18 the amount spent on state pensions in the UK rose by £26bn, while spending on adult social care in England was virtually unchanged in cash terms. Only after it became clear that care homes were closing and that services were likely to fail did ministers allow councils to put up council tax and provide new grant funding via the Better Care Fund.

Other local services such as libraries, planning, highways, housing and waste management have been cut by far more than adult care. Almost by default, the way deficit reduction has been delivered has led to a retreat in the very public services that were the origins of the modern developed British state. While Victorians saw the need for clean streets, lighting, police, parks, libraries, rubbish collection and transport, the impact of post-2010 deficit reduction has been to cut such services hardest.

The abolition of the audit commission has ensured that there has been no official agency to publish embarrassing reports about the impact of cuts on councils’ financial health or, even more awkwardly for Whitehall, on the asymmetric nature of the government’s approach to achieving a zero deficit. The National Audit Office, which, crucially, reports to parliament, has undertaken noble work on the broader systemic challenge to local authorities’ financial sustainability. In a report published in March, the NAO noted that “10.6% of single-tier and county authorities would have the equivalent of less than three years’ reserves … left if they continued to use their reserves at the rate they did in 2016-17”.

In short, many of the larger councils that deliver social care are running short of resources. There have been recent press reports that in the coming spending review, covering the period 2020-21 to 2023-24, local government will again be expected to bear the brunt of deficit reduction. It is worth remembering that a zero deficit was originally planned to be achieved by 2015-16. Northamptonshire may have reached the precipice first, but if reductions in local authority budgets continue, they are unlikely to be the last. The county’s plight is evidence of a wider challenge facing the country: are we willing to put up taxes to protect provision or do we want the state to stop delivering services? A crunch point is approaching.”

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/aug/02/northamptonshire-finances-services-tax-rises

“Public Works Loan Board loans rise as councils try to shore up financial futures”

This is how EDDC is financing the shortfall of the build of its new HQ – you know, the one that was supposed to be “cost neutral” and was costing around £10 million at the last evaluation.

“Local authority borrowing from the Public Works Loan Board has reached a seven-year high as cash-strapped councils increasingly invest in capital projects.

In the last financial year the PWLB increased the value of loans to local authorities by 42%. It advanced 780 loans with a value of £5.2bn to local authorities, compared to 622 loans with a total value of £3.6bn in 2016-17, the board’s annual accounts, released yesterday showed.

The value of loans has been going up in recent years after dropping to £3.2bn in 2012-13 following a high of £16bn in 2011-12.

Paul Dossett, head of local government at Grant Thornton, said the rise was part of a growing trend of councils borrowing more – and not just from the PWLB.

As a recent analysis by PF showed, local authorities are increasingly looking at methods such as bonds and forward-starting loans for capital projects.

“It reflects the growing increase we have seen in capital investment in local authority infrastructure as a whole,” he said.

“While different councils have different options and approaches to generating income, a small amount of this increase is likely to relate to investment in assets for income generation.”

Although, he believed the rate of councils investing in assets for commercial gain might have slowed since the government responded to its consultation on the prudential code earlier this year.

The Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government announced in Feburary it will now require local authorities to produce an annual investment strategy to ensure greater transparency. …”

https://www.publicfinance.co.uk/news/2018/08/pwlb-loans-rise-councils-try-shore-financial-futures

[Tory] “Northamptonshire forced to pay the price of a reckless half-decade”

Northamptonshire county council’s catastrophic financial collapse, and the desperate measures it now proposes to balance the books, reflect management incompetence on a grand scale as well as the punishing effects of eight years of austerity cuts.

Less than six months after it was declared technically insolvent, the Tory-run council now faces a sobering reckoning for a reckless half-decade in which it refused to raise council tax to pay for the soaring costs of social care, preferring to patch up budget holes with accounting ruses and inappropriate use of financial reserves.

Over the next few weeks the council will map out where previously unheard-of levels of cuts will fall. There are no concrete details yet, other than a promise that its future “core offer” to residents will be a bare legal minimum of service, focused only on the most vulnerable residents.

No services will go unscathed, even in priority areas like child protection that have up to now been relatively insulated. There are no easy cuts left to make: the council says hard savings must be dug out of the most essential services. What will remain is what one observer wryly called “a people-not-dying level of service”. …

… Once a low-tax Tory flagship council, touting itself as the future of local government, Northamptonshire is now bust. Its core offer warns residents, with unwitting pathos, that the most they can expect in future is “a reasonable level of customer service, within our means.”

http://flip.it/wGO8K0

“Philip Hammond orders Whitehall to plan for more [local government] cuts”

Owl says: This way council tax go up to cover the shortfall and government can avoid the responsibility of raising general taxes even more than the are about to be raised. The end result is that we all pay more for less – unless you are super-rich, of course.

“Philip Hammond has told Whitehall to plan for another round of cuts before next year’s spending review, putting him on a collision course with some cabinet colleagues who want tax rises instead of austerity.

The chancellor wants ministries without protected budgets, including public health, further education, local government and transport, to work with the Treasury in the summer to identify potential areas for savings.

Some departments believe that these budgets could be cut by as much as 5 per cent. The letter calling for work to start on the savings, sent by Liz Truss, the chief secretary to the Treasury, last week, does not contain a specific target.

Spending totals have been set until the spring of 2020. Mr Hammond will allocate individual budgets, traditionally for the following four years, in a comprehensive review after next spring.

He must first fight a battle with colleagues over whether to raise taxes to cushion some or all of the cuts. Some senior cabinet ministers are understood to be squaring up for a fight. Last week’s public sector pay rises must be paid out of existing budgets.

One minister said: “Philip Hammond has got Theresa May to agree to no more borrowing [above the fiscal rules] so that means it looks like cuts to pay for the extra money for the NHS. But the answer is to raise taxes to protect spending.”

The chancellor has already made it plain that extra tax rises are likely to be necessary to pay for the £83 billion extra in coming years that was announced for the NHS in June.

The overall mix of spending cuts and tax rises could be announced in the autumn budget, inconveniently coinciding with the middle of the Brexit negotiations, or delayed until the comprehensive spending review itself. Mr Hammond has secured a commitment from Mrs May that she will keep to fiscal rules, which force the government to reduce the cyclically adjusted deficit to below 2 per cent of GDP by 2020-21 and having debt as a share of GDP falling in the same period. The chancellor has headroom of £15 billion against the 2021 deficit target, meaning that his scope for borrowing is minimal.

Michael Gove, the environment secretary, has suggested to cabinet ministers that more needs to be done to improve growth. Gavin Williamson, the defence secretary, has proposed boosting it with a tax giveaway such as that brought in by President Trump. The debate about spending and taxation has already begun on the Tory back benches. Bim Afolami, MP for Hitchin & Harpenden, said he understood that the Treasury had a hard job but added: “We urgently need to shift the debate away from management of tough budgetary rules towards growth, moving from austerity to prosperity for a majority of people in this country.

“We need to move away from a necessary but ultimately negative message of managing tough budgetary moves, towards a forward-thinking vision for post-Brexit prosperity sooner rather than later. In general terms every single department should be looking for savings, just like every business does.”

Local Government Association debates tax rise to fund social care

“One of the many downsides of Brexit is that for the last two years or more it has sucked all the energy out of the Westminster policy making process, with the result that other problems are being ignored. It is a major opportunity cost. There are plenty of examples, but adult social care is probably the most glaring. Experts agree the situation is in crisis. The Conservatives floated some audacious plans in their manifesto, but they proved electorally toxic and since then they have gone silent on the topic, putting off announcements until the much-delayed green paper due later this year. Labour’s own plans are sketchy and, understandably, they are reluctant to propose reforms that will involve higher when the government won’t take the initiative itself.

So all credit to the cross-party Local Government Association that is today floating plans in a green paper (pdf) to raise taxes to put care funding on a sustainable footing. With councils in England receiving almost 5,000 new requests a day for adult social care, the LGA says this is essential.

Since 2010 councils have had to bridge a £6bn funding shortfall just to keep the adult social care system going. In addition the LGA estimates that adult social care services face a £3.5bn funding gap by 2025, just to maintain existing standards of care, while latest figures show that councils in England receive 1.8m new requests for adult social care a year – the equivalent of nearly 5,000 a day.

Decades of failures to find a sustainable solution to how to pay for adult social care for the long-term, and the Government’s recent decision to delay its long-awaited green paper on the issue until the autumn, has prompted council leaders to take action.

Short-term cash injections have not prevented care providers reluctantly closing their operations or returning contracts to councils and less choice and availability to a rising number of people with care needs. This is increasing the strain on an already-overstretched workforce and unpaid carers, and leading to more people not having their care needs met.

Increased spend on adult social care – which now accounts for nearly 40 per cent of total council budgets – is threatening the future of other vital council services, such as parks, leisure centres and libraries, which help to keep people well and from needing care and support and hospital treatment.

The LGA is publishing its green paper to start a public debate on how adult social care could be properly funded. There’s a summary here:

https://www.local.gov.uk/about/news/lga-launches-own-green-paper-adult-social-care-reaches-breaking-point

Source: https://www.theguardian.com/politics/blog/live/2018/jul/31/council-leaders-float-plans-to-raise-income-tax-or-other-taxes-to-fund-adult-social-care-politics-live

Many councils which bought commercial properties are in big trouble

“The timing couldn’t have been more perfect. At a debate over the role of councils in the commercial property market, held by retail landlord Ellandi in central London last month, one notable panellist was conspicuous by her absence.

Karen Whelan, chief executive of Surrey Heath council, had been due to argue against the motion that local authorities were “absolute beginners” in the property investment game, but her attention had been diverted by a more pressing issue. That morning, the struggling department store chain House of Fraser had announced its intention to shut 31 shops through a controversial insolvency procedure known as a company voluntary arrangement (CVA).

The Camberley store was among those earmarked for closure. Surrey Heath had paid £17.6m for the property only 18 months earlier, following its £86m purchase of Camberley’s main shopping centre, The Mall (since renamed The Square). House of Fraser’s imminent departure left Surrey Heath staring at a loss of rental income and a destruction of the property’s investment value.

Whelan and the council’s leader, Moira Gibson, issued a joint statement saying they had bought the House of Fraser store “as part of the wider regeneration of the town and not as an investment”. They said they were “disappointed” by news of the CVA but added: “Because Surrey Heath is in control of the freehold of this site, like other sites we have bought, it enables us to continue our regeneration proposals.”

Critics of councils’ increasing forays into commercial activities found the response laughable. Just over a year ago, The Sunday Times raised questions over the boom in commercial property deals being struck by local authorities. Empowered by the 2011 Localism Act and funded by cheap loans from an obscure subsidiary of the Treasury, local authorities ploughed £3.8bn into industrial parks, offices and shops between 2013 and last year, according to consultancy Carter Jonas and landlords’ group Revo.

To say that town halls have a questionable record in commercial ventures is something of an understatement. Hammersmith & Fulham in west London came close to cataclysm in the early 1990s when it amassed £6.2bn of risky derivatives bets (it was saved only when the House of Lords ruled them void).

Concerns about councils’ dealmaking go beyond property. In recent years, their pension funds have started to take a much more active approach to investing in infrastructure, allocating more of their spending to assets ranging from ports to power networks — seen as an ideal match for their long-term liabilities. Yet with that new approach has come greater risk.”

In November, a City fund poured tens of millions of pounds of councils’ pension money into projects run by the outsourcer Carillion — weeks before it went bust. Pensions Infrastructure Platform (PIP), which invests on behalf of councils from Strathclyde to the West Midlands, paid £400m for 10 private finance initiative contracts from Standard Life Aberdeen. Among those assets was a 50% stake in the unfinished Royal Liverpool Hospital. PIP was left nursing heavy losses when Carillion’s collapse in January halted the hospital’s construction. Work has yet to resume.

Councils are under huge financial pressure as they prepare for the withdrawal of central government grants by 2019-20. Last year, the Local Government Association warned they faced a £5.8bn funding gap by 2020 — even if they cut costs by closing all children’s centres, leisure centres, libraries and museums, and turning off every street light. By borrowing from the Public Works Loan Board (PWLB) at 2% and using the money to invest in properties yielding 5% or more, local authorities generate a profit that can be redeployed on front-line services.

Some private sector operators have accused them of behaving like primitive hedge funds exploiting an arbitrage, predicting dire consequences when the property market cracks and the Treasury is left on the hook for deals funded 100% with debt.

Surrey Heath’s experience with House of Fraser could be seen as one of several canaries in the coal mine. A wave of administrations and CVAs by retail tenants such as Select and Poundworld has punched holes in shopping centres’ rental incomes. Even the most sophisticated operators — British Land, Hammerson and Intu — have admitted to feeling the effects of retail insolvencies in recent weeks. Councils, who lack expertise and the scale to move tenants around their portfolios, could find the changing environment far harder to deal with.

Lord Oakeshott, chairman of the property fund manager Olim, said local authorities such as Surrey Heath were “completely failing to face reality”. He said: “The professionals see them coming a mile off and, sadly for council ratepayers and taxpayers generally who are lending them the money, most councils haven’t a clue. They are often the only buyers of their local struggling shopping centres and in a collapsing market they’ve been paying well above last year’s prices. You couldn’t make it up.”

While local authorities such as Portsmouth have ventured beyond their boundaries and struck deals purely to generate income, most have bought assets in their immediate area with a view to running or redeveloping them.

Gibson said she still felt that Surrey Heath’s purchase of its House of Fraser store had been “the right thing to do” because otherwise the council would have been a “hostage to fortune” in terms of deciding the future of the empty site. She said the council had filled holes left by insolvent tenants at The Square by moving in the local museum and creating a table tennis room.

“A year on, we have a lot more retail experience than we started with, and to be fair, I don’t think we can do worse than some of the people in retail at the moment,” she said. “We’re used to dealing with difficult budgets.”

There are instances where council intervention appears to have worked. Gerry Clarkson, leader of Ashford council in Kent, said he grew so tired of receiving complaints about the local shopping centre after taking over in 2013 that he instructed his staff to buy it. Clarkson, a former chief executive of the London Fire Brigade, said the council then revived Park Mall by offering six-month rent-free periods to independent retailers. Ashford is also working on a separate £75m development to build a Picturehouse cinema and a Travelodge.

“We were well aware of the government’s attitude to cutting funding for local authorities, and rather than cry into our beer, we started a strategy of becoming like a business,” he said. “In time, we will redevelop Park Mall and put flats above it, but for now, it’s thriving.”

Agencies such as Cushman & Wakefield and Knight Frank have earned significant sums for advising councils on deals. Charlie Barke, head of retail capital markets at Knight Frank, defended the prices some were paying for properties.

“These guys don’t have the luxury of waiting for what might be the bottom of the market,” he said. “Councils need to take action now, while there’s still some footfall and life in these town centres.”

Barke said the super-low interest rates offered by the PWLB mitigated some of the risks of tenants leaving, as the average shopping centre’s rent income typically covered the interest cost by two or three times. He said councils could mitigate risk further by paying down their loans over time, setting aside excess cash in a “sinking fund” and using professional advisers to manage the assets day-to-day.

Among local authority pension funds, the appetite for infrastructure assets is only growing as they seek to slash the fees they pay to external fund managers.

Last summer, a group including the £14.3bn West Midlands Pension Fund bought the Isle of Wight ferry company Red Funnel for a rumoured £320m — well above the expected price of £250m.

Councillor Ian Brookfield, chairman of the West Midlands Pension Fund committee, insisted it took a prudent approach. “It’s not just a bunch of guys sitting in a smoke-filled room any more,” he said. “We have some of the best advice you can purchase. We’ve done our proper due diligence and looked at the risk factors. It gives us a good, stable return.”

Brookfield added: “Red Funnel was our first direct investment and we are actively looking for more.”

Pension funds chase returns

While councils have been gambling on properties to address funding pressures and the need to regenerate town centres, their pension funds have been ploughing cash into infrastructure assets in a desperate hunt for yield.

For years, overseas counterparts, such as Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System and Australia’s IFM Investors, snapped up water firms, power networks, ports and airports. They were keen to buy assets that matched their liabilities and delivered healthy returns.

Quantitative easing and the dive in gilt yields have forced council schemes to look beyond bonds for returns. Restricted on the amount of risky assets they can hold, they have turned to infrastructure, However, cheap debt and huge pots of money chasing a finite supply of assets have pushed values to eye-watering levels.

Westminster has played a part in the spending spree. Keen to keep a lid on debt, the former chancellor George Osborne ordered the 89 local government pension funds in England and Wales to pool their assets — now £263bn — and plough the money into British infrastructure.

Source: Sunday Times (pay wall)

Local Government Association news – too much (bad) news to choose from

Opinion: Last-minute ministerial statements

Polly Toynbee discusses the raft of ministerial statements issued on the last day of Parliament, including a change to planning laws, under which communities lose the right to have their say on developments if they fail to meet government-imposed targets. She questions whether this will be “a gift for developers” and references LGA Chairman Lord Porter’s view that it “punishes local communities”.
Guardian (Journal p4)

UK’s bus routes at a 28-year low

The UK bus network has shrunk by 8 per cent in a decade with bus routes at a 28-year low in terms of miles travelled, according to government figures. Councils subsidise nearly half of all bus routes in England but a total of 3,347 routes have been stopped or reduced since 2010. The LGA says councils face an overall funding gap of almost £8 billion by 2025 that could see 5,000 bus routes gone by 2022.
Mirror p8

Councils seek £50,000 care home cap to help rural areas

No one should have to pay more than £50,000 for a place in a care home, the County Councils Network has said. Its report, published in advance of the Government’s delayed green paper on reform of the care system, said: “For more people in rural areas to benefit from a cap on care, it needs to be set at a lower level, potentially as low as £50,000. It is estimated that only one in 10 people would benefit from a £72,000 cap.” It said the cap must be fully funded.
Mail p19

School holiday hunger cash

The Government will put £2 million towards a series of projects across the country providing activities including free football classes, play sessions and cooking classes. These projects will also provide free meals for the most disadvantaged families who may rely on the free school meals they receive during term time.
BBC Online, Mirror p17

Wheelchair shortage

Millions of people are being left without wheelchairs as they recover from illness and risk being “trapped” in their own homes, the British Red Cross has warned. The charity said a lack of information about services, stigma around wheelchair use and a “postcode lottery” are among the reasons people are not getting the right support.
BBC Online, i p9

UK heatwave

The London Fire Brigade has called for councils in the capital to introduce a ban on barbecues in parks and drivers are being urged not to throw rubbish from their cars after a string of grassland fires during the heatwave.
BBC Online, Sky News Online, ITV Online, all papers

Flat owners have to pay £3m recladding cost of two Manchester blocks

The owners of 345 flats in two Manchester apartment blocks built with flammable cladding will have to pay an estimated £3 million to have their homes made fire-safe, following a ruling by a tribunal. The tribunal ruled in favour of the freeholder who argued that the flat owners, as leaseholders, should pay for the replacement of the cladding at a cost of £10,000 each through their service charge.
Guardian Online

“Chairman and vice-chairman of Somerset County Council audit committee resigns”

“[Somerset] COUNTY Hall has been rocked by the resignation of the top two councillors in charge of overseeing its finances amid claims it will run out of money later this year.

Audit committee chairman Cllr Dean Ruddle and his deputy Cllr Neil Bloomfield both stood down yesterday (Wednesday). Fellow committee member Cllr Mike Rigby said he believes they have quit to avoid being “left holding the baby”.

The move comes in the week that council leader Cllr David Fothergill denied claims Conservative-led Somerset County Council was on the brink of bankruptcy. He told the County Gazette the authority faces huge financial pressures but was not about to issue a 114 notice, which warns of insufficient funds to pay its bills.

Mr Rigby said: “I’ve been concerned for some time that our budgets are being continually slashed by central government to the point where we can no longer meet our legal duties. “I had thought that we could make it into next year as a council without running out of money. “But after recent developments, I’m not now convinced we can make it that far, despite the emergency spending measures put in place at County Hall. “I’m not surprised that the chairman and vice-chairman have decided to go. Who wants to be left holding this baby?

“It’s about time that our Conservative administration stops supporting the government until the government undertakes a proper review of government finance.”

Cllr Claire Aparicio Paul and Cllr Gemma Verdon have been appointed as chairman and vice-chairman of the audit committee respectively.”

http://www.somersetcountygazette.co.uk/news/16366065.chairman-and-vice-chairman-of-somerset-county-council-audit-committee-resigns/

“Tory-led Northamptonshire county council imposes emergency spending controls for second time in six months”

“A Conservative-led council has taken the unprecedented action of imposing emergency spending controls for the second time in six months after projecting a budget shortfall of up to £70m.

Despite being the first council in nearly two decades to issue a section 114 notice – immediately banning new expenditure – in February, Northamptonshire county council issued its second notice on Tuesday.

As a result of the extraordinary action earlier this year, two government-appointed commissioners were sent to oversee the finances of the council and produce a balanced budget.

But in a letter to councillors, the leader of Northamptonshire county council Mark McLaughlin said the situation was of an “extremely serious nature” and projected a significant budget shortfall in the current financial year of £60m-70m.

After meeting the government commissioners, the council chief decided to issue a second section 114 notice which means no new expenditure is permitted.

The only exception is for the safeguarding of vulnerable people and statutory services. …”

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/northamptonshire-council-run-out-funds-conservative-led-second-time-cuts-a8461461.html

Public service pay increases? Yes, but ….. no but …..

Owl says: Yes, you get a little more money … but there will be fewer of you to do the same amount of work (or more work).

Owl suggests those affected think of becoming MPs. It doesn’t have to be a full-time job (see our own MP Swire’s impressive list of other jobs), your pay rises are frequent and well above inflation, brilliant pension, no questions (or few questions) expenses … what’s stopping you?

“More than a million public sector workers, including teachers, doctors and police officers, can expect wage increases of up to 3.5% a year as Theresa May moved to drop the government’s pay cap. …..”

“The planned new wage increases have come from departmental savings, rather than the Treasury releasing new funds, according to the Sun newspaper. This could result in frontline services coming under threat in order to fund the rises. …..”

https://www.theguardian.com/society/2018/jul/24/theresa-may-to-end-pay-cap-by-forcing-departments-to-make-savings

Tory shire council in trouble fires its Finance Director with 24 hours notice

“Surrey County Council’s finance director has left her post suddenly as the council’s financial problems continue to mount.

Sheila Little, former president of the Society of County Treasurers, departed earlier this month with councillors receiving less than 24 hours’ notice of the news.

This week, a council report said the authority is forecasting an £11.8m overspend on its 2018–19 budget. …”

http://www.room151.co.uk/funding/surrey-fd-departs-as-the-county-grapples-with-budget-overspend/

“Council pensions poured into Carillion” [just before the company crashed]

“A City fund is under fire for pouring tens of millions of pounds of councils’ pension money into projects run by the outsourcer Carillion weeks before it went bust.

Pensions Infrastructure Platform (PIP) invests the pensions of councils from Strathclyde to the West Midlands. It bought 10 infrastructure schemes from Standard Life Aberdeen for £400m in late November.

That deal included two Carillion hospital projects — the troubled Royal Liverpool and Southmead in Bristol.

PIP’s investors demanded an investigation after the fund was left nursing heavy losses in the wake of Carillion’s collapse into liquidation in January.

That internal review, which has been completed, recommended that PIP tighten its internal controls.”

https://www.thetimes.co.uk/edition/business/council-pensions-poured-into-carillion-v3xsrmsvk

Privatisation: today Barnet … tomorrow …? The end of “easy councils”

Owl gathers that the company Barnet outsourced most of its services to is known in the borough as C(r)apita!

“London Borough of Barnet is considering proposals to bring 11 services back in-house — including finance and accounting — in a move that could spell an end to its “easy council” approach.

The council achieved notoriety in 2012 when it decided to outsource up to 70% of its services through a separate joint venture company established with Capita.

But a report to the council’s cabinet this week recommended a rethink of the policy in response to the outsourcing giant’s financial problems and continuing austerity.

The council report said: “Capita’s focus in future will be delivering technology-enabled services, at scale, where the company believes it can add the most value to service delivery.”

Capita’s change of strategic direction — including a sale of treasury adviser Capita Asset Services — occurred last year after issuing a series of profit warnings.

The council added: “The rapidly changing external environment has accentuated the need for the council to increase the level of direct control it exercises over the levers that affect its strategic direction”.

In response, the council says it prefers the option of bringing some services back in-house, rather than a wholesale insourcing, or continuing with the existing arrangements.

Finance and accounting — apart from transactional services provided from a shared service centre in Darlington — are among the services earmarked for a return to direct council provision.

Others include estates, strategic human resources, some social care services, regeneration commissioning, highways, economic skills and development, cemeteries and strategic planning.

Another 17 services, among them printing, payroll, pensions administration, customer services, development control, trading standards and licensing, would continue to be outsourced to Capita.

Officers at the authority will now work on defining the best way forward and drawing up a business plan for changes.

Richard Cornelius, Barnet’s council leader, said: “Many things are working well, and it’s right that we build on them. Where this is not the case, changes are needed.”

Cornelius said that changes would only be recommended if they offered a good deal for the Barnet taxpayer.

Jonathan Prew, managing director of Local Public Services at Capita, said: “The proposed review is an opportunity to respond to changing circumstances and needs that have evolved over the last five years to ensure that a future partnership is focused on providing services that will deliver best value for residents and all stakeholders.

“Our partnership has achieved significant financial benefits, and we continue to be focused on strengthening our performance where we need to and delivering quality services across the borough.”

The chief executive and leader of the council have resigned from the board of the joint venture, Regional Enterprise, to avoid conflicts of interest during the review period.”

http://www.room151.co.uk/resources/barnet-on-the-verge-of-returning-services-in-house/