Glasgow and North Lanarkshire vote to freeze council tax
- International
- February 15, 2024
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Plans outlined in Glasgow’s budget include:
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New parking charges
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10p rise in school meal charges in secondary schools
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Increased charges for uplifting white goods
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Review of school libraries and cleaning services to save £300,000 by 2026/27
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A one-off £1.7m investment towards bringing empty properties and heritage buildings back into use
The city’s budget was passed after a deal between the SNP and Green groups on the council.
Unions have protested against planned budget cuts to services in the city, saying they are already “on their knees”.
Council leader Susan Aitken backed the freeze.
She said: “We don’t have the powers in Scotland just now to address rampant inflation and mortgage rates.
“But we can choose not to pass an increase in this particular bill on to our residents during a tough time, even as we continue to argue for fundamental reform in local taxation.”
Drafting the budget had meant “facing some tough decisions head on”, she said.
Labour councillor Jill Brown said her party was accepting the freeze too.
She said: “In a state where our citizens are suffering from a cost-of-living crisis it is the only option available.”
However, she said the SNP/Green government at Holyrood had passed on “drastic cuts” to the local authority.
A report from officials said there was a £107.7 million spending gap over the next three years following the latest settlement from Holyrood.
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