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Council Tax frozen

20th December 2014 @ 6:06am – by Cheshire East Council
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Cheshire East Council aims to freeze Council Tax despite grant cut of 20 per cent

Cheshire East Council is demonstrating how local authorities can cut costs with innovative ways of working and a residents-first approach.

"We care about the pounds, the pennies and the people," said Council Leader, Councillor Michael Jones.

The Council Leader was speaking after hearing confirmation that the authority had balanced its budget to within £100,000, following the Government's announcement of its provisional finance settlement for councils in 2015/16.

"We are even closer to being able to confirm that there will be no Council Tax increase for our residents for the fifth consecutive year, despite having our revenue support grant cut by £9.66m or 19.9 per cent," he said.

"Indeed, there may even be a small surplus to reinvest in the people of the Borough."

Cheshire East's £750m revenue budget for next year includes a target net saving of £8.7m.

Cheshire East has bucked the trend by working with unions and staff and by creating a range of wholly-owned operating companies that put residents first.

This has reduced management and staffing costs, enabled people to perform better and saved millions – and all without compulsory redundancies.

"We now do far more with a lot less and that's the radical way we need to be," said Councillor Jones. "We are very confident in Cheshire East that we can cope with our planned reduction in spending next year.

"We are adopting different ways of working. We need to be innovative going forward and that's what we are doing. A higher percentage of our income now comes from Council Tax, which has been frozen for the past four years. We have also got economic growth and jobs.

"Nothing has closed at Cheshire East Council and there have been no compulsory redundancies among the staff. People are working differently we are saving money by using arm's-length companies, rather than outsourcing to the private sector.

"This is the right way for a modern council to reduce waste and deal with the pressures of cost reduction."


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