Middlesbrough Council Budget CUTS

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MC Press Release

Savings of £14m on the table as Council seeks to recover financial position.
Savings proposals totalling around £14m have been announced as Middlesbrough Council continues work to recover its financial position.
A report published today sets out how a shortfall of more than £6m remains, with further action beyond the current proposals required to allow the Council to set a legally balanced budget in February.
The Council’s Executive will be asked next week to approve a public consultation on measures that could result in a reduction of around 75 full-time equivalent posts at the authority.
The consultation would invite views on changes including introducing fortnightly waste collections, charging for green waste collections and the potential closure of the Captain Cook Birthplace Museum.

Under the waste collection plans, households of three or more people would qualify to receive a larger bin, with more education and support rolled out around recycling. Those who use communal bins would continue with weekly
collections.
Garden waste collections would be extended, with rounds starting in early April and continuing fortnightly until late November. A £40 annual charge is proposed for the service.
The Council is battling to balance its books in the face of reduced government funding, increased demand for social care and pressures brought about by sustained levels of high inflation.
The Council also has critically low levels of reserves to meet unforeseen spending pressures.

Middlesbrough Council now spends around 83% of its budget on its statutory duties in caring for vulnerable children and adults – a much higher proportion than many other local authorities.
Middlesbrough is an outlier in terms of the demand for social care, with more adults admitted to residential and nursing care homes at 42.4 per 100,000 of population, compared to the national average of 13.9 per 100,000
in 2021/22.

In terms of Child Protection plans in place in Middlesbrough, there were 140 per 10,000 children in 2022/23, while the national average was 43.2 per 10,000 children.
With this context in mind, many of the budget proposals focus on improving the efficiency of social care delivery.
In adult social care, there will be enhanced early intervention, more use of digital technology, increased reablement and a broadening of the Council’s accommodation offer.

In children’s social care, there will be enhanced early help and prevention, the development of new models for placements of looked after children and more in-house fostering capacity.

Middlesbrough Mayor Chris Cooke said: “We are working hard to recover the Council’s finances so we can reset our priorities for the town and start to deliver the services people expect and need.
“The financial situation we are facing means we will have to take tough choices in the short term in order to save our services in the long term.
“By taking a common sense approach and focusing on our communities and the services they value, we can protect services for the future.
“During the short period I have been Mayor, I have created a vision to finally move our town forward, putting people at the heart of our great town.”

Cllr Nicky Walker, Executive member for Finance and Governance, said: “The position we inherited has put us in a place where we have almost nowhere left to go.

“Councils across the land are reporting gaps in funding due to increased costs and demands around key services.

“What makes this particularly challenging for Middlesbrough are the overspends emerging from each of the last two years’ budgets and the critically low level of reserves as of March this year available to cushion such overspends and invest in the transformation that we need to deliver.

“We need to change from being a council which spends more than it has income, start to rebuild our reserves and begin to return to a position o financial resilience.

“Difficult decisions will have to be made now to avoid even tougher measures in the future and we’re determined to transform the Council so we’re protecting the services the public value most and delivering them to the best of our ability.
“We’ve made progress in reducing the overspend during this financial year but there is a lot more work to do.”

Next week’s budget report sets out how the Council still has a further £6.27m to find to ensure it can balance its budget at a meeting on February 28.

Officers are awaiting news on the local government finance settlement for 2024-25, with an announcement due later this month. Detail of the settlement will be analysed so the full impact on the Council’s finances can be assessed.

The process of identifying further savings proposals will continue, including the development of business cases for transformation projects that will be designed to deliver savings or income over a longer period.

The Council will also continue talks with government and will consider applying for “exceptional financial support” if necessary.

If the Council is unable to approve a balanced budget, it will be necessary for the director of finance (also referred to as the section 151 officer) to issue a section 114 notice.

This has been seen recently at councils under different party political control, including Nottingham, Woking and Birmingham. It brings with it the potential for further government intervention and the suspension of all but essential
spending to meet statutory responsibilities.


The budget for 2024-25 also includes a proposal to increase council tax by 4.99%, with 2% specifically set aside for funding adult social care. These increases are in line with the current limits announced by government before a
referendum would be required.

The proposed increase would mean those in Band A properties – over half of households in the town – would pay an extra £1.20 per week.

Alongside the budget proposals, Executive will consider a draft of the Council Plan for 2024-27, the first since Labour took control of the authority in May’s elections.

The plan sets out the Mayor’s vision and ambition for Middlesbrough around the four themes of:
- A successful and ambitious town
- A healthy place
- Safe and resilient communities
- Delivering Best Value.

The Executive will consider the reports on December 20.
 
Middlesbrough Council now spends around 83% of its budget on its statutory duties in caring for vulnerable children and adults – a much higher proportion than many other local authorities.

Middlesbrough is an outlier in terms of the demand for social care, with more adults admitted to residential and nursing care homes at 42.4 per 100,000 of population, compared to the national average of 13.9 per 100,000
in 2021/22.

In terms of Child Protection plans in place in Middlesbrough, there were 140 per 10,000 children in 2022/23, while the national average was 43.2 per 10,000 children.
This section is horrifying and shows just how damaging the austerity campaign was for our area.
 
This section is horrifying and shows just how damaging the austerity campaign was for our area.

I was thinking just the same. I currently live in a fairly affluent area and the numbers don't come close to those. Really sad to see and shows the impact of austerity on the statutory running of a Council. No business can run with such little flexibility.

Makes you wonder how the council found money for any other projects over the last few years.

Everywhere I have lived outside of Middlesbrough has had fortnightly waste collections. Also green bins at additional cost per year.
 
It is remarkable that local authorities aren't on fortnightly collections these days. My Parents lived in Richmond area and have fortnightly for everything. The reluctance to change is often just the ignorance of residents.

I just can't see M'Bro Council recovering from it.
 
Deliberately: Local Authorities are now simply local brokers for Central Government destruction of public services and the reduction of the quality of life for the majority of us - wherever we live. Boro is one of the most deprived areas of the UK and needs more support for its elderly, the young, the low paid, those without adequate bus services, etc, but for decades has been deliberately deprived of resources by Central Government. Effectively, Central Government is running various councils directly, ignoring locally elected councillors and officials and dictating fiscal rules. Its been the aim for decades.

I admire those councillors and community leaders who continue to campaign against cuts and obliteration of local services, but its beyond belief when they have to vote between whether to withdraw financial support for particular child services or providing support for physically disabled people to have a twice-a-week bus service into town, to enable them to get out and increase independence.

I admire the Lodger. I wouldnt fancy having to make decisions like he has for all the tea in China.
 
Didn't realise Middlesbrough was still weekly for waste collection.

Redcar's been fortnightly for years.
 
This section is horrifying and shows just how damaging the austerity campaign was for our area.
those numbers are far from the truth. the department for child protection is so understaffed it takes years to get referrals and they try to drop cases off as soon as they can. i would hate to imagine the true numbers if all cases were followed up
 
those numbers are far from the truth. the department for child protection is so understaffed it takes years to get referrals and they try to drop cases off as soon as they can. i would hate to imagine the true numbers if all cases were followed up

The recent kickings by Ofsted I imagine aren't helping to recruit staff in this area. The knock on effect being that to recruit staff very expensive sums are being paid to recruitment agencies for agency social workers, further damaging the budget and not delivering value for money.
 
With fortnightly recycling as well as green waste in the summer.

As a couple we could handle fortnightly collections but I put the bins away for a number of houses and one sometimes puts two out on a weekly basis.
We have a number of homes that have 2 black general waste bins that gets emptied on a weekly basis already, lord knows what will happen.

The problem with bins is we struggle to get the government to even look at the mess they have put us in though lack of funds, because the first thing they say is, oh, you still have weekly bin collections, you can't be that hard up- truth is we should have stopped that 3-4 years ago but Preston being a populist wouldn't make the unpopular decisions!

We have lots of unpopular decisions to make because others have put them off, but we just have to get on with it, if we don't we will go bankrupt, and that would result in much harsher cuts that we would ever propose.
 
The Government has cut budgets to the bone since 2010. Stockton is a fantastically run council and performing miracles considering.
M’bro has kept going for a long time but appears are heading for the rocks.
What has really sunk them is the madness of the Preston years. Huge amounts of wasted money on vanity projects(who can forget the helipad twin towers…) Payments made to mates and hidden meetings with Chinese developers.
Policies seemingly plucked out of thin air and a reduction of culture and morale in experienced personnel which has seen the town haemorrhaging any talent it had in the council.
 
Why is there such a demand for social care services in Middlesbrough compared to the rest of the country? Does any one have any insight?
 
The Government has cut budgets to the bone since 2010. Stockton is a fantastically run council and performing miracles considering.
M’bro has kept going for a long time but appears are heading for the rocks.
What has really sunk them is the madness of the Preston years. Huge amounts of wasted money on vanity projects(who can forget the helipad twin towers…) Payments made to mates and hidden meetings with Chinese developers.
Policies seemingly plucked out of thin air and a reduction of culture and morale in experienced personnel which has seen the town haemorrhaging any talent it had in the council.
What are you talking about? If you go on his Facebook page and read the comments you’ll see what a great job he did of running this town despite almost bankrupting it, ******* away the reserves and purchasing a crumbling wreck on the corner of Linthorpe and Borough Roads. Hurrah.

I do wonder what he would have done if it’s a second term with these proposed cuts. Especially with the dearth of talent he had in his executive.
 
Why is there such a demand for social care services in Middlesbrough compared to the rest of the country? Does any one have any insight?
I suspect it's because Middlesbrough is one of the most deprived area's in the country. Social care is usually required much more in area of high depravation, the same goes for Children's care.
 
The bin issue is a pi$$ take. We had a big bin that could cope with a fortnightly collection and the change wouldnt have cost a penny... They decided that they wanted to keep the weekly collection but shrink the bin size so they paid nearly a million to replace all the black bins with one 1/2 the size.

now they have to go to fortnightly but they will have to replace all the black bins as they are now too small... guess what it will cost a million to replace them.

So instead of one decision that would actually save money and cost nothing to implement we are now in a position where the same decision is being made but its cost 2 million to get there.
 
Why is there such a demand for social care services in Middlesbrough compared to the rest of the country? Does any one have any insight?
Poverty is the big one, and all of the ills that it brings. There are many other areas of cities and towns with the same problem.

Oh, and ignorance, but you don't have to be struggling to suffer from that.
 
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