09-03-2025
Cumberland Council criticised for £23m borrowing as tax rises
A council has been criticised for approving plans to borrow £23m while raising council Council approved its budget this week, meaning families will pay £4.99% more council tax - between £1.16 and £1.76 more each councillor Gareth Ellis said he believed it was not a budget for residents, but for a council that was "knee-deep in debt". Councillor Barbara Cannon, who is responsible for finance at the Labour-led authority, said the council was facing "significant financial pressures" but would continue to protect its most vulnerable residents.
She said funding was "insufficient" and there was no alternative but to ask for Exceptional Financial Support (EFS) from the Government totalling £ said that borrowing was not a "dirty word" because it helped in areas such as providing infrastructure, the Local Democracy Reporting Service disagreed with Labour leaders' claim that it was a "balanced budget", because it required such extensive borrowing.
'Huge debt'
Independent councillor Robert Betton raised concerns about the council tax increase at a time when people were "struggling with the cost-of-living crisis".For residents on low incomes who may need help paying the tax, the budget includes funding worth £22m a year for the Council Tax Reduction meeting at the civic centre in Carlisle approved a gross revenue budget of more than £800m, of which the net budget of £333m is paid for through council tax, business rates and government to a report presented to councillors, the main change for the 2025-26 financial year was the introduction of the second homes premium, which would see council tax double for second homes from 1 Lib Dems and Green parties proposed amendments to the budget but they fell when put to a vote. Councillor Mike Johnson, the leader of the Conservative group, said the council was in debt to the tune of £244m, most of which was inherited from the former Cumbria County said: "If the budget is approved it will continue to increase."
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