Wednesday, 12 August 2015

From Rural Services Network:

Village halls face higher running costs due to inadvertent consequences from this summer's Budget.

A rise in Insurance Premium Tax (IPT)  from 6 to 9.5% will mean a typical village hall with a £1,000 premium will pay an extra £35 per year – and bring IPT payments close to £200 per year for a larger hall.

The £500,000 generated for the government will come from hire charges paid by small voluntary groups, say village hall representatives.

The National Village Halls Forum, which represents more than 9,000 village halls in England, is arguing that village halls should either be exempt from the insurance increase or that the revenue raised should be used to help trustees share information.

Forum vice chairman Alan West, of Ringmer Village Hall, East Sussex, said discussions needed to be opened about how a grant scheme might operate, the benefits of the scheme and confirm the funding required.

He added: "The estimated funding of £7,000,000 is less than other Budget allocations for similar initiatives and it would spread small but important economic and social benefits throughout the UK."

The Budget also saw an increase in extra free childcare hours from 15 to 30 hours. Mr West said this was good news for many families but it too had unforeseen consequences for village halls.

"Many village halls will be unable to meet this commitment because they do not have the separate toilet, kitchen and meeting facilities for other daytime users," he said.

"Such work needs budgetary provision to support halls to adapt to accommodate increased childcare hours. However, yet again, payment for this work will incur irrecoverable VAT."

article here

Neighbourhoods, not just cities, need more powers


NALC write in DIS

"Pursuing the devolution agenda completely on a model of city-based deals could mean that local empowerment and neighbourhood-level devolution get “missed out”.

Lord Kerslake, the former permanent secretary at the Department for Communities and Local Government (DCLG) and now crossbench peer who is chairing a far-reaching inquiry into decentralisation and devolution, said that the path towards a more devolved Britain will be “immensely challenging”.

He agreed there is value in the current city deal-based model, but said: “There is, perhaps, some risk that if this is all done as city-based deals that the local empowerment and neighbourhood level of devolution gets missed out.

“We have to find ways of empowering local communities as well as empowering cities.”
The All-Party Parliamentary Group for Reform, Decentralisation and Devolution’s inquiry panel will consider written evidence in October and oversee oral evidence sessions in the autumn."

Direct Information Service (DIS) is available at £90 +VAT pa from NALC, more information here

Friday, 7 August 2015

Council tax statistics for town and parish councils

 DCLG has published 
"Council tax statistics for town and parish councils: 2015/16 England".

Some of the key statistics include:
  • The average Band D precept is £54.12, an increase of £1.75 (or 3.3%) on 2014/15
  • Total value of precepts is £409 million, 1.7% of the overall council tax requirement for England of £24.7 billion, £20 million more than in 2014/15 (£389 million)
  • Over a third of parishes (36.7%) had a freeze or a reduction in their precept, just over a quarter of parishes (2,309) had an increase of less than £1, while 62 parishes (0.001%) more than doubled their precept.
The full report can be found here.