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The reasons why your Council Tax charges are so high …

 

West Dunbartonshire Council headquarters in Church Street where council tax rates are decided.

By Bill Heaney

Mounting pressures from inflation, increasing costs and demand are exceeding the Scottish Government’s additional investment in Scotland’s councils, according to the Accounts Commission.

In 2025/26 councils received over £15 billion in government funding, with more money set to be raised from council tax and charges for some services. With communities paying more for services, their expectations are increasing.

In its latest assessment of local government finances, the Accounts Commission reports that additional costs from wage increases, higher employer National Insurance contributions and intensifying service demands, including social care as Scotland’s population ages, mean councils must cover a budget shortfall of £647 million in 2025/26.

Whilst councils have partly met this shortfall through service savings and increased charges for services, continuing to use reserves and make one-off savings isn’t sustainable.

It intensifies pressures on future budgets.  Longer-term change in the way services are delivered is happening but must accelerate.

Action is also needed to better understand the impacts on the most vulnerable communities.

Capital funding is vital for councils to invest in public buildings such as schools and libraries, as well as roads.

It also underpins the significant transformation needed in the ways services are delivered in the future.

Capital funding from the Scottish Government is increasing but has not returned to previous levels.

Councils remain heavily reliant on borrowing to fund their planned £4.7 billion capital investment in 2025/26.

Derek Yule, a member of the Accounts Commission, said:  ‘There’s a growing expectation gap. Councils don’t have enough money to meet current demand, at a time when local communities are being asked to contribute more through increases in council tax and charges for some services.

“Councils need to provide clearer budget information and work with communities to determine how services will be delivered in the future. These conversations won’t be easy.

“With public finances tightening, however, not all cost increases faced by councils can be met by government funding.

“Local action is needed now to find solutions to immediate and future financial challenges. This means difficult decisions on what services can be delivered and making major changes in how they are delivered.”

West Dunbartonshire Council have been asked to comment, but have refused.

Scottish Liberal Democrat finance spokesperson Jamie Greene said:  “Local authorities have had a raw deal from the SNP over many years and that has had a knock-on impact on the provision of vital local functions.

“This report shows there is a titanic gulf between what the SNP have provided and what councils say they actually need to maintain basic local functions.

“The SNP have demanded councils do more with less. As a result, we have ended up with school strikes, bin strikes and shortages of elderly care packages.

“All the while people are seeing their council taxes rocket as councils desperately try to fill black holes in their finances.

“Local government deserves long-term central government funding deals which adequately meet its needs and provide locally delivered public services. That is what people rightly expect.”

Scottish Labour Local Government spokesperson Mark Griffin, right, said “This stark report shows people right across Scotland are paying more and getting less as a result of SNP incompetence and cuts. 

“Councils have faced years of budget cuts under the SNP, leaving services threadbare and making long-term reform more difficult. 

“The UK Labour government decisively ended Tory austerity and delivered record funding for the Scottish Government, so the SNP has no excuses. 

“The SNP must deliver consistently fair funding for local government and work with Councils across Scotland to modernise services so they are fit for the future.”

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