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Greatest council tax rises in England confirmed as Shropshire and Somerset see £160 hikes

The biggest council tax will increase in England from April have been confirmed.

The biggest council tax rises in England have been confirmed (Picture: Getty)

Households in some areas of England face council tax rises of as much as 9% from April, with these residing in areas like Worcestershire, Shropshire and North Somerset the worst affected.

The unpopular tax pays for all types of native companies from social care to bin collections, street resurfacing and leisure centres.

Usually, annual will increase are capped at not more than 4.99%, and native authorities have to hunt particular permission in an effort to elevate it any additional.

However seven councils have particular permission to extend their council tax past the core 5%, to ease a “difficult monetary place”.

It’s a part of a three-year settlement for native authorities which the Authorities has finalised, making round £78 billion out there to city halls all through England. And several other councils have already been given the go forward to boost the tax by rather more than the traditional authorized restrict.

Worcestershire County Council will improve council tax by 9% as a result of ‘extreme monetary stress’. 

Shropshire Council and North Somerset Council may even elevate it by 9% because of excessive social care prices.

In Worcestershire, the rise will add £145.41 per yr on to the price of the invoice for the common Band D property.

In Shropshire, residents shall be compelled to swallow a £162.60 rise on common Band D properties, and in North Somerset, it is going to be a £161.44 improve on Band D.

Trafford Council, in Manchester, will improve its tax by 7.5%, whereas Warrington Borough Council will do the identical, as will Windsor and Maidenhead in London.

Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole on the south coast will elevate the tax by 6.75%.

Steven Broadbent, the County Councils Community (CCN) finance spokesman, warned the following three years “shall be very difficult” for the organisation’s members.

Mr Broadbent, who’s the Conservative chief of Buckinghamshire Council, mentioned he was “upset” that “ministers have chosen to but once more unfairly goal much more sources on a choose cohort of city and metropolitan councils”.

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He mentioned: “It is because the restoration grant overwhelmingly advantages city metropolitan borough councils, but evaluation by CCN reveals that they collectively face a funding hole of £180 million subsequent yr whereas county and rural unitary councils face a colossal £2.7 billion funding black gap.

“This reveals that immediately’s determination to extend the restoration grant by an additional £440 million, reasonably than offering further funding to all county and unitary councils, is patently unfair and compounds the choice to downgrade remoteness inside the method.”

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