Surrey: Residents face hike in Surrey council tax

It's the highest rise permitted by the government

Author: Julie Armstrong, Local Democracy ReporterPublished 27th Jan 2022

The average council taxpayer in Surrey faces a £77 rise in the largest portion of their council tax in the coming year.

Surrey County Council’s Conservative cabinet yesterday (January 25) recommended a 4.99 per cent hike for the year beginning April 2022, meaning a band D household will have to pay £1,626 for the year.

This is without adding on the cost of what the police and districts or boroughs charge.

The county council says the increase is made up of 0.99% for the increased cost of delivering services, due to inflation and the living wage, 1% for mental health prevention and early intervention and 3% for adult social care.

Mole Valley district councillor Paul Kennedy (LD, Fetcham West) said: “That’s really going to hurt people, it’s going to be tough.”

He said Mole Valley residents are already facing a £680 increase in their energy bills from April. The Liberal Democrats have forecast a national average uplift in bills of £598 a year for each household.

Nearly 80p out of every £1 the council spends comes from council tax, and Cllr Kennedy said Surrey’s Conservative MPs should have pushed for a larger settlement from government.

The authority is expected to get £18.8 million from central government – but spends a budget of over £1 billion.

“We collect lots of business rates and they send them up North and to London. It would be nice if our MPs sat up occasionally and said, this isn’t right,” he said.

“It’s very convenient for Surrey County Council (SCC) that they don’t have an election this year. I warned last year they were deferring an increase.”

This year’s rise is the full amount permitted by government and in addition, SCC is carrying over 2% of the adult social care precept it did not use last year, out of a possible 2.5% that it could roll over.

At the time, Waverley borough councillor Paul Follows (LD, Godalming Central and Ockford) said: “Arguably pushing the reality of the financial problems they face into next year – you might think it was Surrey County Council elections this year.”

Surrey council leader Tim Oliver yesterday told the Local Democracy Reporting Service: “We only took half a per cent last year because we couldn’t justify it; we didn’t need more last year because we had significant one-off funds from the government through Covid.

“Actually we lost 14 seats last year, so I don’t think anybody can say that by keeping it at 2.5% that won us any seats.”

In the cabinet meeting he said: “Four per cent of this 4.99 per cent increase is all about delivering care to vulnerable residents; this is not about paying for back office costs.

“We are determined to do right by all generations to provide dignity and a better quality of life.

“The rise in the adult social care precept is unavoidable if we want to deliver this ambition and look after residents most in need.”

He said the average cost of the council looking after an older person had increased by 13 per cent compared to before the pandemic.

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