A ONE per-cent funding cut will put Powys County Council services under “severe pressure” according to leader Cllr Rosemarie Harris.
Cllr Harris was reacting to the news from the Welsh Government which announced details of its draft budget settlement for 2019/20.
Alun Davies, Cabinet Secretary for Local Government and Public Services, announced that overall council funding will be cut by 0.3%, to £4.21 billion.
Powys, along with along with the Isle of Anglesey, Conwy, Flintshire and Monmouthshire, received the joint poorest settlement in Wales
This comes on top of the 0.4 per-cent cut to this year’s budget.
Cllr Harris said: “Council services are already under severe financial pressure in the county so news of another one per cent cut will do little to ease the financial strain.
“Once again the county finds itself at the bottom of the funding table and will face difficult decisions as it tries to balance levels of service delivery against the council’s ability to pay for them.
“The council has reduced spending by £41 million over the past four years and was already facing a further £13 million reduction for 2019/20.
“Today’s provisional settlement will only increase pressure on the council’s ability to deliver public services.”
Earlier today, (Tuesday, October 9), the Cabinet reviewed the Financial Position knowing that nearly £8 million in cuts is needed to balance the books.
A review of where to find savings and freeze department spending had been announced at a cabinet meeting in September, but that work has not started yet.
Finance portfolio holder, Cllr Aled Davies, was asked the question by leader Cllr Harris: “How confident are we that the savings will be achieved by March?”
Cllr Davies said: “Putting right the mistakes of the past is a costly process.”
“Clearly in some areas it’s going to be challenging, expected savings will still leave us with a £5.8 million overspend.
“We hope to see the work take affect by the next report.”
Any shortfall by the end of the financial year could see the authority forced to dip into it’s general reserve fund.






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