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Pembrokeshire Council Cabinet reluctantly backs big Council Tax rise

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PEMBROKESHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL’S Cabinet voted by six to two for a 16.31% Council Tax rise from April.

Two Cabinet members, Cllrs Guy Woodham and Michelle Bateman, supported an 18.94% rise.

Meanwhile, Cabinet Member for Finance, Cllr Alec Cormack, supported the 16.31% rise but said he hoped councillors would “twist his arm” at March 7’s budget meeting and back an 18.94% increase.

A 16.31% Council Tax rise will still mean cuts to school budgets, closure of day centres, and job losses.

The decision comes on the back of massive increases in spending pressures, almost two years of rising inflation, and the Welsh Government’s demands that Councils deliver far more services with far less money.

After decades of living in a fool’s paradise of low Council Tax in exchange for worse and fewer services delivered on the cheap (compared with other councils), the budgetary chickens have come home to roost.

Social care has now outstripped education as the single largest spending obligation for the Council. As people live longer in deteriorating health, the drain on the Council’s resources has accelerated. While the threat it poses to the Council’s ability to balance its budget has long been known, the long-term failure to reform local government finance and social care provision has compounded the problem.

In addition, because of a decision by the IPG two decades ago, Pembrokeshire’s cut from the local government settlement is much lower than the formula suggests it needs.

With meaningful social care reform at least a decade away, the drain of resources towards paying for it will haunt councils in the years ahead.

Councillors have until this Wednesday (February 14) to propose alternative budgets and Council Tax proposals. 

Unlike NHS bodies, Councils must balance their annual budgets.

Any proposal for a different level of Council Tax rise must show how its proposers will balance the budget, where cuts will fall, and how they would rebuild reserves if those are tapped for immediate spending.

Sam Rowlands MS, Shadow Minister for Local Government, said: “The Labour Welsh Government has to accept its share of the blame for this potential rise, which will compound misery for hard-pressed residents.

“Thanks to the Labour Government’s stale funding formula, councils are in too many cases being forced to balance their budgets on the backs of residents.

“The Welsh Conservatives would reform the funding formula to fund councils fairly, and require councils to hold a local referendum if they want to raise rates by more than 5%.”

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Manorbier school fire legal discussions ongoing

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LEGAL discussions are ongoing about Pembrokeshire County Council potentially recouping a £200,000 insurance excess paid by it following the 2022 fire at Manorbier school.
Manorbier Church in Wales VC School and its adjoining schoolhouse was severely damaged by a fire on October 11 of 2022, which broke out in the school roof space.

Pupils and staff were successfully evacuated with no injuries, and a ‘school from school’ was set up in Jameston Village Hall, after a brief period of sanctuary at the nearby Buttyland caravan site.

Pembrokeshire County Council’s insurers have previously said the fire was accidentally started while ‘hot works’ were being carried out by contractors to renew an adjacent flat roof, but, as has previously been stressed, no liability has been accepted to date.

Councillors have previously heard the majority of costs were likely to be met from the council’s insurers, with the caveat of the unknown issue of liability and its effect on a £200,000 insurance excess.

A submitted question, by Councillor Aled Thomas, heard at the full council meeting of Pembrokeshire County Council on May 9, asked Cabinet Member for Education and Welsh Language Cllr Guy Woodham “to update the chamber on what progress the Cabinet have made in recouping the £200,000 insurance excess paid following the devastating non-fault fire at Manorbier school”.

Councillors have previously been told by Cllr Woodham: “The legal issues are not straightforward but will be robustly taken forward.

“At this stage it’s still subject to legal discussion. The excess will be covered by a fund the council holds for insurance excess.”

He said that, if liability was found or accepted, the council would “pursue for the full maximum claim of the costs associated with the fire”.

Responding to Cllr Thomas’s question at full council, Cllr Woodham said there was a limited amount of information he could make public due to ongoing active proceedings.

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Stop funding Bute, Carmarthenshire residents tell County Council

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CARMARTHENSHIRE Residents Action Group (CRAiG Sir Gâr) has challenged Carmarthenshire County Council leader Cllr Darren Price to stop funding Bute Energy through the council’s pension fund investment at today’s Cabinet meeting at County Hall. 

Green Gen / Bute Energy is proposing to run at least two pylon chains through Carmarthenshire’s countryside’s decimating the historic landscape of the Tywi Valley and villages and along the A485.  Councillors including Plaid Cymru Council Leader Darren Price have voiced their opposition.  Yet Carmarthenshire is one of seven Welsh local authorities to invest its pension fund in Bute Energy.  In contrast, neighbouring Powys County Council has declined to invest in the controversial firm.

Havard Hughes, local resident and spokesperson for the Carmarthenshire Residents’ Action Group commented: “We’ve challenged the County Council on their funding of Bute Energy because both Cllr Darren Price and Cllr Ann Davies have been vocal in their words about the firm’s pylon schemes.  However it is utterly ludicrous that the Council they run as the Cabinet has not just been slow to act but is actively funding Bute Energy.

“Carmarthenshire County Council holds the key to killing off Bute Energy’s schemes as they are the consenting authority for the sub-stations which will connect them to the national grid.  This is why residents are so concerned about a conflict of interest.  Moreover, we believe that the withdrawal of Carmarthenshire’s investment would have a domino effect on Bute Energy’s funding. 

“Cllr Price and Cllr Davies have the opportunity to demonstrate leadership on this issue by pulling Carmarthenshire’s funds out of Bute Energy.  Instead we have the town hall farce whereby they claim, on the one hand there is nothing they can do; but state that their representative on the pension board, which Carmarthenshire itself runs, will have some “stern words”.  If Carmarthenshire is serious about making Bute Energy listen to residents then they should immediately follow Powys’s lead and disinvest. 

“The elephant in the room is that Powys County Council, which is also affected by Bute Energy, have managed exclude their pension fund investment.  Darren Price and Ann Davies cannot claim ignorance as Carmarthenshire has one of the largest Wind-industrial zones designated in the whole of Wales in the Welsh Government’s Future Wales 2040 plan.  If it was obvious to Powys this would be a problem then why not to Carmarthenshire’s representatives on the fund?

“This investment generates a direct conflict of interest between the interests of the Council in maximising its return and that of residents in minimising harm.  Bute Energy is already arguing that burying cables will be more expensive.  Lower profits might mean happier residents; but it will also mean lower investment returns to Dyfed Pension funds members many of whom are elected to or are employed by Carmarthenshire County Council. 

It is time for Cllr Price and Cllr Ann Davies to end the excuses and take action that Bute Energy will understand.  So far the most decisive action we’ve seen from Plaid Cymru on Bute has been to give Bute Energy’s Public Affairs Adviser a well-paid job for life in the House of Lords.  Residents deserve deeds not empty words form our Plaid Cymru politicians in County Hall.”

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St Davids RNLI rescue crew after yacht runs out of fuel

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VOLUNTEERS from St Davids RNLI were tasked to assist a 4m yacht that had run out of fuel six nautical miles southwest of St Justinians on Sunday (May 12).

The lifeboat launched in calm conditions at 11.08am. The yacht, with one person on board and sailing from New Haven to Swansea, did not have enough wind to sail to safety.

Without fuel or wind to sail, the yacht was unable to return to shore unaided, so the RNLI Coxswain took the decision to tow the stricken vessel back to the mooring at the lifeboat station.

This rescue was the first for Reuben Palin in his role as volunteer mechanic.

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