Mark Conrad 21 November 2022

Stark Solace survey gives thumbs down to Autumn Statement

Stark Solace survey gives thumbs down to Autumn Statement image
Image: Becky Stares/Shutterstock.com.

Nine in ten senior council managers believe the Autumn Statement will impact negatively on their residents, with many frontline services expected to be axed, a stark new survey has suggested.

Swift research by senior officers’ organisation Solace found 87% of council chief executives and senior staff believe chancellor Jeremy Hunt’s financial measures announced last week ‘will have a negative or extremely negative impact on their residents’.

Asked specifically about vulnerable residents, more than two-thirds (69%) said the Autumn Statement would have a negative or extremely negative impact while three out of four senior council personnel believe the measures will negatively impact businesses.

Four out of 10 senior council staff believe the Autumn Statement has made their financial position worse than it was before the announcement.

Almost four out of five Solace respondents said that before the Autumn Statement they were already facing a ‘large or very large’ gap in their budgets for the 2023-24 financial year.

Solace spokesperson for finance and chief executive at Sunderland City Council, Patrick Melia, said: ‘This survey makes for alarming reading.

'Our members in councils across the country were already grappling with hugely challenging financial pressures, in part due to the huge increases in the cost of all manner of core goods and services, as well as the ongoing increased demand for services, amounting to a real terms funding shortfall into the billions across the sector.

‘Trying to respond to these pressures through regressive council tax or use of reserves is simply not sustainable.

'The upshot is that basic service provision will inevitably suffer, with negative consequences for millions of residents.’

This article was originally published by The MJ (£).

SIGN UP
For your free daily news bulletin
Highways jobs

Supervisor (Relief) - Christian Head Residential Care Home WMF1081e

Westmorland and Furness Council
£35,745 - £36,648
We are looking for kind, compassionate candidates interested in the opportunity to make a real difference Cumbria
Recuriter: Westmorland and Furness Council

Governance Support Officer

City of York Council
Grade 6 Level 1- 4 (£26,224 to £28,725 per annum) reduced pro rata
Are you super-organised and looking for a part-time, flexible role, working term time only with a mix of office and home working? York, North Yorkshire
Recuriter: City of York Council

Customer Service Representatives

City of York Council
Grade 5 Level 1 - 4 (24,629 - £25,779 pro rata per annum)
Are you an amazing retail, tourism or contact centre worker with excellent customer service skills. York, North Yorkshire
Recuriter: City of York Council

Care Enabler

Rotherham Metropolitan Borough Council
£23,893 pro rata (Pay award pending)
Do you want to help people maintain and increase their independence also have control over their lives? Rotherham, South Yorkshire
Recuriter: Rotherham Metropolitan Borough Council

Programme Manager WMF1082e

Westmorland and Furness Council
£62,273 to £65,017
This is an exciting opportunity to join the Westmorland and Furness Programme Management Office Cumbria / Various
Recuriter: Westmorland and Furness Council
Linkedin Banner

Partner Content

Circular highways is a necessity not an aspiration – and it’s within our grasp

Shell is helping power the journey towards a circular paving industry with Shell Bitumen LT R, a new product for roads that uses plastics destined for landfill as part of the additives to make the bitumen.

Support from Effective Energy Group for Local Authorities to Deliver £430m Sustainable Warmth Funded Energy Efficiency Projects

Effective Energy Group is now offering its support to the 40 Local Authorities who have received a share of the £430m to deliver their projects on the ground by surveying properties and installing measures.

Pay.UK – the next step in Bacs’ evolution

Dougie Belmore explains how one of the main interfaces between you and Bacs is about to change.