A new Local Government White Paper has been published setting out
how a new relationship between central and local government -
which provides long-term financial certainty and empowers
councils - is the only way for the next government to solve the
issues facing the country.
The White Paper – produced by the Local Government Association
ahead of the General Election – includes new analysis revealing
that councils in England now face a funding gap of £6.2 billion
over the next two years. This is being driven by rising cost and
demand pressures to provide adult social care, children's
services, homelessness support and home-to-school transport for
children with special educational needs and disabilities.
Such pressures are increasingly leaving councils with less
funding to provide universal local services that people rely on
every day – such as keeping streets clean, filling potholes and
tackling anti-social behaviour. A recent LGA survey found two
thirds of councils have already had to make cutbacks to local
neighbourhood services this year (2024/25) including waste
collections, road repairs, library and leisure services – as they
struggle to plug funding gaps.
The LGA is calling on all political parties to commit to a
significant and sustained increase in funding for councils in the
next Spending Review, alongside multi-year funding settlements
for councils and plans to reform the local government finance
system. This year saw the sixth one-year settlement in a row for
councils.
Without this, the LGA is warning that cost and demand pressures
will continue to stretch council budgets to the limit in the
coming years, leaving more councils of all political colours and
types unable to deliver their legal duties for their residents
and putting vital services at further risk of cutbacks.
However, the LGA said it is not just about local government
having enough money to provide services for their
communities.
The White Paper calls on the next government to urgently
commission a major review of public service reform to understand
how all public services can work together within their local
communities, focusing on a joint approach to investing in more
preventative services for people in need and reducing demands on
current costly and high need services such as adult and
children's social care.
Focussing on how councils, when given the powers, can shape their
local areas, the White Paper also makes clear that economic
growth can only be achieved if every local economy is firing on
all cylinders.
To unlock the potential of people and their communities, the LGA
has set out how councils can play a vital leading role in
unlocking labour markets, creating jobs, plugging skills gaps and
increase productivity. This includes devolving powers to run
local skills and employment schemes, ending fragmented,
short-term growth funding pots and backing local climate
action.
Other proposals in the Local Government White Paper include:
- Giving councils and combined authorities the powers to build
more affordable, good quality homes at scale for people in the
areas where they are needed, with five-year local housing deals
for all areas of the country that want them, combining funding
from multiple housing programmes into a single pot.
- A renewed focus on prevention, including immediate
implementation of the Hewitt report recommendation that at least
1 per cent of NHS spend is invested into preventative services
over the next 5 years, ensuring councils can provide the right
support for people at the right time.
- Reforming adult social care, ensuring it is adequately
funded, with councils and the NHS working better together to
support people in need, and a focus on prevention and recovery
services, including support for the voluntary sector who are a
crucial part of the adult social care system.
- Reviewing early years education and childcare to ensure that
the workforce has the right skills and training and ensuring
early years entitlements are properly funded, with councils fully
resourced to deliver their statutory duties.
- Building a stronger partnership between councils, the NHS and
schools, backed by new powers and a separate “inclusion”
judgement in the Ofsted school inspection framework, that meets
the needs of children and young people with SEND and enables more
children to remain in mainstream schools.
Cllr Kevin Bentley, Senior Vice Chairman of the LGA,
said:
"We all rely on local government to keep our streets clean,
collect our bins, fix our potholes, build more homes, create
jobs, keep children safe and support people of all ages to live
fulfilling lives.
"However, a funding gap facing local services of more than £6
billion over the next two years - fuelled by rising cost and
demand pressures - means a chasm will continue to grow between
what people and their communities need and want from their
councils and what councils can deliver.
"On July 5, the next government will be faced with many
challenges, whether it is building more affordable housing,
improving care for adults and children, reducing homelessness,
boosting inclusive growth or tackling climate change.
"Local government's offer to the next government is huge. Respect
us, trust us and fund us. By working together as equal partners,
we can meet the fundamental long-term challenges facing our
communities.”