Councils can’t actually go bankrupt, but their equivalent is declaring ‘Section 114’. We understand that once that happens, how the council spends money changes – and the council’s Monitoring Officer and the Chief Finance Officer become responsible for signing off all spending. We have asked them what plans they have: the Monitoring Officer has said he can’t say because discussions are still ongoing with the government, and the Chief Finance Officer didn’t reply to either of our enquiries.
From our understanding and research, assisted with some links provided by the council’s Monitoring Officer Lloyd White, we have created this page and will update it as other information becomes available.
When the council’s auditors issued the Section 24 Recommendations in July, the council was obliged to arrange a public meeting within 30 days. It got special dispensation to extend that period because it fell over the summer holiday period, but it rearranged the September full Council meeting so that it was in the second week of September rather than the last week of September. The next full Council meeting is on 27 November, a week after the next Cabinet meeting. Perhaps we’ll learn something then.
Initially, residents are unlikely to notice any difference in their neighbourhood services or council activity. The immediate effect is an internal one, where the council is legally forbidden from making new spending commitments and must meet within 21 days to decide on a course of action.
After the initial 21-day period, the council must pass an amended budget to bring its spending in line with its income. This is when residents would begin to notice significant changes, which typically fall into two categories:
The council will look for savings from the various services it provides. The decisions on what to cut are guided by the council’s legal obligations:
A major and direct impact on residents is likely to be a substantial increase in council tax next year (it can’t be increased before April)
In summary, while there would be little immediate change, residents would eventually feel the impact through a combination of reduced or withdrawn local services and a significantly higher council tax bill.