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Reporting local life since 1854
Friday, July 27, 2012
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CAPTAINS FANTASTIC Fears changes will lead to ‘ghettos’
£5 MILLION CUT FROM BENEFITS BY ALEX CAMPBELL
alex.campbell@thesentinel.co.uk
TENS of thousands of residents face a huge reduction in their benefit payments as they fall victim to Government cuts. The Sentinel has learned Stoke-on-Trent City Council faces a gap of at least £5 million between the total amount currently paid to the city’s 34,000 council tax benefit claimants and the Government funding it will receive next April. It means working-age residents could face a real terms reduction in the benefit of at least 20 per cent because pensioners and other groups, which have not yet been identified, are excluded from the cut. Now council leaders must decide whether to cut services and increase council tax for everyone, or force cashstrapped tenants to pay more towards their council tax to meet the shortfall. The Labour-run authority has issued a warning that the reforms will lead to ‘ghettos, poverty and a return to Victorian squalor’. Stoke-on-
Trent will be hardest hit by the changes because of its large proportion of benefit claimants. But councils across the region also face 10 per cent reductions in the amount available for council tax benefits. Council tax benefits paid directly by central Government will be abolished next year and councils will instead be funded to offer discounts on tax bills themselves. It means: ■ Cheshire East Council, which will take on responsibility for about 8,500 claimants in the former Crewe and Nantwich and Congleton boroughs, faces a funding shortfall of up to £2.5 million; ■ Newcastle Borough Council, covering about 8,200 claimants, will lose £810,000; ■ Staffordshire Moorlands District Council faces a shortfall of at least £540,000 from the £5.4 million currently paid to about 5,200 claimants. City council deputy leader Paul Shotton, pictured, said: “The Government is passing the buck and shirking its responsibility to the most vulnerable people in society. “We’ve got to find the funds to cover the shortfall on council tax. Do
OLYMPIC RINGS SEE PAGE 20
Shotton’s case is due in court THE case of Stoke City star Ryan Shotton, who has been charged with assault by beating, was today due to be heard by magistrates. But the Fenton-born player was not expected to attend the hearing as he is currently on a pre-season tour of America. The 23-year-old has been accused of assaulting a man close to the Pink Lounge Bar and Club, in Hanley, in an early morning altercation last month.
Bug patient is on critical list
we cut services to cover the £5 million or take it away from the people who receive it? “It’s an appalling abdication of responsibility.” Simon Harris, chief executive of Stoke-on-Trent Citizens Advice Bureau, said: “Unless there is an alternative like jobs for people to go into, we are going to see some of the poorest people in the city becoming even poorer. “We’ll also see the levels of debt rise with more people turning to expensive payday loans to make ends meet.” It is understood that the Government currently pays out around £50 million in council tax benefit to city residents. Nationally, the average tenant receives £15.78 week in council tax benefit. Residents in Band A properties currently pay the council £952.47 a year in tax. A spokesman for the Department for Communities and Local Government said: “Spending on council tax benefit has more than doubled since 1997.”
What do you think? Email us at letters@thesentinel.co.uk
ACCUSED: Stoke City star Ryan Shotton.
A PATIENT being treated for Legionnaires’ Disease was last night in a critical condition in hospital. The patient is among 11 people struck down by the bug in Stoke-on-Trent. See Page 2
Raid uncovers cannabis haul HUNDREDS of cannabis plants have been uncovered at an empty industrial unit. A tip-off about suspicious activity at Fenton Industrial Estate led officers to the drugs factory. See Page 10
WIN
Picture: Steve Bould
Council ‘nightmare’: See Page 6
Tickets to see Dr Seuss’ The Lorax: See Page 26
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