logo
Minister sends team to 'take control' of Croydon council

Minister sends team to 'take control' of Croydon council

BBC News17-07-2025
The government is sending in its own team to take control of a south London council that has gone bankrupt three times in the past five years.Local government minister Jim McMahon said the scale of the financial difficulties facing Croydon Council and "the failure of the council to adequately respond to these difficulties" had led him to appoint commissioners.The four commissioners will have powers over financial management and decision-making and the "appointment, dismissal and performance management" of senior council staff.Executive Mayor of Croydon Jason Perry said the decision to appoint commissioners was "the wrong decision for Croydon and its residents".
'Financially distressed'
Commissioners are appointed when a council is not performing its duties adequately, particularly in areas like financial stability and service delivery.McMahon said "a short and sharp reset, with fast action, is required to shift the dial on the council's recovery".In a statement to Parliament, McMahon said: "Croydon remains one of the most financially distressed councils in the country."Failing to change course would condemn Croydon's residents to a worsening position without a recovery strategy."I believe this is best achieved by escalating the statutory intervention to a commissioner-led model to ensure the council can achieve sustained change at the pace needed."The council has to pay the costs of the commissioners, including their fees and expenses.The minister said most decisions should continue to be made by the council but with the oversight of the commissioners who "will uphold proper standards and due process and recommend action to the authority".
Perry said: "It does not feel fair and consistent in line with the lower levels of intervention placed on other councils."I will not allow our residents to carry the cost of historic failure. I will not support any proposals that would destroy vital local services or impose further council tax increases above the government cap."Perry also said the council would "engage with the government-appointed team constructively".He added: "We will welcome their advice, challenge, and support, and we will continue to put Croydon's residents at the heart of every decision we make."Croydon Council became the first London borough in two decades to effectively go "bankrupt" back in 2020.It went on to declare bankruptcy for a third time in November 2022.Perry promised to address the borough's £1.4bn debt burden when he was elected in 2023.Recent cuts include the closure of four libraries in November 2024 and a restructure of the authority's Youth Engagement Team.Council tax in Croydon has increased by more than 26% since 2022.The Conservative-led council attributes its financial problems to a surge in homelessness and social care demand, along with rising costs for children's placements.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The BMW iX3 is about to make a BIG comeback
The BMW iX3 is about to make a BIG comeback

Auto Car

time9 minutes ago

  • Auto Car

The BMW iX3 is about to make a BIG comeback

An 800V electrical architecture will mean the iX3's battery will also be able to charge at up to 400kW, enabling a 218-mile top-up in just 10 minutes from suitable chargers. Two powertrains will be available when the iX3 arrives in the UK early next year: a single-motor, rear-wheel-drive one and a dual-motor, four-wheel drive one that can deliver up to 402bhp. The second-generation iX3 also receives a new computing system that is 10 times faster than the network of chips in current BMWs. In addition, to maximise interior space within this set-up and to keep vehicle height as low as possible to aid aerodynamics, BMW will unusually bolt the front seats directly to the pack – another first for the firm. Visually, the new iX3 will draw on the original Neue Klasse models from the 1960s and return to small kidney grilles rather than the bolder, more expansive front ends that adorn the likes of the iX. The double-kidney grille will divide a large, gloss black panel on the iX3's front end – similar in style to the Vizor found on Vauxhalls. The panel is likely to conceal the sensors and cameras required by the latest generation of driver assistance systems. The rest of the car will feature a boxier, more chiselled look than today's models, with angled lights front and rear, plus a rear light bar. The reinvention continues inside the iX3, which will be the fi rst car to employ BMW's new iDrive X system.

Durham outdoor gym plans at former Elvet bowling green scrapped
Durham outdoor gym plans at former Elvet bowling green scrapped

BBC News

time10 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Durham outdoor gym plans at former Elvet bowling green scrapped

Campaigners say they are relieved and "ecstatic" after plans for an outdoor gym at a former bowling green were County Council said it would not install the equipment at the site in Elvet, which has since been turned into a community garden, after a consultation had "inconclusive" Carter, from the Hemp Garden Community Association, which has been renovating the area near the city centre since 2017, said he was "elated".The Reform UK-led authority said it would make new plans for the area but added a popular idea for a play facility could not go ahead due to its proximity to the River Wear. It said it would develop new proposals once the future of a nearby toilet block was clear. The structure, which has been disused for over a decade, is going to be sold, with hopes it could become a cafe."We are ecstatic to learn that the council will not be installing the equipment and that they are now prioritising the sale of the toilet before seeking to do anything with the bowling green," Mr Carter said. In July, the gym equipment plans caused anger when residents and parish councillors said it was not wanted and criticised the consultation process.A one-day drop in event, where people could see designs, was branded a "show and tell"."Any future proposals will be subject to a full consultation process, including both face-to-face and online engagement, and over a longer timeline than the recent exercise," Durham County Council said. Durham parish councillor Victoria Ashfield said there had been more than 70 objections to the plans and the "right thing" had been done by scrapping she called the council "disingenuous" over its reasons for refusing a play area."That is ridiculous," she said, adding: "I've checked out parks in other areas, I walked around a lake in Berkshire where there was a play park right at the edge of the lake."There is a safe gate preventing children running out, so their excuses for not making it for children are foundless."Graham Wood, the county council's economic development manager, said the option had been "carefully considered" in line with safety guidelines."Unfortunately, due to the site's proximity to the fast-flowing River Wear, this location is not a safe site for a play area, even with fencing," he said. Follow BBC North East on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.

The village pub I run is being taxed to death
The village pub I run is being taxed to death

Telegraph

time10 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

The village pub I run is being taxed to death

At 5pm on Saturday, my pub sat empty. The beer garden was open, the sun was shining – yet there was not a single punter to serve. If you didn't know already that Britain's pubs are in crisis, then this sorry sight would have hammered home the catastrophic impact of Rachel Reeves's tax raid. For the hospitality industry, we've never seen a situation quite as bad as this. As well as an apocalyptic backdrop of soaring costs and rising levies, landlords are also battling an unprecedented shift in consumer behaviour. Families no long view a pit stop at the pub as an everyday social activity, but rather as a special treat. And I don't blame them. When the average price of a pint rose above £5, we crossed a psychological threshold that turned what used to be one of Britain's favourite pastimes into a luxury. No landlord wants to raise prices, but it is now the only way for us to recoup costs and survive in the face of higher taxes. Somehow, the Westminster elite is yet to grasp all of this. Despite the devastating effects of the Chancellor's National Insurance increase, there is talk of further tax rises this autumn. This would not only seal the fate of many more pubs and restaurants across the UK but also further unravel the country's social fabric. The pub was once a place to enjoy each other's company. A hub where people of all backgrounds could come to congregate, socialise and get out of the house. But tax rises have ripped that apart, as hard-up households choose the cheaper option of staying at home instead of popping out for a drink and a chat. Whatever we do to attract customers, visits keep falling – as people just aren't using the pub in the same way as old. I was confronted with this depressing reality at The Wonston Arms on Saturday afternoon. Despite our award-winning status, which includes being named Camra National Pub of the Year in 2018 and recently being awarded Hampshire's best boozer by The Telegraph, we did not have a single customer. In my 10 years running the pub, which is wet-led and does not serve food, I'd never experienced anything like it. It was one of the most shocking moments in what has been a dreadful year for the industry – one dominated by closures and job losses. Since the Chancellor's Budget, I have tried to strip all unnecessary costs from the business in the hope of putting us on a stable financial footing. I've got rid of Sky TV, scaled back our weekly opening hours from 35 to 27 and gone from having three full-time staff to running the pub myself, occasionally with the help of my wife and the odd part-timer. The volatility of trading and our ballooning tax bill have made it impossible for us to hire in the same way we used to. We're not alone. Every single landlord I speak to is now saying that costs are unbearable. And the worst thing is that we can't say everything is going to be alright next weekend, or the weekend after that. Trading in the hospitality industry today means survival, not success. This is why I am calling on the Government to cut VAT for hospitality in the next Budget. Avoid the temptation of tax rises and give us a reason to invest. No one in this game is here to sit still. We all want to grow, attract more business and strengthen our ties to the local community. I invite Sir Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves to personally come down to my pub to see how hard people like me are working. For all the pictures of politicians pulling pints and the countless promises to save Britain's pubs, it is now time for them to show they mean it.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store