
Will you pay more council tax to fund the North? Use our tool to find out
Households across southern England that pay less than £2,000 a year in council tax are facing an increase in their bills to fund the North.
Angela Rayner is cutting the amount of central government funding that local authorities which set low bills will receive.
The Tories accused the Deputy Prime Minister of 'punishing' these councils and putting them under pressure to either cut services or increase council tax to cover the funding shortfall.
The changes could lead to bills rising across southern England to enable more money to be sent to northern cities.
About half of council income comes from central government, and Labour claims that the way it is shared between councils is unfair.
There are 13 councils that charge less than £2,000 a year in council tax, all of them in London.
However, town halls can only put up council tax by a maximum of 5 per cent unless a local referendum approves a higher rate, or the Government gives them permission to do so.
The plans for what Ms Rayner believes is a 'progressive' redistribution were unveiled in a consultation document published on Friday.
It will change the way that central government grants are shared out, based on calculations of what local authorities could raise if all areas charged the same rates of council tax based on their housing mix.
The document states: 'The Government is proposing to set a notional council tax level that achieves the objective of full equalisation.
'To fully equalise against the council tax base, we set the notional council tax level at the average Band D level of council tax in England in scope of these reforms (c£2,000 in 2026-27).'
The Government will also introduce a new formula for accounting central government funding based on local needs, including population, poverty and age.
Ms Rayner believes it is unfair that people living in the North often pay hundreds of pounds more in council tax than those in southern areas.
For example, a three-bedroom semi-detached home in Hartlepool generates a council tax bill higher than a 10-bedroom home in Westminster valued at £80 million.
The combination of the two changes will mean steep falls in grant income for wealthier councils, mainly in London and the South East, forcing them to either raise council tax rates to make up the shortfall or cut public services.
Ms Rayner also unveiled changes to council tax collection to stamp out 'unacceptable, aggressive' practices.
To help households manage their finances, she proposes to change council tax billing from 10 months to 12 months.
Council tax bills tend to be paid through 10 instalments (from April to January) and the majority of the 25 million council tax bills issued each year in England are paid by this method.
But 12 month instalments could help households to spread the cost of their bills over a longer period.
The Government is also looking at enforcement processes, including 'a more appropriate and proportionate time frame' before councils can demand a full bill from households.
When someone fails to pay council tax, a reminder can be sent seven days after a missed payment. Following that, if the bill remains unpaid seven days after the reminder notice has been issued, the full amount due for the year becomes payable.
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Ten members allegedly used an old prison van to break into an Elbit Systems site in Bristol last August in an act described as a 'ram raid'. Eighteen were arrested and remanded in custody, and will be tried this year. Ms Ammori was not involved. In March, activists on a cherry picker targeted Elbit in Bristol again, spraying it with red paint and using a sledgehammer on a rope to smash windows. This militancy seems a far cry from Ms Ammori's upbringing in a detached house in a gated cul-de-sac in an affluent area of Bolton. But she appears to have been radicalised young. She claims her great-grandfather was killed by British soldiers in the 1936 uprising in Palestine, a major Arab revolt against British rule and increasing Jewish immigration. She also endured turmoil in 2013 when her father, Professor Basil Ammori, left the family home and moved in with a woman 30 years his junior, whom he later married. In 2014, she and her father were said to have had a violent doorstep altercation after she allegedly posted his new wife's name on a personal ads website causing men to post messages asking for sex. She also claimed he had 'f***** off with a white whore' and had a 'b****** son', a General Medical Council tribunal heard in 2016. Accused of hitting Ms Ammori when she confronted him at his home in Altrincham, Cheshire, the obesity surgeon was cleared. Ms Ammori's mother declined to discuss her daughter's militant activities with the MoS. Richard Barnard has a similarly conflicted background. Among his 30 tattoos are Buddhist chants, an IRA slogan, 'freedom' in Arabic and 'all cops are b*****ds' in code. Once part of the Christian anarchist group Catholic Worker, he told Prospect he was now Muslim. He is said to have been in a hardline faction of the environmental protest group Extinction Rebellion (XR) around founder Roger Hallam, who also established Just Stop Oil. Hallam is serving a four-year prison sentence for conspiring to disrupt traffic over the M25. Barnard was arrested in 2019 but later acquitted for protesting on top of Tube trains in an XR stunt. He is due to be tried next year for allegedly eliciting support for Hamas and encouraging criminal damage. At a demo in Manchester the day after the Hamas attack on Israel on October 7, 2023, he reportedly told the crowd: 'When we hear the resistance, the Al-Aqsa Flood [as Hamas called the attack] we must turn that flood into a tsunami of the whole world.' Other supporters include NHS orthopaedic doctor Rahmeh Aladwan, who on Thursday reposted a tweet from Iranian leader Ali Khamenei, which read: 'I offer my congratulations on the victory over the fallacious Zionist regime.' She has also tweeted: 'Let the record show that I support [Palestine Action]... upholders of truth and justice. Our British heroes.' Then there is Paul Shortt, 52, from Dumfries, Scotland, who posed with what appears to be a handgun on social media alongside a post stating: 'Resistance is not terrorism! Resistance is justified. When people are occupied. Resist! By any means necessary.' He was one of ten activists who attacked Elbit's Bristol HQ in 2022. He received a suspended jail term. Palestine Action has produced a manual on how to plot disruption. Members should organise themselves into cells of three or four, use 'burner' phones and code names, cover their faces and pay for any supplies in cash. Today, it is due to carry out a 'training day' in Leicester for recruits, who are expected to 'harness the strength of the grassroots and direct it towards bringing down Israel's war machine'. More are scheduled for London, Liverpool and Glasgow next month. In our webinar, Gamze Sanli says members are expected to make a 'level of sacrifice'. But in a slide marked 'police station tips', detainees are told they can ask for 'a free tracksuit'. These middle-class activists seem ready to part with their liberty for the cause. But some home comforts clearly remain essential.