Page 47 - br-feb-2020
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February 2020                        February 2020
 Committee to overturn the Officers recommendations to get rid of this requirement
 to  prevent  new  houses  being  used  as  second  homes  for  a  development  in
 Lulworth. We now await the results of the Inspectors review of our Local Plan to see
 whether  he  will  support  this  being  a  key  policy  in  our  Local  Plan  for  all  new
 developments.

 Budget

 Each year, the Council and other local authorities - such as the Dorset & Wiltshire
 Fire  and  Rescue  Service  and  Dorset  Police  -  review  their  financial  plans  and
 budget assumptions and plan by how much they need to increase their council
 tax.    There  are  many  factors  involved  in  building  the  budgets  for  these
 organisations  –  including  increases  in  prices  for  the  services  they  buy-in,  pay
 inflation,  cost  of  delivering  any  new  requirements  driven  by  Government  and
 increases in the fees and charges they earn.
 In  balancing  their  budgets  (a  legal  requirement  that  expenditure  must  broadly
 balance with annual income) these authorities will set a budget for income from
 council  tax.    However,  council  tax  isn’t  simply  “the  balancing  figure”  in  the
 authority’s  budget,  there  are  rules  set  out  in  each  Local  Government  Finance
 Settlement covering maximum allowable increases in council tax.
 Local  authorities  cannot  increase  their  council  tax  by  more  than  a  set  amount
 without triggering the need for a local referendum of council tax payers to see if
 they are in favour of it.  For 2020/21, this referendum limit is 2% and Government is
 also  enabling  Councils  to  charge  a  further  2%  for  the  Adult  Social  Care
 Precept.    For  Dorset  Council,  the  proposal  Cabinet  is  therefore  currently
 considering  is  an  annual  increase  for  a  Band  D  property  from  £1,629.75  to
 £1,694.79, the equivalent of £1.25 per week. Thus, the overall increase is planned to
 be around 4%, although this will be the subject of a formal vote at full Council on
 February 18th.
 As well as increasing council tax, the council has also made significant efficiencies
 and cost reductions in other areas of its business.   All of these  are set out in the
 Cabinet  and  Council  reports  which  are  available  at  Dorset  4  You  website.  I  will
 issue  a  fuller  report  in  the  next  months  article  subject  to  the  outcome  of  the
 forthcoming Council meeting.

 Minerals
 Dorset  Council  and  BCP  Council  as  Mineral  and  Waste  Planning  Authorities
 adopted the Bournemouth, Christchurch, Poole and Dorset Mineral Sites Plan 2019
 and  the  Bournemouth,  Christchurch,  Poole  and  Dorset  Waste  Plan  2019  on  31st
 December 2019.

 Both the  Waste Plan and the Mineral Sites Plan were examined by independent

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