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East Renfrewshire: Council faces £30m budget black hole over next 3 years - Residents Face Rising Charges? Cuts to Services?
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TOPIC: East Renfrewshire: Council faces £30m budget black hole over next 3 years - Residents Face Rising Charges? Cuts to Services?

Re: East Renfrewshire: Council faces £30m budget black hole over next 3 years - Residents Face Rising Charges? Cuts to Services? 1 year, 6 months ago #13

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Dear Councillor David MacDonald, Annette Ireland, Kate Campbell, Katie Pragnell ....

------ Original Message ------
Sent: Friday, 4 Nov, 2022 At 13:19
Subject: Budget plans for 2023-2026 - Your views on which of these proposals you will support and which you will not support

Your constituents are being asked by ERC(yourselves) to take part in a consultation.

'We want to hear your views on our spending plans for the next three years (2023-2026)'

If we are being asked to complile the Budget(free of charge) then surely our Councillors(who are being paid) should at least say which of these proposals they will support and which they will not support.

'Budget Briefing 3- provides information on savings proposals we have to consider because of our estimated funding shortfall of £30m over the next three years.'


orlo.uk/eEeXZ


An acknowledgement and your help in giving your views on which of these proposals you will support and which you will not support will be appreciated.

Thanks

Re: East Renfrewshire: Council faces £30m budget black hole over next 3 years - Residents Face Rising Charges? Cuts to Services? 1 year, 6 months ago #14

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07/11/2022

Posted ERC facebook page

www.facebook.com/eastrenfrewshirecouncil/


East Renfrewshire Council
56m
As part of our budget engagement, put yourselves in the shoes of the Council in trying to decide how to meet the savings target.

Our budget simulator tool gives you the chance to set the budget - and will highlight the challenges in balancing the books.

Try it out here:

orlo.uk/QRBhX

Once you've used the budget simulator, you might be better placed to complete our budget survey here:

orlo.uk/f87iL

Re: East Renfrewshire: Council faces £30m budget black hole over next 3 years - Residents Face Rising Charges? Cuts to Services? 1 year, 6 months ago #15

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East Renfrewshire Council's Budget Challenge 2023-26

Welcome to East Renfrewshire Council’s online Budget Simulator.


We are facing unprecedented funding challenges.

We need to find £30 million of savings over the next three years.

This is on top of the £80 million of savings we have already delivered since 2015/16.

Many of these savings will have an impact upon services we provide across East Renfrewshire.

We are asking you to put yourself in the shoes of the Council in trying to decide what services should be cut to make our savings target.

Our budget simulator is easy to use and allows you to reduce or increase spending across council services and see the consequences of your choices.

It is only an example budget to help you see the impact that decisions can have on residents and services.

You also have the opportunity to give us your comments and ideas in our online survey. This will help us understand what is important to you ahead of councillors agreeing the Budget early next year.

This is YOUR opportunity to have your say and experience for yourself the challenges the Council faces.

Please start your budget below then use the services in the left-hand menu to find your savings.

More info

Through our simulator you can have a go at ‘balancing the budget’.

See what happens if you cut or boost spending on different services – each cut you make will have serious consequences which will be highlighted on screen.

There is an option to read more detailed information about the consequences by clicking on the link available.

There are five main blocks which are further broken down in to services the council provides.

Again you can read a brief description about what these services do and the consequences of any budget cuts.

Please think carefully before submitting your choices. At the end, you will have the chance to make suggestions, add comments or ask questions.

Create Your Budget

orlo.uk/QRBhX

Re: East Renfrewshire: Council faces £30m budget black hole over next 3 years - Residents Face Rising Charges? Cuts to Services? 1 year, 6 months ago #16

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07/11/2022

Comments on latest ERC facebook Budget post

www.facebook.com/eastrenfrewshirecouncil/

- This feels very much like you're feeling sorry for yourselves when people have very legitimate concerns about how the council is using our money. I have better things to do than playing on budget simulators. It's your job to sort it out, not ours.
53 m

- I'd also be interested to know how much of our money was spent on creating a 'budget simulator'.
53m

- I just saved £40 million.
How do I get rid of the other £170 million?
45m

- Why not put yourselves in the shoes of voters who elected a council they didn't get because of your grubby little deal to stay in power. How can constituents trust you to get us out of this mess when you're not even elected?
1h

- well said
1h

Re: East Renfrewshire: Council faces £30m budget black hole over next 3 years - Residents Face Rising Charges? Cuts to Services? 1 year, 6 months ago #17

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09/11/2022

Posted BBC website

www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-63555301

Council with Scotland's top schools debates 'very serious' education cuts

1 day ago

The school week for primary pupils in East Renfrewshire could be reduced from 25 hours to 22.5 hours

East Renfrewshire Council which has some of the top performing schools for exam results in Scotland is considering "very serious" education cuts.

The authority has announced it could face a funding shortfall of more than £30m in the next three years.

It said that without an increase in funding it would "not be able to deliver the same levels of service we are currently providing".

One idea is to reduce the school week for pupils at its 24 primaries.

The council has published a seven-page document of possible savings between 2023-26 which could result in 550 job loses.

It said that not all would be enacted, "but it's likely many of them will". The document went on to say that council chiefs had found the cost-cutting task "incredibly difficult", however, balancing the budget was important.

Pupil attainment

Members of the public, staff and s are now being consulted ahead of the council's 2023-24 budget being set on 1 March.

Schools in East Renfrewshire consistently perform well in exams with 77% of S4 pupils attaining five or more National 5s and 47% of S5 pupils achieving five or more Highers.

Of its £339m budget, just over a third (116.9m) is spent on its primary and secondary schools.

Suggested savings totally about £20m include;

reducing funds for staff to work with the lowest-performing 20% of pupils
removing funding for reduced maths and English class sizes in secondary schools
cut the number of pupil support teachers
cut to classroom supplies budget
reducing primary school week from 25 hours to 22.5 hours

The council said some of the options for cuts would have a "very serious negative impact on the quality of learning and teaching, attainment, achievement, wellbeing, pupil support, equity and would increase the pupil to teacher ratio".

It added: "It will also severely impact career opportunities for teachers, particularly newly-qualified teachers. The reduction in early learning and childcare and school-based support staff would impact on both the workload of school management and other departmental and council services."

At this time of the year, Scotland's 32 local authorities start to discuss how they will balance the books for the forthcoming financial year.

East Renfrewshire says that like all other councils it is "facing the same challenges as everyone else in terms of inflation and rising energy costs".

It also highlights that the money it receives from the government is remaining at the "same cash level".

Besides education savings, the authority is suggesting possible cuts to other services including reducing the roads budget, increasing charges to garden waste collection, introducing parking charges and establishing a residential parking permit scheme.


Analysis box by Jamie McIvor, news correspondent, BBC Scotland

Some councils have operated a 4.5 day school week for several years.

Scottish Borders made the change nearly 10 years ago while Edinburgh has done this for even longer.

Pupils spend the same number of hours with teachers each week but the days are configured differently - four longer days to allow for a shorter day on Friday.

There are economic arguments for making the change - for instance, over the cost of heating school buildings. However, the overall length of the working week for teachers is not affected.

The educational arguments are more complex.

Some primary school teachers, for instance, would say that they plan their week differently: Mondays to Thursdays might be relatively intense while Friday mornings might be more relaxed with more fun activities to help pupils wind down for the weekend.

Change can be difficult though.

In particular, working parents may need to consider the implications for childcare if schools are closed on Friday afternoons.

Re: East Renfrewshire: Council faces £30m budget black hole over next 3 years - Residents Face Rising Charges? Cuts to Services? 1 year, 6 months ago #18

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09/11/2022

Published Barrhead News On Line

www.barrheadnews.com/news/

East Renfrewshire Council considers job losses and service cuts
1 hr ago


By Norman Silvester
Reporter

Tough decisions lie ahead as council considers job losses and service cuts

Details of drastic cuts being considered by East Renfrewshire Council as it tries to meet a £30million funding shortfall have been revealed.

Council chiefs have warned that tackling the massive budget black hole will have a major impact on frontline services, with as many as 550 jobs at risk over the next three years.

Among the money-saving options on the table is a reduction in refuse collections, with grey, blue and green bins only being emptied once every four weeks, rather than every three weeks.

Brown bin collections, which include food and garden waste, could be switched to every fortnight, with an increase in the annual £20 charge.

Also being considered is the closure of Barrhead’s recycling centre, as well as all grass football pitches.

There could also be increases in burial charges – already among the highest in Scotland – while the price of school meals could rise by 20p.

Council bosses will consult with staff and trade s over the next five months as details of cutbacks, including any job losses, are finalised.

The cuts are due to a reduction in cash from the Scottish Government, which funds the majority of council services, and a rise in inflation and the likes of energy costs.

Only 18% of cash available to the local authority comes from council tax.

Around £20m of the planned £30m worth of savings could come from cuts in schools and nurseries.

Options being considered include reducing the school week at primaries from 25 hours to 22.5 hours.

There could also be less funding for under-achieving pupils and those with additional needs, as well as a reduction in the number of classroom assistants, janitors, library staff, caterers and cleaners.

School crossing patrols could also be cut back.

Further savings are planned by reducing money spent on repairing potholes and gritting roads.

There are also plans for more residential parking schemes and charges to use council car parks.

In addition, cuts could be made in customer services, leading to increased waiting times for complaints and queries to be dealt with.

A council spokesperson told the Barrhead News: “Like all councils, we are facing unprecedented financial challenges in the years ahead.

“It is expected we will have a £30million budget gap over the next three years and a range of difficult decisions will need to be made, including considering cutting services and jobs.

“All savings proposals put forward at this stage are options and councillors will not set the final budget until March 1, 2023.”
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