Mayor to increase council tax to fund 500 additional PCSOs
- Insufficient Government funding for London’s frontline public services means the Mayor is having to increase council tax to fill the gap
- Proposed council tax increase will help the police to continue reducing crime and ensure vital transport services are protected
- Budget reflects the government’s funding conditions for Transport for London, including a proposed fare rise of 5.9 per cent on 5 March 2023 – the same as national rail fares
The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, has today set out his plans to protect and improve London’s vital public services by increasing council tax to help fill the funding gap left by the Government for policing, transport and the London Fire Brigade.
Publishing his draft budget for the Greater London Authority Group, the Mayor will announce that, as expected by Government, he’s planning to increase council tax by £15 for an average ‘Band D’ property in 2023-24 to specifically invest more in policing. This will raise an additional £29.3 million, which will go directly to the Metropolitan Police Service to fund 500 additional Police Community Support Officers (PCSOs) to work in local neighbourhoods disproportionately impacted by crime.
The additional police funding by the Mayor will increase the number of PCSOs in London by around 50 per cent - taking the total number of PCSOs in the capital to more than 1,500 and reversing a decade of falling PCSO numbers caused by Government austerity. These Sadiq-funded extra PCSOs will serve as a visible police presence to help reduce crime further, make London safer and rebuild community relations and public trust in the police.
The new Commissioner has set out how the Met needs an additional £827m a year to have the same real-terms per-head budget as in 2010-11. After a decade of austerity, Ministers are still refusing to provide the full investment in policing London desperately needs. According to the Home Office’s own review, Government funding for the Met’s capital city policing duties is currently short by £159m. Over the last six years, the Mayor has had to step in to fill the gap as much as possible by investing record amounts from City Hall to support the police. This has enabled the Met to put 1,300 more officers on the streets, expand neighbourhood policing and has helped elevate police officer numbers to the highest level in history. Overall, violent crime in London is now falling, bucking the national trend. But the level of violence remains too high and the Mayor is determined to use his budget to continue making progress by investing more in the police as well as programmes to tackle the complex causes of crime.
The Mayor has managed to protect transport services for Londoners by navigating TfL through the financial crisis caused by the pandemic. However, TfL has been left with a significant funding gap and, on top of further stretching savings targets, City Hall is required to raise over £500m a year from new sources as a condition of the emergency government funding deal - with Ministers explicitly proposing that the Mayor does so by raising council tax. This means that, as previously announced, the Mayor has been left with no viable alternative but to plan to increase council tax by £20 next year for transport, as approved by the Government, to ensure services are protected and that London can maintain a world-class transport network.
An additional £3.55 will also go to the London Fire Brigade to ensure it can continue to respond quickly to major fires and make the changes needed after the Grenfell Tower Inquiry.
This means that the Mayor is proposing to increase his share of council tax bills for an average ‘Band D’ property by £3.21 a month (£38.55 a year) from April. An average household will pay £434.14 a year. Almost half of London households are in Bands A to C and will therefore pay a lower amount of council tax.
The Government set strict conditions in the recent emergency funding agreement with TfL so the Mayor is indicating the fares on TfL services will have to increase by 5.9 per cent on 5 March 2023 – in line with the Government’s increase to national rail fares.
The Mayor froze TfL fares for five years from 2016 to 2021, saving Londoners hundreds of pounds each year and helping to encourage public transport use. If the Mayor had chosen not to freeze fares set by TfL and instead increased them in line with inflation, they would have risen by 12 per cent between 2017 and 2020 inclusive. Had there been no fares freeze, this would have meant that a Pay As You Go bus fare in 2023 would be £1.90 (rather than £1.75) and a Zone 1-6 peak Tube fare would be £6.50 (rather than £5.60).
The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, said: “The last thing I want to do is increase council tax at a time when many household budgets are stretched, but the Government’s refusal to provide the funding our city needs means I’ve been left with no viable alternative but to help plug the gap by raising council tax by £3.21 a month. This will ensure we can protect and further improve our vital frontline public services, including the police, transport and the London Fire Brigade.
“Bearing down on violent crime and making our city safer for everyone remains my number one priority. The extra funding for the police will go directly towards putting an additional 500 Police Community Support Officers into neighbourhoods across London. This will help us to build on the progress we’re making to reduce violent crime in London.
“I froze TfL fares for five years from 2016 to make transport more affordable for millions of Londoners. But my hands have been tied since the pandemic by the strict conditions set by the Government in the recent emergency funding agreement for TfL, which means fares have to be increase in London by the same amount as national rail fares – 5.9 per cent.
“This is a challenging time for our city, with a Government that is not fully funding our public services, but I’m determined to step up so that we can continue building a greener, safer and fairer London for everyone.”
The overall level of fares set by TfL are proposed to increase by an average of 5.9 per cent, with a slightly larger rise for Tube Pay As You Go fares within Zone 1, which will increase by 30p. This is in order to keep costs as low as possible for Londoners travelling from outside Zone 1 into the centre for work, and for those using public transport in outer London – where car use tends to be higher – as journeys solely within Zone 1 are more likely to be made for tourism or leisure.
In addition, the Mayor has confirmed that the temporary travel time restrictions on 60+ Oyster and Older Person’s Freedom Passes, introduced due to Government conditions, will have to become permanent from today, Wednesday, 18 January. TfL were also having to consider a proposal to increase the age of eligibility for the 60+ concession on a phased basis so that the start date of eligibility would increase incrementally by around six months every year. Today the Mayor has confirmed funding from City Hall will be used prevent this change and protect the concession for Londoners over 60. These changes to the London concessions will still mean that the offering in London remains more generous than that available to older people across England, as well as for under 18’s.
Notes to editors
- The 500 additional Met PCSO's paid for by the Council Tax rise will be start being recruited in April 2023 and will all be in post by April 2024 and work in in local neighbourhoods disproportionately impacted by crime.
- The draft Budget for the GLA is available at: www.london.gov.uk/budget
- These proposals will be considered by the London Assembly on 26 January 2023 and the final budget on 23 February 2023.
- The Mayor of London’s 2023-24 draft Council Tax requirement is £1.3 billion – this being the total sum forecast to be collected from Londoners to fund GLA services.
- The Mayor is proposing to increase his share of council tax bills from £395.59 a year to £434.14 (Band D household) for residents of the 32 boroughs – an overall increase of £38.55.
- This equates to a Policing Precept increase from £277.13 to £292.13 and a non-Policing Precept from £118.46 to £142.01 a year. Council taxpayers in the 32 London boroughs pay both – the City of London has its own police force so taxpayers there do not pay the Mayor’s police precept.
- The Metropolitan Police Commissioner has highlighted that despite the increased funding provided by the Mayor it would take a 27 per cent increase for the Met to match 2010 real terms per capita investment levels.
- Over the last six years, Sadiq has invested record amounts from City Hall to support the police, which has enabled him to put 1,300 more officers on the streets, expand neighbourhood policing and elevate police officer numbers to the highest level in history. However, the Mayor and the Met Commissioner agree that London needs at least 1,440 more officers than the Government is currently planning to fund. In addition, the Home Office is still refusing to award London the extra £159m National and International Capital Cities grant that its own independent review said London is due.
- The ‘Hopper’ fare, introduced by the Mayor in September 2016, will increase by 10p to £1.75 and continue to provide meaningful savings for Londoners by offering unlimited bus and tram travel within an hour for the price of a single fare. Since it was introduced, almost 800 million Hopper fare journeys have been made.
- Rail companies across the country also faced emergency funding issues due to a drop in passenger numbers during the pandemic. In every case, the government agreed to give these failing private train rail operators an 18-month blank-cheque funding deal – with no strings attached. Even though TfL provides a far better service than the private rail operators, the government refused to offer the same deal for London.
- TfL is required by the government’s extraordinary funding agreements to develop options to generate between £500m and £1bn of additional net revenue per annum as soon as possible. In December 2021, the Mayor outlined a number of fares policies that were being explored in order to comply with the Government’s funding conditions, and it was estimated that restricting the use of 60+ and Older Person’s Freedom Pass concessions to after 9am on weekdays would deliver around £40m per year in additional revenue for TfL a year. Having taken into account stakeholder feedback and the results of an Equality Impact Assessment, the temporary 9am restrictions will be permanent from 18 January 2023. No change will apply to holders of the Disabled Person’s Freedom Pass.
- TfL will also support London Councils in creating clear information about the concessions available to those who are older, as well as work to ensure that those who are disabled apply for and receive the Disabled Person’s Freedom Pass to benefit from free travel before 9am. The Deputy Mayor for Transport, Seb Dance, has also written to London NHS Trust and GP bodies to request that medical appointments for those aged 60 and over are, where possible and appropriate, scheduled to occur after 9am to help ensure that free travel can be used to and from their appointments.
- The additional funding provided to prevent introducing the increase the age of eligibility for the 60+ concession on a phased basis will mean that no changes will now be made within the current TfL Business Plan.
- TfL also continues to consider a separate proposal to generate additional income by withdrawing from the Travelcard Agreement. This would require the support of the Government and the Train Operating Companies due to the impact on Travelcard usage in London, especially for customers travelling from outside London where PAYG is not available.
- Sadiq has previously saved travel concessions from being scrapped due to the Government’s conditions attached to TfL's funding deal, keeping in place free or discounted travel for under 18 year olds. Holders of the 60+ Oyster card and Older Person’s Freedom Pass will remain eligible for unlimited free travel on TfL’s services from 9am on Mondays to Fridays and at all times at weekends and bank holidays.