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02
Feb
North Yorkshire residents look set to be charged millions of pounds extra for the area’s police service from April.
The increase will leaving average council taxpayers more than £100 worse off than their counterparts in other parts of the country.
Zoe Metcalfe, the North Yorkshire Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner, has proposed council taxpayers pay 3.99 per cent, or on average £11.77 more than last year, to raise almost £4 million and help cover inflationary pressures.
If approved by the area’s police, fire and crime panel on Monday, a report by the commissioner states through council tax, residents will face average bills for the force of £308.86 from April, covering some 46 per cent of North Yorkshire Police’s cost.
The document highlights how across the country, residents fund on average 34 per cent of their police forces' budgets.
Residents in Northumberland pay just 19 per cent of their force’s cost – almost half of what North Yorkshire residents will be obliged to pay.
Conversely, residents in Surrey, where the force has 54.6 per cent of its funding coming from council tax, paid £310.57 last year.
The report states the proposed police budget also includes investment of £2 million in specialist safeguarding teams to safeguard the most vulnerable and £1 million for investigation teams to mitigate risks to vulnerable people.
It also outlines further investment into the force control room of £1m to further enhance the service to the public and other investments into the digital forensics unit, professional standards unit, neighbourhoods and criminal justice of over £1 million.
The report states although North Yorkshire Police has a budget of £201 million, to provide a similar level of service to now, the force forecasts needing around an extra £12 million due to salary increases and the rising cost of fuel, utilities and general cost increases.
The government is expected to say the commissioner can raise the police precept by £15 from April – that would be an increase of 5.1 per cent, an extra 29 pence per week for an average Band D property, which would only raise £4.7 million of the extra needed.
Ahead of the meeting, the panel’s chairman Councillor Carl Les said the government needed to review funding levels for all local government services, including police and fire.
He said:
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