With the final budget of the present York Council now being implemented, it is possible to get an accurate picture of how its financial position has changed since 2011.
A response to a Freedom of Information request reveals that taken together government grant income and Business Rates income has fallen by an average of 2% a year.
This is very different from the headline grapping 47% cut figure being peddled by the Labour Leadership.
After taking Council Tax income into account, the actual reduction in expenditure on public services in the City over the last 5 years has been 3.5%.
The expenditure per head of population (probably the best measure of a Councils efficiency) has fallen from £626.39 in 2011/12 (the last budget set by the outgoing LibDem administration) to £585.41 in the latest Labour budget.
This is a 6.5% fall over 5 years.
Of course the figure disguises where investment was prioritised. Hence the ongoing criticism of Labour’s vanity project obsession – such as digital media centres, arts barges – not to mention huge amounts wasted on aborted projects like the Lendal bridge trial and the elderly care village)
Next week we’ll look at York’s relative performance when compared with other Local Authorities and the – much criticised – borrowing polices of the Council.