Brighton Labour council plans beach huts tax to plug £70m black hole
Cash-strapped Brighton Labour council plans a new 10 per cent ‘sales tax’ on beach huts in bid to plug £70m financial black hole
- Labour Brighton and Hove Council plans 10% transfer fee on sales of beach huts
Owners of Brighton beach huts could face a new 10 per cent effective sales tax as the cash-strapped council tries to plug a £70million black hole in its budget.
Labour-run Brighton and Hove City Council has started a consultation on changes to licence fees for and has proposed charging transfer fee of 10 per cent if they sell up.
The fee would be based on the sale price from April and was proposed by councillors in lieu of raising the annual £503.60 licence fee.
The new rules, if implemented, would also come with a band on hiring out the seafront shelters.
This comes after the city councillor’s auditors, Grant Thornton, warned the authority needed to make around £70million worth of budget cuts by 2027 or they could fall into effective bankruptcy, as Labour-run Birmingham Council did last month.
Owners of Brighton beach huts could face a new 10 per cent effective sales tax as the cash-strapped council tries to plug a £70million black hole in its budget
Labour-run Brighton and Hove City Council has started a consultation on changes to licence fees for and has proposed charging transfer fee of 10 per cent if they sell up
The council could be forced into making ‘politically unattractive or undesirable decisions in the interests of the authority’s future viability’, accountants said.
Chairwoman of the Hove Beach Hut Association, who has owned one since 2015, slammed the plans, saying it was wrong to charge owners selling up, as they do not make a profit after maintaining them and paying council fees, The Argus reports.
She told the local paper that she was ‘very angry’ and accused the council of thinking hut owners are ‘made of money’ – especially as she pays £1,000 a year in rent to the council and a further £1,000 to maintain it.
Labour councillor Alan Robins, who is chair of the authority’s culture culture, heritage, sport, tourism and economic development committee, has said the new money could be reinvested into vital services on the seafront such as lifeguards.
Cllr Robins added that it was ‘an extremely challenging time for government finances’.
There are a total of 459 beach huts along Brighton and Hove’s seafront which are owned privately by locals
There are a total of 459 beach huts along Brighton and Hove’s seafront which are owned privately by locals.
According the council, the value of these huts has risen to a range of £25,000 and £35,000 based on its location and condition.
Similar transfer fee schemes are in place at neighbouring authorities, including Adur and Worthing.
An attempt to introduce a similar scheme was struck down in January this year after residents fought against it.
The consultation is expected to report its results in November.
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