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Mayoral Council Tax Precept, Mersey Tunnel Tolls and Transport Levy could be frozen for a year under new plans from Steve Rotheram
4 years ago
The Mayoral Precept and Mersey Tunnel Tolls could be frozen for a year if proposals from Metro Mayor Steve Rotheram are accepted.
This would mean that when residents get their council tax bills in March, the Metro Mayoral Precept will remain at £12.67 for a Band A property (ÂŁ19.00 for a Band D property) for the second year in a row.Â
While Mersey Tunnel Tolls for City Region residents will remain at ÂŁ1 for those using a Fast Tag and ÂŁ1.80 for those paying by cash or contactless.  The ÂŁ1 Fast Tag rate â introduced by the Metro Mayor in 2019 – remains the lowest toll for 20 years. Â
The Metro Mayoral Precept is part of the overall council tax paid by Liverpool City Region residents and used to fund City Region-wide services for which the Metro Mayor is responsible.
The decision to freeze the precept is intended to avoid putting extra short-term financial pressure on residents who are struggling due to the Covid pandemic. 95% of households in the City Region will continue to pay no more than 32 pence a week.
The Transport Levy, paid by the city regionâs six local authorities, will also be frozen.
Metro Mayor Steve Rotheram said:
âThe pandemic has hit our region hard and I know many people will be entering the New Year after having seen their income vastly reduced, or sadly in some cases having lost their job, over the past 12 months.
âAt the same time, the Combined Authority and our six Local Authoritiesâ have lost hundreds of millions of pounds through revenues and the cost of responding to the pandemic. Despite our strong representations to the Government, the funding to cover these shortfalls has not yet been forthcoming, so it seems likely that councils will have no choice but to increase council tax just to survive.
âIn this context I â and the leaders of our six Local Authorities â do not think it would be right to add to the burden on household budgets by increasing the Metro Mayoral council tax precept or tunnel tolls at this time.
âHowever, it is vital that we continue to provide crucial city region-wide services, such as strategic transport, skills and economic development, if we are to emerge stronger from the pandemic in the coming year.
âThrough careful management and use of reserves we are able to achieve this in our 2021-22 budget.
âBut this does not mean there will not be tough choices to come in the near future.
âUnless the Government makes good on its promise to fund âwhatever it takesâ to tackle Covid, our budgets â particularly for our transport services – will not be sustainable at this level in the long term.â