Re: Unlawful Public Consultation to introduce charge for Garden Waste Collection
A letter in response to the email sent (post #14) arrived under cover of email on 8 July 2015 from North East Lincolnshire Council's Solicitor. The contents are as follows:
29 June 2015
Dear Mr [outlawlgo],
Thank you for your letter of 11 June 2015 regarding North East Lincolnshire Council’s (the Council) Public Consultation to introduce a charge for garden waste collections to the Leader of the Council, Cllr Ray Oxby. The Leader of the Council has passed your letter on to me for response.
It is clear from your letter that you consider that the consultation carried out was unlawful. You further allege that the Council are aware of the illegality alleged.
There are courses of action, and ultimately remedies available to members of the public such as yourself who consider that a consultation process has been carried out unlawfully. The Council does not share this view and strongly believes the consultation process carried out to be lawful. The Council respects your rights to challenge. Should you wish to take formal proceedings to challenge the legality of the public consultation in question these proceedings should be served on:
Monitoring Officer
North East Lincolnshire Council
Municipal Office
Town Hall Square
Grimsby
North East Lincolnshire
DN31 1HU
Thank you for the reference to the case of Moseley, R (on the application of) v London Borough of Haringey [2014] UKSC 56. That case was not about the introduction of a charge for garden waste collection. It held that a local authority’s consultation exercise relating to the introduction of its council tax reduction scheme was unlawful. The consultation documents in that case failed to refer to any other options considered by the council for addressing the shortfall in funding caused by the government’s scrapping of council tax benefit and suggested the only option for the council was to require people who were exempt from council tax benefit scheme to pay approximately 20% of their council tax.
The Council’s public consultation to introduce a charge for garden waste collections included on option for consultees to propose alternatives and a number of consultees did so.
The Council’s consultation to introduce a charge for garden waste was at a time when the proposals were still at a formative stage. The Council is considered to have given sufficient reasons for the proposal to allow for intelligent consideration and response. The Council believes that adequate time was given for the consideration and response. Finally it is considered that the product of the public consultation was taken into account in finalising proposals. This means that the Council has complied with the Sedley criteria which were themselves endorsed in the case of R (Gunning) v Brent London Borough Council (1985) 84 LGR 168 for the basic requirements for a lawful consultation process. In short the Council considers that it has complied with all relevant duties and the common law duty of procedural fairness in respect of its public consultation to introduce a charge for garden waste collections.
I note the quote you have included from Cllr Watson in his capacity as Portfolio Holder for Environment. Cllr Watson is right to identify that funds raised from the introduction of charging for garden waste collection can be redirected to other vital services for our communities. The Council undertakes a range of such vital services within the collection and disposal of waste and many of these services are mandatory. The collection of garden waste is a discretionary service. It is lawful to charge for discretionary services and this includes the collection of garden waste. As I am sure you are aware many councils charge for collection garden waste. The setting of a charge for such a discretionary service has to, in part, be based on an estimate of the numbers of people who will pay for the service. It also factors in the real costs of the overheads in delivering the service. An appropriate proportion of the total overheads within the Council’s waste collection and disposal budget can rightly be included when calculating the appropriate level of charge for this particular service – namely the collection of garden waste.
Thank you for drawing attention to the Barnet case. That case pertained not to garden waste collection but to charging for parking permits in accordance with the Road Traffic Regulation Act 1984 (RTRA) to create a surplus which could be used to defray the costs of other transport initiatives funded from London Borough of Barnet’s General Fund. The Barnet case differs from the arrangements in question here as the Barnet case deals with the deliberate creation of a surplus, arising from charging under the RTRA for parking permits, after all appropriate costs for that scheme had been calculated. The arrangements here relate to the proper charging of overheads arising from the garden waste collection service to users of that service. It generates savings elsewhere because the remaining services don’t, as a consequence, have to bear 100% of the overheads. This practice is well established as lawful.
You have requested a proper breakdown setting out the Council’s income and expenditure around the setting of the £30 annual charge. I have obtained information from the Council’s section 151 officer, Sharon Wroot who clarified the income required must meet the Council’s savings target of £500k and the additional administrative costs was £672k [£172k]. Ms Wroot stated that in order to achieve the £672k target, the charge per household was based upon 56,000 households, with an assumed 40% take up. These assumptions equated to a £30 charge per household. Given this information, it is advised that the Council is not making a profit on the service itself even with the additional income. Ms Wroot advised that ceasing the service altogether was also only estimated to achieve a saving of £500k per annum as there was an expectation that we would incur other costs from householders hiding garden waste in the green bins and additional landfill disposal costs (as outlined in the December Cabinet report). Ms Wroot provided me with a breakdown of the total costs of the service. I have attached that for your information.
The final point you made about keeping income/expenditure under constant review so that the fee can be considered in the light of changes is well made. The law on charging for discretionary services requires the Council to do this but not constantly. The requirement is to set fees taking one year in comparison with another to ensure that the level of charge remains within that which can lawfully be charged. Naturally the Council will do this as part of its overall setting and review of fees and charges activity.
I trust the above is in order.
Yours sincerely
A letter in response to the email sent (post #14) arrived under cover of email on 8 July 2015 from North East Lincolnshire Council's Solicitor. The contents are as follows:
29 June 2015
Dear Mr [outlawlgo],
Thank you for your letter of 11 June 2015 regarding North East Lincolnshire Council’s (the Council) Public Consultation to introduce a charge for garden waste collections to the Leader of the Council, Cllr Ray Oxby. The Leader of the Council has passed your letter on to me for response.
It is clear from your letter that you consider that the consultation carried out was unlawful. You further allege that the Council are aware of the illegality alleged.
There are courses of action, and ultimately remedies available to members of the public such as yourself who consider that a consultation process has been carried out unlawfully. The Council does not share this view and strongly believes the consultation process carried out to be lawful. The Council respects your rights to challenge. Should you wish to take formal proceedings to challenge the legality of the public consultation in question these proceedings should be served on:
Monitoring Officer
North East Lincolnshire Council
Municipal Office
Town Hall Square
Grimsby
North East Lincolnshire
DN31 1HU
Thank you for the reference to the case of Moseley, R (on the application of) v London Borough of Haringey [2014] UKSC 56. That case was not about the introduction of a charge for garden waste collection. It held that a local authority’s consultation exercise relating to the introduction of its council tax reduction scheme was unlawful. The consultation documents in that case failed to refer to any other options considered by the council for addressing the shortfall in funding caused by the government’s scrapping of council tax benefit and suggested the only option for the council was to require people who were exempt from council tax benefit scheme to pay approximately 20% of their council tax.
The Council’s public consultation to introduce a charge for garden waste collections included on option for consultees to propose alternatives and a number of consultees did so.
The Council’s consultation to introduce a charge for garden waste was at a time when the proposals were still at a formative stage. The Council is considered to have given sufficient reasons for the proposal to allow for intelligent consideration and response. The Council believes that adequate time was given for the consideration and response. Finally it is considered that the product of the public consultation was taken into account in finalising proposals. This means that the Council has complied with the Sedley criteria which were themselves endorsed in the case of R (Gunning) v Brent London Borough Council (1985) 84 LGR 168 for the basic requirements for a lawful consultation process. In short the Council considers that it has complied with all relevant duties and the common law duty of procedural fairness in respect of its public consultation to introduce a charge for garden waste collections.
I note the quote you have included from Cllr Watson in his capacity as Portfolio Holder for Environment. Cllr Watson is right to identify that funds raised from the introduction of charging for garden waste collection can be redirected to other vital services for our communities. The Council undertakes a range of such vital services within the collection and disposal of waste and many of these services are mandatory. The collection of garden waste is a discretionary service. It is lawful to charge for discretionary services and this includes the collection of garden waste. As I am sure you are aware many councils charge for collection garden waste. The setting of a charge for such a discretionary service has to, in part, be based on an estimate of the numbers of people who will pay for the service. It also factors in the real costs of the overheads in delivering the service. An appropriate proportion of the total overheads within the Council’s waste collection and disposal budget can rightly be included when calculating the appropriate level of charge for this particular service – namely the collection of garden waste.
Thank you for drawing attention to the Barnet case. That case pertained not to garden waste collection but to charging for parking permits in accordance with the Road Traffic Regulation Act 1984 (RTRA) to create a surplus which could be used to defray the costs of other transport initiatives funded from London Borough of Barnet’s General Fund. The Barnet case differs from the arrangements in question here as the Barnet case deals with the deliberate creation of a surplus, arising from charging under the RTRA for parking permits, after all appropriate costs for that scheme had been calculated. The arrangements here relate to the proper charging of overheads arising from the garden waste collection service to users of that service. It generates savings elsewhere because the remaining services don’t, as a consequence, have to bear 100% of the overheads. This practice is well established as lawful.
You have requested a proper breakdown setting out the Council’s income and expenditure around the setting of the £30 annual charge. I have obtained information from the Council’s section 151 officer, Sharon Wroot who clarified the income required must meet the Council’s savings target of £500k and the additional administrative costs was £672k [£172k]. Ms Wroot stated that in order to achieve the £672k target, the charge per household was based upon 56,000 households, with an assumed 40% take up. These assumptions equated to a £30 charge per household. Given this information, it is advised that the Council is not making a profit on the service itself even with the additional income. Ms Wroot advised that ceasing the service altogether was also only estimated to achieve a saving of £500k per annum as there was an expectation that we would incur other costs from householders hiding garden waste in the green bins and additional landfill disposal costs (as outlined in the December Cabinet report). Ms Wroot provided me with a breakdown of the total costs of the service. I have attached that for your information.
The final point you made about keeping income/expenditure under constant review so that the fee can be considered in the light of changes is well made. The law on charging for discretionary services requires the Council to do this but not constantly. The requirement is to set fees taking one year in comparison with another to ensure that the level of charge remains within that which can lawfully be charged. Naturally the Council will do this as part of its overall setting and review of fees and charges activity.
I trust the above is in order.
Yours sincerely
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