Ministers raise concerns over council finances

Kaleigh Watterson
BBC Cheshire political reporter
BBC Cheshire East Council's headquarters at Delamere House in Crewe, CheshireBBC
Cheshire East Council has struggled with financial challenges in recent years

Ministers have shared "significant concerns" that cash-strapped Cheshire East Council could go effectively bankrupt.

The council has been handed a best value notice by the government as a "formal notification" of its concerns and to highlight the need for improvement.

Cheshire East Council has faced financial problems in recent years and has been given "exceptional" powers to borrow money to avoid going bust.

The authority said it had made "significant progress" and was putting "building blocks in place for sustainable improvement".

'Challenging'

A best value notice is a formal warning issued by the government to local authorities where there are concerns about performance.

Local government minister Jim McMahon said it was not a statutory intervention but a "formal notification of the department's concerns".

In Cheshire East's case, the government has raised concerns about the sustainability of council finances.

The notice acknowledges steps are being taking to address the issues but said that ministers "remained concerned".

The government said the notice also came after an external report found low reserves, historical overspending, and challenging savings targets that could see the authority go effectively bankrupt.

The notice sets out a number of actions for the council to take, including agreeing a "single overarching improvement plan" and continuing with its current transformation plan.

McMahon said there was no evidence of a "current best value failure" but that "significant issues need addressing at pace to avoid future failure".

The notice will be in place for 12 months and reviewed.

In a statement, Cheshire East Council leader Nick Mannion and deputy leader Michael Gorman said: "We are confident in our transformation and improvement plans. While we have set ourselves a challenging agenda, we are making good progress.

"Continuing to drive improvements, delivering what we have committed to, and supporting each other to deliver at the required pace is critical.

At neighbouring Warrington Council, ministerial envoys are set to be sent in following a best value investigation which found the authority was failing to comply in five areas.

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