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Category: Politics

Marin Lewis

When good intentions meet council tax reality, residents may pay the price

Posted on 01/05/202601/05/2026 by Malcolm

There is a familiar rhythm to British public policy. A popular campaigner identifies a real unfairness. Ministers sense an easy win. Special advisers spot a headline. A complex administrative system is reduced to a slogan. Then the professionals who actually have to run the thing are left to pick up the pieces. That, in essence,…

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When Systems Collide: Supported Housing, Reorganisation and Poverty in Local Government

Posted on 01/04/2026 by Malcolm

The Independent Revenues and Benefits Monday Discussion Group on 30 March ranged across three familiar but connected themes: supported housing, local government reorganisation and the latest poverty figures. What tied the conversation together was a persistent sense that national systems are still passing risk, cost and confusion down to councils, while expecting local services to…

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Youth jobs, council tax support and the case for deeper reform

Posted on 18/03/2026 by Malcolm

Reflections from the Independent Revenues and Benefits Monday Discussion Group This week’s Independent Revenues and Benefits Monday Discussion Group ranged widely, but two themes dominated the discussion: the government’s latest youth employment package, and the continuing argument over council tax support, Universal Credit and the wider future of local taxation. As ever, the session brought…

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Independent R&B Monday Discussion Group: Spring Statement review: what revenues and benefits practitioners heard beneath the headlines

Posted on 11/03/202611/03/2026 by Malcolm

The latest Independent Revenues and Benefits Monday Discussion Group took the Chancellor’s Spring Statement as its starting point and asked a simple question: what does it really mean when viewed from the frontline of local government? The answer from practitioners was clear enough. However upbeat the national presentation may have sounded, the local picture still…

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Monday Discussion Group, 12 January 2026: transparency, microwaves, beach huts and the fine art of “savings”

Posted on 14/01/2026 by Malcolm

We reconvened for the first session of 2026 with Malcolm Gardner in the chair, supported by Nicki Duckworth, and a familiar cast of local government finance, revenues and welfare experts, including Naomi Armstrong, Paul Howarth, Gareth Morgan, Laura Bessell, Kirsty Brooksmith, Michael Fisher, Bob Wagstaff, Robert Fox, Richard Hanby, Peter Haywood and others. The meeting…

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Budget 2025: Impacts on Revenues & Benefits Administration, Housing and Local Government Finance

Posted on 30/11/2025 by Malcolm

1. Council tax administration High Value Council Tax Surcharge (HVCTS) The main direct council tax change is the new High Value Council Tax Surcharge: Administrative implications for councils: There are no direct changes to core council tax discounts or CTR in the Budget, but welfare changes (below) will affect CTR caseload and income assessment. 2….

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Monday Discussion Group: Budget Expectations, Council Tax Premiums, Fraud Pressures and Deprivation Indices

Posted on 26/11/2025 by Malcolm

Summary of participant views – 24 November 2025 This week’s Monday Discussion Group opened with a sense of déjà vu. With the Budget only days away, Malcolm Gardner remarked that most of its contents seemed to have been pre-announced, leaving little mystery for Wednesday. Paul Howarth agreed, noting that Budget leaks usually reflect firm Treasury…

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Pension Credit Take-Up, Notional Income, and the Real Value of Minimum Wage

Posted on 12/11/202512/11/2025 by Malcolm

Independent Revenues & Benefits Monday Discussion Group10 November 2025 The latest Monday Discussion Group, chaired by Malcolm Gardner, explored pension credit take-up, changes to notional pension income rules, and the real impact of the new national minimum wage. Pension Credit Take-Up Gareth Morgan (Dangos Training) opened the session with analysis of new DWP data showing…

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Independent R&B Discussion Group: From Snail Farms to Council Tax Reform

Posted on 29/10/2025 by Malcolm

27 October 2025 The Independent Revenues and Benefits (R&B) Discussion Group gathered for another lively Monday session chaired by Malcolm Gardner, who began on a light note from “sunny Yorkshire” before steering conversation into some very grounded policy terrain — business rates, council tax reform, and the pressures facing local authorities. Snail Farms and Business…

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Procurement Pain and Populism: Local Government Under Pressure

Posted on 22/10/2025 by Malcolm

Independent R&B Monday Discussion Group – 20 October 2025 The latest Independent R&B discussion opened with Malcolm Gardner wryly noting that the week’s agenda looked like “a bit of a hodgepodge”—ranging from procurement headaches to welfare reform, the leaked Reform UK video from Kent, and the ever-growing fiscal squeeze on councils. Procurement: Avoidance, Waivers and…

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Recent Posts

  • When good intentions meet council tax reality, residents may pay the price
  • Council tax reform: fairer administration, or a bill councils cannot afford to send?
  • The reality of council tax court fees in England
  • DWP Spring Forecast 2026: why the real welfare story is not just higher spending, but a changing social contract
  • Temporary Accommodation – When National Policy Fails, Councils Carry the Cost: Reflections from the Independent Revenues and Benefits Monday Discussion Group

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