The majority of  North East councillors have agreed to accept Budget proposals aimed at saving the local authority from effective bankruptcy.

The Full Middlesbrough Council met at the town hall on Friday to cast their vote on the plans which include the maximum council tax rise, along with a charge for green waste collection. They also agreed to accept exceptional financial support from the Government allowing the council to borrow £13.4m.

The vote saw 25 councillors vote for the Budget plans and 16 against while five abstained. Earlier in the meeting, the town’s Mayor Chris Cooke told the meeting if they did not accept the Budget proposals, the only option left would be the issuing of a so-called section 114 notice – when a council declares it can no longer meet its financial obligations.

This would take away control from the local people “at significant cost”, said Mr Cooke. Labour councillor Matt Storey said it was one of the most important Budgets ever considered by the council and refusing it would result in the “decimation of every service in the town”. He added: “This is not the night to play politics with the budget.”

The council recently previously rowed back on two elements of its budget proposals after public opposition, deferring plans to close the Captain Cook Birthplace Museum, in Stewart Park. It also scrapped the plans for new parking charges at the Marton park.

Labour councillor David Branson said, compared to other local authorities, the budget plans did not impose “a huge cost” on the people of Middlesbrough. He said many other local authorities had had to make “much more severe” cuts.

Conservative councillor Luke Mason, who was among the 16 voting against the plans, said he would not let some of the Executive members “run a bath” and said the Mayor had backtracked on a “promise” to remove the Linthorpe Road cycle lane. He also noted an audit which found the cash-strapped council racked up a bill of almost £8m on its corporate purchase cards in 2022/23 which he said had “grossly undermined” his confidence.

Also voting against the Budget proposals was Conservative councillor Mieka Smiles said the council tax increases on many people in her ward of Nunthorpe would be “totally intolerable” while seeing “a greatly-reduced level of services”.

Regarding the purchasing cards issue, Cllr Nicky Walker, Executive member for finance and governance said the period covered in the investigation took place under the previous administration. She said officers identified the problem and solutions were put in place. “Please don’t put that at their door,” she added.

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She also the council had critically low reserves which set it apart from other local authorities and said “a huge amount of effort” had gone into putting the town “back on track”. Addressing the meeting, she said: “Could you look your residents in the eye and say you said no to a budget and it led to a section 114?”

Community services would be cut or lost, she said, while council tax could increase by up to 21 per cent over two years. “Please don’t inflict that on residents,” she said.

Middlesbrough Council will be one of 19 local authorities to receive exceptional financial support to manage financial pressures. It means, the council will have permission to borrow money to fund day-to-day spending in 2024/25 only in a way not usually permitted.