News RSS Feed


Crumbs!


Taxpayers foot £135,000 bill for tea and biscuits

COUNCILS in the region spent hundreds of thousands of pounds on tea and biscuits for councillors last year, an investigation by The Northern Echo has discovered.

Councils face tough budget decisions as the global financial crisis continues to bite, but council taxpayers are still footing a six-figure bill for free refreshments for elected members.

An investigation into the finances of 13 of the region’s councils found that at least £135,623 was spent on snacks at council meetings last year.

The highest-spending authorities between April 2007 and March last year were North Yorkshire, Sunderland, North Tyneside and South Tyneside.

North Tyneside Council spent £28,200, South Tyneside £25,503, Sunderland City Council £24,610 and North Yorkshire County Council £23,563.

The figures are about the average wage of a senior social worker or fully qualified school teacher.

Susie Squire, from the Taxpayers’ Alliance campaign group, said: “It is wrong that taxpayers, who are already struggling in the credit crunch, have to foot this kind of bill.

“This is a sky-high cost for such everyday items, and those at the council should buy their own tea and biscuits, just like everyone else does.”

Newcastle City Council revealed that it had spent £326,000 on hospitality, but a spokeswoman said the authority did not know how much of that was spent on refreshments for councillors. Many authorities said the spending on councillors could not be separated from that for civic functions and receptions for visitors.

A spokesman for South Tyneside Council said: “There were 5,133 visitors who received some form of refreshment. These included guests and pupils visiting the town hall who received tea, orange juice and biscuits, and attendees and guests who attended council meetings and mayoral events and engagements.”

Of the remaining councils, Redcar and Cleveland borough spent £14,042, Middlesbrough spent £11,481 and Northumberland Council spent £8,223.

Durham county and Gateshead have yet to respond to requests for information.

The only councils in the region which do not provide free tea and biscuits as a matter of course are Hartlepool, Stockton and Darlington borough councils.

Darlington council leader John Williams said: “We think it is entirely appropriate for councillors to pay for their own refreshments when attending meetings – it is something that many people in other jobs have to do.”

A spokeswoman from North Tyneside Council said: “As the majority of the meetings that our 60 councillors attend during a year are in the evening, coinciding with usual mealtimes and often straight from work, it is reasonable that they should be provided with refreshments.”


Your Say YourNorth-East

Jonathan, Darlington says...
9:04am Sat 3 Jan 09

another hard hitting story from the northern echo, it reminds me of the stories lois lane and clark kent investigated at the daily planet, councillors spend money on food!

big arnie, Darlo says...
10:48am Sat 3 Jan 09

Lol Jonathan, an "investigation" also simply means a few Freedom of Information requests were fired off, which anyone could do if they so wished.
Funnily enough, it is an "exclusive" but I've yet to see Sky News or CNN scrambling to follow it up...

Nick Scott, Durham says...
11:12am Sat 3 Jan 09

Quite right gents, the standard of reporting on here has been terrible of late.

PettyComplainer, Darlington says...
4:45pm Sat 3 Jan 09

Funny, I thought I saw a bunch of hob-nobs in the town hall the other week...

William Brown, Newcastle says...
6:08pm Sat 3 Jan 09

Yes, it smacks of a little story the Northern Echo prepared earlier (ie before the Christmas break, to fill the pages when the hacks are on holiday).
Having said that, it is shocking that councillors aren't finding obvious ways of saving money while pleading poverty when the next council tax raise is announced.

big arnie, Darlo says...
6:32pm Sat 3 Jan 09

It's all the stranger as a story for focusing on North and South Tyneside, Sunderland and North Yorkshire - areas in which the Echo has little interest, or indeed readers, particularly after closing most of its offices down to focus on Darlington.

Nick Scott, Durham says...
9:13pm Sat 3 Jan 09

OK, let's see if the Echo censor is still at work, seeing as the journalists are working at 3/8ths.....

Has anyone noticed the amount of stories we are unable to comment on increasing? Has anyone noticed stories where there are a number of comments listed, but fewer when you actually go into the story?

This is particularly prevalent with stories about the BNP or minority communities.

Don't get me wrong, I'm making an apolitical point here, but it would be worth keeping an eye on. It seems the Echo is policing its readers more than its journalists.....

Laird, darlington says...
9:41pm Sat 3 Jan 09

Yes, I too have noticed that Nick.
Does anyone else have problems with this site crashing often?
Something about "script running slow"

steven1980, Hurworth says...
11:48am Sun 4 Jan 09

Agree with all the comments on here. While there are some hopeless councillors out there, the majority are hard working for the good for their communities, so if that means they're missing their dinner to attend meetings then for God's sake what's wrong with them having a cuppa?
As for the line about the figures being equivalent to a teacher or social worker's salary, so what? Would taking on this one extra worker solve all the problems of the north east's education or social care sectors?
There's plenty of things to criticise local councils for, but providing orange juice for kiddies visiting the mayor's parlour ain't one of them in my book.

Your sayYour North-East

comment Add your comment

Register for a FREE The Northern Echo account and you can have your say on today's news and sport by adding comments on articles we publish. The best comments may even get published in the paper.

Please register now or sign in below to continue.

Crumbs! Crumbs!

Local Advertisers

Local Information

Enter your postcode, town or place name

House prices »   Schools »   Crime »   Hospitals »