Further to this site's recent articles on Haringey Councillors' pay, the Evening Standard yesterday published a story about rises in councillors' pay across London. Haringey is noted as one of the boroughs with particularly steep increases. The story:
Councillors' Pay Bill Soars by £1.4million
Ross Lydall and Anthony Kimber, Evening Standard, 31.12.07
Councillors in London awarded themselves about £1.4 million in pay rises in the past financial year.
The total spent on allowances and expenses last year is estimated at £27,451,483, according to research commissioned by the Evening Standard.
This is a rise of 5.5 per cent on the previous year - more than double the rate of inflation.
The biggest increases in spending on councillors were seen in some of London's most deprived boroughs, including Lewisham (up £204,594), Haringey (up £183,427) and Newham (up £128,677). Conservative-controlled Enfield agreed the biggest rise: up £277,785 - 28 per cent - to £811,156.
Camden, run by a Liberal Democrat and Tory coalition, cut its bill by more than £200,000.
Five of the capital's 33 local authorities - Croydon, Kensington & Chelsea, Newham, Southwark and Wandsworth - spent more than £1 million a year on elected members.
Twenty-three of the 32 boroughs that pay allowances - only the City of London Corporation does not - awarded each member a basic amount in excess of £9,000.
Matthew Elliott, chief executive of the TaxPayers' Alliance, said: "Ever-higher expenses suggest that local authorities are more concerned about feathering their own nests."
So my earlier question remains. Do we get value for money?