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Birmingham City Council 2025-03-31

31 March 2025

Lead MP

The Minister for Local Government and English Devolution

Debate Type

Ministerial Statement

Tags

EconomyTaxation
Other Contributors: 15

At a Glance

The Minister for Local Government and English Devolution raised concerns about birmingham city council 2025-03-31 in the House of Commons. A government minister responded. Other MPs also contributed.

How the Debate Unfolded

MPs spoke in turn to share their views and ask questions. Here's what each person said:

Government Statement

EconomyTaxation
Government Statement
Today I am updating the House on the statutory intervention at Birmingham city council and the ongoing issues affecting its waste service. The government pledged to fix local governance foundations, aiming for well-functioning councils providing essential services. Commissioners have been supporting Birmingham's recovery for 18 months. Despite progress in addressing equal pay issues and governance improvements, challenges remain due to substantial risks on governance, financial management, and service delivery. The industrial action involving waste services causes significant disruption; the government supports the council by increasing core spending power up to 9.8%, or £131 million, including a one-off recovery grant of £39.3 million. The situation has escalated into a major incident due to public health risks for vulnerable residents. While ministers cannot legally intervene in industrial action, they will support local leaders and have put in place an exceptional financial support agreement worth £1.24 billion. We encourage all parties to resolve the dispute sustainably without future liabilities. Practices in waste services led to a large equal pay crisis costing over £1 billion; reforms are necessary for sustainable service delivery. The government remains committed to partnership with Birmingham, supporting economic growth and regeneration opportunities.

Shadow Comment

Kevin Hollinrake
Shadow Comment
The shadow secretary criticises the government's inaction on the waste dispute affecting Birmingham residents for over 20 days. He highlights the public health emergency caused by overflowing bins, rats, and fly-tipping due to ongoing industrial action with Unite since 2017. The Labour Mayor of West Midlands has expressed frustration about the situation. Shadow calls for a Cobra-led response, cutting councillor allowances of cabinet members responsible for the mess, and appointing private sector binmen to clear up. He questions whether the Deputy Prime Minister's influence over unions could help resolve the issue.
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