THE amount paid by residents for fire services in South Wales will increase by more than seven per cent next year.

Budget proposals approved by the recently-appointed commissioners for South Wales Fire and Rescue Service on Monday, February 12, will see a 7.23 per cent increase in the budget from this year - with it being worth a total of £95.8 million.

It was approved by the four independent commissioners who have taken over the running of the service from the fire authority which was stripped of its responsibilities by Welsh Government following a damning report published in January exposing a “sexist and misogynist culture” within the service.

The budget report said that this increase assumes that the Welsh Government will transfer additional fire fighter pension funding to constituent councils in the final local government settlement in accordance with the practice it started at this stage last year.

It added that without this funding change the underlying like-for-like increase in the revenue budget would be 5.8 per cent.

The provisional local government funding settlement announced in December included an overall 3.1 per cent increase for Welsh councils.

The report said the impact of the cost of living crisis and problems forecasting pay and price inflation has caused significant turbulence in the last two financial years with a budget significantly lower than comparable funding increases in local councils in 2022-23 and higher in 2023-24.

It said that cumulatively increases in fire budgets remain lower than the comparative levels in constituent councils over the period.

The report said that £2.5 million of reserves will be committed in the current year and a further £1.2 million in 2024-25.

If approved each of the 10 councils which are covered by South Wales Fire and Rescue Service would contribute these amounts:

  • Bridgend would contribute £9.08 million - a rise of £565,942, or 6.64 per cent;
  • Blaenau Gwent would contribute £4.1 million - a rise of £214,331, or 5.42 per cent;
  • Caerphilly would contribute £10.9 million - a rise of £572,705, or 5.52 per cent;
  • Cardiff would contribute £23.1 million - a rise of £942,746, or 9.16 per cent;
  • Merthyr Tydfil would contribute £3.6 million - a rise of £186,314, or 5.36 per cent;
  • Monmouthshire would contribute £5.8 million - a rise of £367,505, or 6.72 per cent;
  • Newport would contribute £10.04 million - a rise of £802,209, or 8.68 per cent;
  • Rhondda Cynon Taf would contribute £14.8 million - which is a rise of £922,933, or 6.62 per cent;
  • Torfaen would contribute £5.7 million - a rise of £366,268, or 6.77 per cent;
  • Vale Of Glamorgan would contribute £8.3 million - a rise of £523,809, or 6.73 per cent.

The report said that population changes impact directly on the level of budget contributions from individual councils and that the budget assumes additional grant of £1.266 million will transfer into the local government settlement.

Given the current uncertainty of the transfer, a recommendation is that powers are delegated to the treasurer to change the approved budget if for any reason additional grant funding for pensions is paid directly to the fire service.

The capital budget would add up to £16.3 million, with £7.6 million slippage from this year, and £8.7 million for next year covering things like property, fleet, and ICT.

Some of the considerations the authority has taken into account include pay inflation, pension costs, setting budgets in the absence of confirmation of central funding for the coming year, the widening of the role of the fire fighter, temporary staffing costs, and energy and external contract costs.

They have also considered unavoidable inflationary pressures on budgets like communication systems, ICT, operational equipment and fleet, the capital programme, capital financing costs, Welsh Government grant funding announcements and more than £2.05 million worth of reductions which have been identified with around £250,000 worth of consequential budget increases leading to a net £1.8 million budget reduction.

The four independent commissioners are Baroness Wilcox, former leader of Newport City Council and peer in the House of Lords. Kirsty Williams, former Lib Dem MS for Brecon and Radnorshire, Vij Randeniya, former chief fire officer at West Midlands fire service and Carl Foulkes, former chief constable at North Wales Police.

Baroness Wilcox said she’s happy to agree the budget but said she’s keen that it’s minuted that they revisit it more regularly than perhaps normal.

She said with the issues around sums available, pensions and funding from councils and grants they’ll need to keep a much closer eye on it.

She said for the sake of the process they will pass it but with a close eye on what they’re doing and regular updates.