West Lothian cuts projected overspend by £2.3m

West Lothian cuts projected overspend by £2.3m

Urgent action by West Lothian Council has reduced the local authority’s projected overspend by £2.3 million to £5.8m, councillors will be told.

An update on the council’s current financial position for the Council Executive meeting of 4 February shows an improvement in the council’s projected overspend for 2024/25.

A range of measures were agreed in November 2024 when the council’s estimated overspend was £8.1m, which it said is mainly due to increasing and unprecedented demand for social care and homelessness.

These measures included: a stop on non-essential spend; further enhanced recruitment controls with a recruitment freeze for some areas; and review of committed funds and one-off balances.

This has led to the majority of council services predicting underspends for the 2024/25 financial year to reduce the gap.

West Lothian Council is still predicting an overspend of £5.3m for social care services for adults and older people, due the growth of often complex care packages. 

West Lothian’s older population is growing and continues to grow at a faster rate than the Scottish average. The number of people in West Lothian aged 65 to 74 is expected to increase by 19% by 2028 with those aged over 75 increasing by 39%. This is compared to the Scottish average growth of 14.4% in the 65 to 74 population and a 25.4% increase in those aged over 75 during the same time period.

A £1.4m overspend is also predicted in social care services for children, mainly due to the cost of delivering placements for young people, such as specialist external residential schools.  

An overspend of £1.3m is forecast principally due to the huge demand for temporary accommodation for homeless people. On average, 188 people per night were given bed and breakfast accommodation between April and December 2024.

Kenneth Ribbons, acting head of finance and property services, said: “Good progress has been made to bring down the council’s budget projected overspend by £2.3m in recent months.

“However, the scale of the projected overspend remains high at £5.8 million, with further action still required to ensure the council has a financially sustainable position going forward.”

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