Landfill tax row will cost council 拢16m to settle

Image source, Jaggery | Geograph

Image caption, Lamby Way landfill site closed in 2015 but soil was needed to help with remediation work, said the council
  • Author, Ted Peskett
  • Role, Local Democracy Reporting Service

Wales' biggest council has agreed to pay 拢16m to settle a bill over landfill tax dating back 10 years.

Cardiff council said HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) had ruled some firms should have been paying more to take soil and other materials to its former Lamby Way landfill site.

The local authority said there was no suggestion of any impropriety or illegality, only a dispute over definitions and categorisations about the materials.

Cardiff said it had initially faced a bill of 拢45m which had been reduced to 拢12m after negotiations, although it will rise to 拢16m with interest payments.

The issue came to light during a HMRC landfill tax audit in January 2017.

"Landfill tax rules changed around the time issues arose, and this contributed to the confusion," said Chris Weaver, the Labour council's cabinet member for finance.

The Lamby Way landfill site was closed in 2015 but the council said soil was needed to help contour, cap and remediate it.

Landfill tax is charged at two rates depending on the material and whether it is processed or unprocessed.

During the period affected by the dispute, the standard rate of landfill tax was between 拢82.60 and 拢86.10 per tonne, while the lower rate was between 拢2.60 and 拢2.70 per tonne.

Liberal Democrat councillor Rodney Berman said: "Paying out 拢16.2m now that wasn't previously budgeted for will be a massive hit to the council's finances which it can ill afford.

"We must now have a full and open inquiry into what went wrong and why the Labour-run council has blundered in such a spectacular way."

Companies that took material to the site included one owned by a businessman who made a controversial donation to former First Minister Vaughan Gething's campaign to secure the job.

The council cabinet will consider a recommending acceptance of the settlement at a meeting on Thursday.

It will also be asked to approve plans to puruse any outstanding, unpaid landfill taxes following HMRC's re-categorisation of soil taken to the site.