COPELAND council is encouraging people to give their views on next year's budget, in which it must save £500,000.

The authority has launched a consultation today to ask what the council's priorities should be.

Mike Starkie, Mayor of Copeland, said: “We are working incredibly hard to maintain services amidst ever decreasing budgets. It’s worth reminding people that we only keep around 11 per cent of the council tax you pay, which is an average of £3.89 per week, for all the services we provide.

“For the fourth consecutive budget, we are not proposing any cuts to frontline services. But the reality is that we do have to save a further half-a-million-pounds and are looking at ways that this could be achieved.

“We want to hear our residents’ views on how we spend their money, and I’d urge everyone to respond to our consultation.”

The council must save £500,000 in 2019/20, due to the reduction in central Government grants, and is prioritising the delivery of its statutory commitments while increasingly using income and grants to run its discretionary services.

A spokesman for the authority said: "Residents are being asked what they think the council’s priorities should be in terms of town centres, cemeteries and open spaces.

"The public is also being asked for its views on a number of discretionary services provided by the council, including the collection of garden waste.

"Also proposed is a 1.95 per cent increase in Copeland Council’s share of council tax, and increases in line with inflation in its fees and charges."

The consultation runs until Monday, December 17. The document is available at www.copeland.gov.uk, where residents can complete an online questionnaire.

Hard copies are also available at Copeland council’s offices at Market Hall, Whitehaven, and St George’s Road, Millom, and in libraries across the borough.