CRUMBRIA: 8.03.2026
This week, it emerged that a Council department will need an extra £2 million of public money this year. So why did our local rags also dodge a highly-topical political skirmish during Cumberland Council’s budget meeting?

LAST week, we highlighted the methods of Carlisle’s two local rags when it comes to Council meetings.
The formula for The Crumbling News and the News & Shrug is simple enough – attend the meeting, record the Council-speak, republish the untranslated mush, and ask no questions of those in elected power.
As noted previously by The Town Hall Tapes, the CN had hinted darkly last week at financial concerns in Labour-run Cumberland Council’s Children’s Services.
What the newspaper failed to do was establish the cost of those “concerns”.
That figure emerged at this week’s budget setting meeting when the Council revealed it is ring-fencing an extra £2 million of contingency funds to deal with “volatility” in Children’s Services this year.
That follows concerns raised by the department’s director. Children’s Services and ‘Family Wellbeing’ already cost the Council about £78 million a year.
Children’s Services are, of course, one of local government’s great money pits. By way of context, a week-long care package in Cumberland for a single child can cost nearly £27,000.
None of it comes cheap.
The service covers child protection, children in need, disability and SEND cases, and children in care.
Which is why the paper’s failure to pin down the number last week was more than sloppy — it was the whole damn point.

Also on budget day this week, the Tory opposition suggested that Cumberland Council could find a further £200,000 for Children’s Services from 1st April.
That, however, would have meant not taking up a one-year contract extension with a Manchester-based firm providing interpretation and translation services for the Council’s “non-English-speaking customers”.
Over two years, the contract is worth up to £400,000.
Labour members, distinctly unimpressed, voted down the Tory proposal.
With the Council still pursuing ”Sanctuary status,” perhaps the leadership decided that trimming the lingo budget might send the wrong virtue signal.
Possibly lost on them, of course, is that if Children’s Services costs in Cumberland are already soaring, taking on ever more demand under Sanctuary Status isn’t likely to do the Council’s budgets any favours!
As you will see below, the News & Shrug, Carlisle, found no room in its budget meeting report to spell any of this out.
Instead, readers were left with the gloriously vague sentence that the Conservatives proposed an amendment, but it fell when put to the vote.
The £2 million figure mattered, the row mattered and the local rags managed to dodge both.




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READ MORE: Town Hall Tapes #1
READ MORE: 20.03.2025: COUNCIL LINGO BILLS SOAR
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