Hi!
Google found me here, with much the same question as above! Our local council is Ludlow Town Council (Private Eye, ad nauseam!)
Council members have just granted £27,000 of our £330,000 precept to the parish church (£9k to be given to the church in each of the next three years).
See: http://www.ludlowadvertiser.co.uk/news/10758119.print/
The money will reportedly help fund "a major refurbishment project" in the church, "starting with a new heating system".
This £27k award was apparently made by way of a s.137 grant under the Local Government Act 1972. Although, as yet, nothing is minuted to confirm that.
A number of us are unhappy with this funding allocation.
The parish church is strictly a place of worship. It is not available for hire or for general community use, and it has no attached hall. Further, the parish church is just one of several buildings in the community used for religious worship. Why should it be favoured over other denominations? For this reason, it seems wrong for the award to have been granted at all. It discriminates on the grounds of religion.
Secondly, public finances here are already very tight, and with worse to come. The former town clerk has just won her constructive dismissal claim against the Council, and must be compensated for "substantial losses in salary and pension". Meaning even less public money for s.137 awards:
http://www.shropshirestar.com/news/2013/12/03/former-ludlow-town-clerk-wins-her-unfair-dismissal-fight/
And yet, at the same time, other, arguably more worthy appeals for s.137 grant funding are being rejected en totale, or else greatly scaled-down.
The Council has a roll of ~6,000 electors. The limit of S.137 expenditure for this year is therefore ~£42,000 (just under £7 per head). Is an annual £9k grant for a church refurb project commensurate with that limit?
The National Association of Local Councils (NALC) has published Legal Topic Note (LTN31) offering advice on the use of s.137 grant-giving powers:
http://www.yorkshirelca.gov.uk/YLCA-Web/UserFiles/Files/NALC/NALC%20Legal%20Topic%20Notes/LTN31%20Section%20137%20of%20the%20Local%20Government%20Act%201972%20August%202013.pdf
NALC cautions that the expenditure should be "commensurate with the local benefit". And the grant must be "in the interest of, and will bring direct benefit to, the area, or any part of it, or all or some of its inhabitants."
Does an award for repairs, or even just refurbishment, of a church fit those legal criteria? If so, why are s.137 grants to churches so uncommon?
I can find just one other example:
http://www.breagepc.org.uk/minutes/211113.pdf
The council in that case (Breage PC in Cornwall) was clearly uncomfortable with the S.137 request for funding to repair the leaking roof of its local Methodist Chapel Hall. Before agreeing to a grant of £1,298, the clerk sought advice from the Cornwall ALC.
The ALC advised that a S.137 grant, in that case, was permissible "as [the hall] is a separate room not used for worship and provides community facilities."
That, however, is not the case with the parish church in Ludlow. It is solely a place of worship, and does not provide community facilities.
Any suggestions greatly appreciated. Especially any advice on broaching the subject with an historically very confrontational council!
Thank you for your time!