Churches fear tax changes put maintenance at risk

Jasmine Ketibuah-FoleyWest of England
News imageMP Ashley Fox MP Ashley Fox is talking with three people inside a church. There are pews and the altar in the background.MP Ashley Fox
Somerset MPs Ashley Fox and Tessa Munt have called for the scheme to be reinstated

Listed churches could fall into a state of disrepair after the government scrapped a vital grant, those working to maintain their parish churches have warned.

The Listed Places of Worship Grant Scheme, which allowed VAT to be recovered on repairs, closed at the end of March, meaning churches now have to pay the standard 20% tax.

Martin Spence, who is fundraising to fix a church spire in Porlock, Somerset, said the team are concerned about finishing the project due to increases in costs.

The government has said cutting the grant took place against a "tough financial background" and added it would provide £92m to support refurbishments over the next four years.

Spence said the extra costs are "worrying".

"Where we originally thought that we'd be looking at £80,000 or £90,000 - together with some roof repairs that need to be done - it's coming to £1.5m," he said.

"That's a lot of hundreds of thousands of pounds in the extra VAT."

News imageGoogle The exterior of St Peter & All Hallows' Church. It is a sunny day and the grass is green and cut.Google
Melissa Wall said they would not have been able to repair their church without the grant

Melissa Wall from St Peter and All Hallows' Church in West Huntspill, which recently completed a £1m revamp, said they would not have been able to do it without the grant.

"I don't think we'd be able to do it. It was a lot of money," she said.

"We wouldn't be able to as a church to have funded the deficit. It was a lot of work with a lot of volunteers."

'Competing priorities'

Sir Philip Rutnam, chair of the National Churches Trust, said it is "unfair" to expect volunteers to cover the extra charges.

Somerset MPs Ashley Fox and Tessa Munt have called for the grant scheme's reinstatement - a fund Munt said was "essential" to the continuation of many of the county's churches.

The Department for Culture, Media and Sport - which oversees the government grant scheme - said the changes to the scheme took place against a "tough financial background" and "competing priorities" within the department.

They added that 94% of claims were expected to be unaffected by the change.

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