The
dispute involved disagreements over the correct application of complicated, new
landfill tax rules introduced in 2015, and discrepancies in how some waste was
recorded. Landfill tax is charged at two rates depending on the type of
material. During the periods affected by the dispute, the standard rate of
landfill tax was between £82.60 and £86.10 per tonne, while the lower rate was
between £2.60 and £2.70 per tonne.
HMRC
argued that soil, which was normally charged at the lower rate, should have
been charged at the higher rate due to ‘administrative’ failures in how the
material was treated when received at site.
HMRC
considered that the material was subject to additional compliance testing due
to its properties, whereas the Council did not consider that the compliance
requirements were applicable.
Cardiff
Council was one of a number of operators and public bodies facing enquiries and
landfill tax assessments from HMRC on this issue (HMRC collects £1bn in unpaid tax from landfill tax
investigations   - Accountancy Age).
The
full disputed amount was initially £35.3 million in unpaid landfill tax.
Penalties brought the total liability to nearly £45 million – interest on this
amount which would have been due depending on when payment was made is not
included in this figure.
Following
negotiations over several years a final in-principle settlement sees the
council facing a £12.3 million bill in unpaid landfill tax and approximately
£3.9 million in interest. This means the Council’s liability will be reduced by
at least £28 million in unpaid tax and penalties, and considerably more in any
interest that would have been due.
At its
next meeting on Thursday, September 26, Cardiff Council’s Cabinet will consider
a report recommending acceptance of the settlement with HMRC. The report will
also propose a payment method, which will be presented to Full Council on the
same day for approval. Additionally, the Cabinet will be asked to approve a
recommendation to pursue any outstanding, unpaid landfill taxes following
HMRC’s re-categorisation of soil brought to the site.
The
issue came to light during a HMRC landfill tax audit in January 2017 and
initially related to two companies that brought material to the Lamby Way
landfill site. The site was closed in 2015, but soil was needed to help
contour, cap and remediate it.
Company
A (Bridgend Biomass/South Wales Wood) brought material to the site which was
taxed at a lower rate. HMRC disputed the categorisation saying it should have
been taxed at a higher rate. This led to a tax dispute, which was eventually
resolved at minimal cost to the Council. Details of this settlement with HMRC
are confidential, as such we are not able to disclose further information at
this time.
Company
B (Neal Soils) delivered soil to the site which was charged as unprocessed soil
and at the lower rate. However, HMRC maintained that this soil was processed
and should have been taxed at a higher rate. The Council argued that the new
compliance regulations were ambiguous around how processed soil was defined and
treated in order to qualify for the lower rate of tax. There is no suggestion
of any impropriety or illegality here, only a dispute over definitions and
categorisations.
Faced
with the uncertainty of litigation over the interpretation of the soil brought
to site by Company B, versus a HMRC settlement offer that substantially reduces
the liability, the Council will be recommended to enter into the settlement
agreement.
Cllr
Chris Weaver, Cabinet Member for Finance, Modernisation and Performance, said
the proposed settlement was a “pragmatic decision” that balances the cost of
litigation with the risk of paying the full disputed amount. He emphasized the Council’s
efforts to address HMRC’s concerns, to reduce the financial fines and
penalties, while improving monitoring and practices at council waste sites.
Cllr
Weaver added: “Landfill tax rules changed around the time issues arose, and
this contributed to the confusion. The materials assessed, and the rules and
rates around those materials were not always clear. The landfill tax regime is
complex and ambiguous, and this Council is not alone in receiving landfill tax
assessments from HMRC. The errors should not have arisen, but since we cannot
go back to 2015 and do it differently, our job now has been to resolve this.
“HMRC
maintain that soil from Neal Soils was processed and so should have been
subject to testing. We disagree, but going to litigation, given its inherent
uncertainty could cost us significantly more.
“We have been in negotiations with HMRC over several
years. Although this outcome will result in a significant cost to the Council,
I understand it may be the best way forward now. The Council is not able to
retrospectively rectify the issues that have arisen since we cannot open up the
landfill to isolate and carry out testing on the material at issue. Although
the council no longer runs a landfill site, the authority has reviewed waste
management practices, implemented improved control measures, and worked closely
with legal and tax experts to ensure tax regime compliance.
Cardiff
Council has never hidden this dispute. It has been noted in multiple reports
over the years, beginning in 2018.
Cabinet
will take the HMRC settlement report at its next meeting On Thursday, September
26. You can watch a live stream of that from 1pm here Agenda for Cabinet on Thursday, 26th September, 2024,
1.00 pm : Cardiff Council (moderngov.co.uk) where you will also be able to view the full report. If
approved Full Council will then take a decision on whether to agree the payment
method, which requires an amendment to the 2024/25 budget in accordance with
the Budget Policy Framework. You can view a live stream of that meeting from
4.30pm on the day here Agenda for Council on Thursday, 26th September, 2024,
4.30 pm : Cardiff Council (moderngov.co.uk)
Mitigations
The
Council also took several significant actions to engage with HMRC and mitigate
the landfill tax assessments, including: