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Port companies could face multi-million pound rates bills

Companies operating out of Dover docks may face huge rates bills
Companies operating out of Dover docks may face huge rates bills

Businesses based at Dover docks - and all other ports in Kent - could be hit with multi-million pound back-dated rates bills under a radical change introduced by the Government.

Companies based in Hull - including Dover-based P&O Ferries - have already been sent huge bills for rates dating back to 2005 and it is expected the same will happen at other ports across the country during the coming weeks.

Business people fear it could result in bankruptcies and redundancies.

The change applies to the way that business rates are charged to companies that use ports and to compound the agony the process is being backdated.

At Hull the new system has just been applied to 39 businesses, large and small. P&O Ferries faces a backdated bill of £5million to 2005 plus £2.4million for the current year.

Other companies face bills for £3million and and £1.3million.

The combined annual rates bill under the old system at Hull was just over £3million before 2005.

Under the new system the rates collectable in 2008, with the backdating, tops £20million.

Valuation officers are now applying the new process to companies that operate from other ports across England and Wales and companies based and businesses based at Dover are bracing themselves.

"Rates have already been paid under the old system, so backdating shouldn't arise," said a spokesman for P&O Ferries.

"Looking ahead, the new bills are so detached from commercial reality that there can be no doubt they'll drive some smaller companies to the wall.

"Unless the Government wants to decimate the shipping and logistics sector, it should call a halt and reconsider the whole sorry mess."

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