London's Pulse: Medical Officer of Health reports 1848-1972

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Clerkenwell 1893

[Report of the Medical Officer of Health for Clerkenwell, St. James and St. John]

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25
being based, for the first five local financial years, on
the average number of indoor paupers so maintained
during the five financial years ending on the 25th
March, 1888.
The precept of the School Board for the year
1893 amounted to the sum of £15,539 3s. l0d.
The Police precepts for the year amounted to
£7,645 19s. 6d.
It will thus be seen that of the £102,500 raised
during the year, the sum of £75,199 was required
by bodies beyond the control of the Vestry; or in
other words, of the total rates of 5s. l0d. in the
pound for the year, 4s. 3½d. was for other bodies,
and 1s. 6½d. for the local administration, paving,
lighting, dusting, slopping, &c.
An average of 1,418 summonses have been issued
for the recovery of the rates in each quarter of the
year. This appears a large number, but it is quite
evident that a very large proportion of the persons
summoned are content to wait for the summons,
treating it as the "final demand" for payment,
preferring to pay the small fee of 1s. charged for
the summons and hearing, and to hold their money
as a matter of convenience, as long as possible.
That this is so is patent from the fact that only
five per cent. of those summoned attend the hearing,
the bulk of the remainder paying without
further proceedings being necessary.
An average of 42 committal warrants per quarter
were granted in respect of non-payment of rates,
the majority of the cases being those of persons who
set the Vestry at defiance, and have no goods on
the premises on which distress can be levied, and
it may be taken that practically the same persons
form the cases each quarter. In the large maiority