 Felly, felly wedi bod yn gwneud ond llwyddo i'r 04.25, Ieithi'r Lyfriddor yn lleiol yn holygu'r cymdeithasodd arno sy'n bod'i rhoi'r peidio ac yn holygu'r peidio. Andrwn i nhw wedi'i arddangos y gallu ysgufo ar gyfer y cyddenodiwyr i'r bobl i'r adnod o'r Llyfriddor yn feddiad arno ymgylchol a rydym yn dangodol yn i'r thanfygol. Mae gilydd am gywle'r budget neu'r dod yw yw amgueddfa'n gweithio hyn yn ganodol anhygoelol yn 80,000,000. Felly mae yna'n cael y cymaint o'r holl gwymoniaid ymarferan yr adreffydd, ac yn adleffydd, a'r holl bwysig o'r anhygoel yn ei hefyd yn holl gyrwyr ar gyfer. Rwy'n cymaint, mae fydd yn cyr flynyddiadau i gyd yn gyrsgol. Rwy'n ceio ddiwethaf i 15.7kins o myll pleid, mae gennych gennych gweithredu o gylliwnol. Mae'n bwysig. Mae'n bwysig, a maen nhw'n eistedd yn llafiullol. Yn ymddeithasol, rwy'n hexfökol, mae'n eistedd yn dod o bobl a'i byddai ei ddefnyddio'n bwysig, a gweld y gweithio yn fawr, a fydd yn cael ei gweithio cymdeithasol. Rwy'n meddwl o'ch gweithio, mae have gafos i'r strategi ddechrau addedig. Mae'r bwysig o'r gweithio gwahanol a'r gweithio'r bwysig yw'r rhai eu cael eu cymdeithasol, ond mae'r cyfan yw ymdweud wedi eu cyfan y dyfodol, mae gennym ni i cyflogio, mae gennym ni i'n cael eu risiliau, ond mae'r gweithio'n ei wneud i gweithio'r bod y dyfodol yn ymgyrchol ond mae'r fuddiots yma yn eu cyfan yw'r ffordd o'u cyfan yw yng nghymru yn gwybodaeth i gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gwybod. Well, there's a lot of pressures coming through the system this year. It's been a challenging, even more challenging year than usual. We've had to put in an additional £82 million into our budget for £24.25, of which £28 million is for to cover pay and price inflation, and £54 million is to cover service pressures. Predominally those service pressures are in social care such as children's and adult cares, but there are also pressures in highways and other areas. We've had a long year because we started last July with a £45 million gap, so all our staff have worked extremely hard to get that down to be able to balance the budget. And as the leader has said, we've done that with only £15.7 million of efficiency savings, and they are efficiency savings, they are not cuts. So, we've managed to balance the budget. I would add that we were able to balance the budget at the last minute, because Michael Gove, the Secretary of State, announced £500 million worth of additional social care funding last week, and a West Sussex share of that is £6.9 million, so that enabled us to close that gap of the final gap of £3.6 million. The additional 3.3 that we're left with, we have put into the budget, but we will decide how we spend that in the first quarter of next year, because we didn't have time to allocate it, the funding came through so late. But what I'd like to be quite clear about is that we are not putting money, any of this additional funding back into our reserves, because we've got the additional funding, we no longer have to draw that money down from our reserves. So, that is very important. Our council tax decision for next year is that we have, unfortunately, we are having to increase our council tax once again by the maximum amount, which is 4.99%. We have to do that because the core funding that the government give us is assessed on the fact that we will raise council tax by the maximum amount. The 4.99% is made up of 2.99% for core services and 2% for adult social care preset. Now, we don't like having to raise council tax because we appreciate the present cost of living situation most people are in. But as it's part of our core funding, we need that money to protect our front line services. A council tax of 4.99% represents a weekly increase for a band D taxpayer of £1.57 per week.