Haringey Council has defended the need to hire experienced staff after salary details of the highest-paid bosses were revealed.

The Town Hall Rich List – published on Wednesday (April 15) by campaign group the TaxPayers’ Alliance (TPA) – revealed 31 employees were paid more than £100,000 in 2018-19.

According to the TaxPayers’ Alliance, it was the highest number in London.

But Haringey Council pointed out the figure includes headteachers as well as directly-employed council staff – and teachers’ pay is not included in the data for many other local authorities.

The Rich List focuses on total remuneration – which includes loss of office payments and benefits such as pensions, as well as basic salaries.

According to the council, which was an early adopter of the London Living Wage for lower-paid staff, 18 officers are on a salary above £100,000.

A Haringey Council spokesperson said: “From building houses, running schools and caring for vulnerable people, to protecting the environment and supporting our economy, local authorities keep their boroughs running.

“At this time, as we adapt to a pandemic that has affected the world, the work councils do has never been clearer – and we need experienced people leading our teams. Through restructures and reallocation of roles we have reduced senior pay significantly since 2017.

“We are working hard to make the council more efficient as we continue to deliver vital services for our residents, businesses and communities.”

In neighbouring Enfield, the TPA data shows 12 members of staff received remuneration in excess of £100,000 in 2018-19.

Essex County Council topped the TPA’s UK-wide table for remuneration, with 35 employees receiving more than £100,000.

The campaign group has called on local authorities to freeze council tax and focus on frontline services.

John O’Connell, chief executive of the TaxPayers’ Alliance, said: “The coronavirus crisis means that frontline council services are more crucial than ever, but at the same time household budgets face an enormous squeeze from crushing council tax rises.

“There are plenty of talented people in local authorities who are focused on delivering more for less, but that is needed across the board. The country needs every council to cut out waste and prioritise key services without resorting to punishing tax hikes on their residents.

“These figures should shine a light on the town hall bosses who’ve got it right, but also allow taxpayers to hold to account those who aren’t delivering value for money at this critical time.”

Enfield Council was also approached for comment.