Image caption Melanie Woolcock was unlawfully jailed for non-payment of council tax

"Outdated and disproportionate" prison sentences for getting into council tax debt will be scrapped in April.

Finance Secretary Mark Drakeford said he would consider new measures to deal with people refusing to pay in Wales.

At least 62 people were jailed in Wales and England in 2016-17 over the issue - nearly a third of them from Wales.

In January, a legal challenge brought after a woman was unlawfully jailed over debts to Bridgend council found potential errors in similar cases.

Melanie Woolcock, from Porthcawl, was given an 81-day sentence by Bridgend magistrates in July 2016 for failing to pay £10 a week towards her debt.

From 1 April next year, Mr Drakeford said it will "no longer be possible to start proceedings to commit an individual to prison for council tax debt".

Image caption Mark Drakeford has described imprisoning people who council tax debts as Dickensian

He added: "The payment of council tax is vital to maintaining the local services which we all rely upon every day,

"However, it is also right that those who are less able to contribute are treated fairly and with dignity.

"The sanction of imprisonment is an outdated and disproportionate response to a civil debt issue."

Councils will look at how they tackle the issue and share good practice with other authorities.

Welsh ministers said out of 14 local authorities who replied to a consultation, 11 agreed in principle with removing the option of jailing people for non-payment.

But "most were also opposed to the idea of removal without implementing other measures to prevent an increase in deliberate refusals to pay council tax".

Mr Drakeford said: "There is little evidence of a relationship between the use of the committal process and collection rates while there is growing evidence that collection levels and arrears are best managed through early engagement with citizens."