Image copyright Getty Images Image caption Pay rises will apply to 75% of council staff

Councils have asked the Scottish government for more cash to pay for public sector pay rises.

Ministers announced an end to the public workers' pay cap as part of their 2018/19 tax and spending plans.

The budget deal with the Scottish Greens means pay rises will now apply to 75% of public sector staff.

The Greens' deal also won an additional £170 million for councils, but umbrella group Cosla said pay remains a major issue for local authorities.

The local government group's resource spokeswoman Gail Macgregor said: "We acknowledge the additional resources secured into the settlement for this year following extensive lobbying by Cosla.

"However this will not negate all of the challenges we still face, the main one obviously relates to pay for our workforce now that the Scottish government has set out its public sector pay policy.

"This additional resource has to become built into the core of our budgets for future years."

She added: "This year's deal means Scotland's councils are far from out of the woods and not cementing this funding into core budgets would be an extremely bad result for the delivery of essential services.

"Because quite simply with no money in the settlement from Scottish government for pay, any pay rises for council workers can only come from cuts to services or council tax rises."

Image copyright EPA Image caption Workers across the public sector have been subject to a pay cap

Finance Secretary Derek Mackay said: "In spite of continued UK Government real terms cuts to Scotland's resource budget, we have treated local government very fairly.

"In 2018-19 councils will receive funding through the local government finance settlement of £10.7 billion.

"This will provide cash terms increase in funding for local revenue services of over £174 million - a 1.8% rise, and capital spending of £89.9 million - an increase of 11.4%. This delivers a real terms boost in both revenue and capital funding.

"As well as this increased funding, councils have the flexibility to increase council tax by up to 3%. Taken together, this will mean that councils have access to an additional £251m that can be spent at their discretion, including on pay increases for their staff."

Scottish Labour's finance spokesperson James Kelly MSP said: "Cosla is absolutely right to raise these concerns.

"Hard working people in the public sector deserve a pay rise after years of Tory and SNP austerity and declining living standards - but Derek Mackay hasn't provided councils with the money to deliver it.

"That is unacceptable.

"Scottish Labour's alternative budget would ask the richest to pay their fair share and properly fund a real terms pay rise for public sector workers."