Councils in Cumbria have not been awarded sufficient money to prepare for a no deal Brexit, a meeting has heard.

The Government has set aside £3 billion and has awarded Cumbria County Council £175,000 over two years, or £87,500 a year.

District councils, including Barrow, Copeland and South Lakeland, have been given £35,000 over two years, or £17,500 a year.

Stewart Young, leader of the county council, said the rest of the cash was being "swallowed up by an army of civil servants and consultants".

He said the Government had published more than 100 documents about how councils should prepare for a no deal, which he called impenetrable.

Councillor Young told a meeting of the full council there had been three years to prepare but the Government had launched a flurry of activity before Christmas and the New Year.

"The Government isn't prepared and they are now asking local authorities to do the preparatory work within three months with totally inadequate resources," said Coun Young.

"We will do our best, our officers are attending meetings and making contingency plans but we need to be clear that a no deal Brexit will cause major disruption and economic damage to Cumbria."

Coun James Airey, the opposition Conservative, called the warning another round of Project Fear.

He said 55 percent of the electorate in Cumbria had voted leave and that Britain's relationship with the EU had become a bad one.

"It's a relationship based on the EU taking exactly what they want and ignoring all the things that matter to Britain," said Coun Airey, the Conservative councillor for Ulverston West.

"A friend who bullies us is no longer a friend. At 11pm on March 29, we will remove the shackles of the EU and return law-making to parliament and set our great nation free."