Cape Breton Post

EU beauty pageant

Cities vie to host agencies departing UK

- BY LORNE COOK

It hasn’t taken long. Five months after Britain formally announced it was leaving the European Union its partners are already picking over the spoils.

Twenty-three cities are vying to host the EU’s banking and medicines agencies, which are based in London but must find new homes before Britain leaves the EU at the end of March 2019.

Ahead of the decision this fall, to be made by secret vote, the cities are vaunting their qualities and perks - from iconic office buildings to free museum passes for agency staff - in a highly-competitiv­e process reminiscen­t of a beauty pageant.

The European Banking Authority, which has around 180 staff, monitors the regulation and supervisio­n of Europe’s banking sector. It assesses weaknesses in the sector through risk assessment reports and EU-wide bank stress tests. The European Medicines Agency is responsibl­e for the scientific evaluation, supervisio­n and safety monitoring of medicines in the EU. The EMA, which has around 890 staff, hosts more than 500 scientific meetings every year, attracting about 36,000 experts.

Beyond the prestige, hosting EU agencies helps boost local economies and spur developmen­t in the region they are based by creating jobs and drawing investment to provide services for the hundreds of staff that move with them.

The host must have its HQ up and running by the time Britain leaves. Its location must be easily accessible and close to transport networks and the agency must be able to continue its business seamlessly. Adequate education facilities for agency staff children must be available. Staff families should have easy access to job markets, social security and medical care. Lastly,

the EU wants its agencies to be spread around the bloc in a geographic­ally balanced way.

In their applicatio­ns, published this week, the cities each flaunt their best qualities.

Frankfurt boasts of the fact it is already home to the European Central Bank and is the business capital of the EU’s economic powerhouse, Germany. Office space is cheap and ple 0ntiful and it’s offering the Westhafen Tower, a new circular skyscraper. The mayor notes that the nearby Rhine vineyards are perfect for day trips.

French President Emmanuel Macron wrote a personal appeal in Paris’s applicatio­n, offering 1.5 million euros to cover the costs of relocating the banking agency and arguing that a move to the French capital would be the least disruptive for staff families. Prague, the Czech capital, is offering to pay the agency’s rent for five years, and provide benefits for staff like language courses, the use of sports facilities and free access to museums.

Italy wants to host the medicines agency in a 31-storey

skyscraper, the iconic Pirelli building in central Milan. The first year would be rent-free. In a concise four-page applicatio­n - some cities have lavish brochures, others videos Bulgaria underlines that it is one of the rare member states not to host an agency. Croatia is offering the Sky Office building in Zagreb, which it claims is Europe’s cheapest city in the bloc’s safest country. Greece offers to lodge the medicines agency in Athens’ Keranis Building - a former cigarette factory.

 ?? AP PHOTO/MICHAEL PROBST ?? New circular skyscraper The Westhafen Tower in Frankfurt, Germany, on Thursday, where office space is cheap and plentiful.
AP PHOTO/MICHAEL PROBST New circular skyscraper The Westhafen Tower in Frankfurt, Germany, on Thursday, where office space is cheap and plentiful.

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