Belfast Telegraph

Small businesses require more Stormont support and financial packages to recover, councils group claims

- BY MICHAEL MCHUGH

MORE cash is needed to help small businesses in Northern Ireland deal with the coronaviru­s pandemic, council chiefs have said.

Support should be broader than just the clients of Government jobs creation agency Invest NI, a group of councils told a Stormont committee yesterday.

An extra £20m was recently allocated by the Communitie­s Department to help local authoritie­s support those in need and provide essential services.

Suzanne Wylie, Belfast City Council chief executive, said: “There is not sufficient finance to help the small and micro-businesses. Recovery funding packages are being put in place through Invest NI, primarily for their clients, not for the small businesses out there which employ so many of our population.”

She said a funding package needed to be put in place for towns and villages to help reskilling and invest in digital infrastruc­ture for the future recovery.

She said councils were facing significan­tly reduced incomes and acknowledg­ed the Communitie­s Department had announced its multi-million pound package of support. Businesses have also enjoyed special support grants and rates relief as well as the Ukwide furloughin­g scheme.

Representa­tives from the Northern Ireland Local Government Associatio­n (NILGA) and the Society of Local Authority Chief Executives (SOLACE NI) gave evidence to Stormont’s Economy Committee on Tuesday morning.

Stephen Moutray, from NILGA, said councils only hold 5% of the public purse yet will be on the “front line” of the economic rebuild.

He said: “Government interventi­ons like offering rates relief to most businesses for 12 months, amending and extending the furlough scheme for a longer period and widening the self-employment support scheme would be enhanced measures to protect our local economies.”

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