Bristol Post

Weca Anger as county could face four-year wait for decision

- Adam POSTANS Local Democracy Reporter adam.postans@reachplc.com

BRISTOL city councillor­s have passed a motion supporting North Somerset’s bid to join the West of England Combined Authority (Weca) – but it could face a four-year wait.

Opposition Conservati­ve and Lib Dem members criticised the final version pushed through by the ruling Labour group with support from Greens as “kicking the issue into the long grass” by removing the need for consultati­on by the Government’s deadline of Friday last week.

They claim it means there is now no chance Weca will expand until the next local elections cycle.

The Greens say they backed Labour’s amendment because it still “demonstrat­es strong support for North Somerset’s inclusion” and calls on Bristol mayor Marvin Rees to meet urgently with other Weca leaders to agree a deal and publish the statutory consultati­on.

Members from all parties agreed at an extraordin­ary meeting of full council on Wednesday that North Somerset’s exclusion from Weca was “nonsensica­l”.

But Mr Rees said a financial package from the Government needed to be in place first or the risks to the city would be too high.

He told the remote meeting: “There is no deal on the table for us to agree.

“The Government has cancelled two scheduled meetings to discuss the potential of a deal, which shows a lack of interest.

“We would be one voice among four local authoritie­s rather than one among three, and the only city voice among three rural voices. We want safeguards within the governance that our interests will be looked after.

“The relationsh­ip between Bristol and its neighbours has been a very strong narrative historical­ly around clipping Bristol’s wings, not expanding to the point that the consequenc­es of Bristol’s growth spills over the boundaries and hits village life.”

He said the city would be potentiall­y “shortchang­ed” by the assumption Weca’s money was split equally between the unitary authoritie­s despite Bristol having a larger population and greater needs in terms of deprivatio­n.

Mr Rees said Conservati­ve metro mayor Tim Bowles should have pushed his own party’s government months ago for North Somerset’s inclusion but that it had been left until the 11th hour, a claim disputed by Weca and the leaders of the neighbouri­ng authoritie­s.

“It’s like the kids haven’t done their homework and they’re asking the teacher to give them a pass on the paper anyway a minute before midnight,” he said. “The work has not been done.” The mayor said it was very unlikely that the treasury would give more money to an “underperfo­rming, relatively invisible” political structure rather than specific projects during an economic crisis.

“I’m not opposed to North Somerset joining but safeguardi­ng Bristol’s economy is more important to the West of England’s economy than North Somerset joining Weca.”

Labour cabinet member Cllr Steve Pearce said: “Not all areas were created equal – some are more equal than others.

“Despite making up the bulk of the population and being the main wealth creator in the region, Bristol is being neglected and funding is not allocated proportion­ately to population.”

Green group leader Cllr Eleanor Combley said the amended motion “still clearly states Bristol City Council believes North Somerset belongs in Weca”.

She said: “This amendment does not prevent the consultati­on being launched on a timescale that gets North Somerset into Weca in 2021 – I could not support it if it did.

“It allows a consultati­on to proceed in parallel with continuing discussion­s on the details.”

Conservati­ve Cllr Steve Smith said it was “blindingly obvious” North Somerset should be part of Weca and the district’s decision in 2016 not to join was a “mistake we can put right”.

He said: “The economic case is overwhelmi­ng. There isn’t a Bristol economy and a North Somerset economy. The two are the same thing. You cannot separate the two.

“If the deal at the end of the process isn’t right then we don’t sign it, but to complain there’s no deal when you’re deliberate­ly blocking the process that would get to a deal is putting the cart before the horse.”

Tory group leader Cllr Mark Weston said Bristol did get a fair amount of money because it had just under half the region’s population and received just under half of Weca’s funding, while the remainder was spent strategica­lly on cross-border issues such as transport.

“If you put a park and ride on the M32, the spend may be in South Gloucester­shire but the benefit on air quality would be felt in Bristol,” Cllr Weston said.

He said the amendment was “shameful” and “let people down”.

Conservati­ve Cllr Geoff Gollop said: “The enlargemen­t of Weca is fundamenta­l to the economic and environmen­tal wellbeing of Bristol and the greater Bristol area. “The amendment removes the emergency, kicks this into the long grass and keeps North Somerset out in the cold until 2025. “It is absolutely appalling.” Lib Dem Cllr Tim Kent said: “The mayor has ripped up the whole process before we even get to a deal. “The deadline was clear. You’ve thrown out the very little wriggle room we had.

“Mayor Rees, having wrecked the finances of Bristol, has now moved on to Weca.

“You had one chance. It’s gone.” The amended motion was passed by 42 votes to three, with 17 abstention­s.

The economic case is overwhelmi­ng. There isn’t a Bristol economy and a North Somerset economy. The two are the same thing Councillor Steve Smith

 ?? Photo: Weston Air Festival ?? A hot-air balloon over Weston-super-Mare. North Somerset is waiting for a decision on whether it will be allowed to join the West of England Combined Authority
Photo: Weston Air Festival A hot-air balloon over Weston-super-Mare. North Somerset is waiting for a decision on whether it will be allowed to join the West of England Combined Authority

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom