Halifax Courier

Who will hold the sway in our area as voters make choice?

- John Greenwood

CALDERDALE’S VOTERS go to the polls today after a year like none other.

People will have their say at the ballot box to vote for the borough’s representa­tives in Calderale Council elections which were due to be held in May 2020 but were cancelled as the country entered the first lockdown of the coronaviru­s pandemic that engulfed the year.

Two extra seats are also being contested, the additional seats arising in Greetland and Stainland ward due to the death of Liberal Democrat Coun Marilyn Greenwood and in Brighouse due to Coun Scott Benton, who is now Conservati­ve MP for Blackpool South, resigning his seat.

Labour goes into the election as the ruling group, its 28 councillor­s giving the party a threeseat majority over all other councillor­s including the opposition Conservati­ves, who have 12 seats, the Liberal Democrats, who have held seven, and four independen­t councillor­s.

The winning line for any group to have an overall majority is 26 councillor­s.

Labour are defending eight seats this year, in Calder, Illingwort­h and Mixenden, Luddenden Foot, Ovenden, Park, Sowerby Bridge, Todmorden and Town, and the bottom line for the party to continue running the council alone is that they need to retain at least six of those, or make compensato­ry gains for any losses.

The Conservati­ves are defending Northowram and Shelf, Hipperholm­e and Lightcliff­e, Rastrick, Brighouse, Ryburn and Skircoat.

The Liberal Democrats are defending seats in Elland, Warley and two in Greetland and Stainland.

If either of these parties managed to hold their seats and make enough gains at Labour’s expense, the council would revert to no overall control.

Of the independen­t candidates, Coun Colin Peel, a former Conservati­ve who initially left the party to represent Change UK, is defending his Brighouse seat without any party affiliatio­n.

It is a year in which the council has, in addition to its usual work, had a major role in ensuring rules and guidelines which have been introduced to combat the pandemic, with public health also playing a major role.

But there have been major developmen­ts in council policy and it will be interestin­g to see if these play out in the poll. Major decisions have been taken by Labour’s cabinet, including on infrastruc­ture, with projects being developed including corridor programmes and further stages of the major A629 scheme, addressing climate emergency and developing schemes to invigorate public transport including new bus and rail stations for Halifax and a new rail station at Elland, among policies the party believes benefit Calderdale.

But some have been controvers­ial, including the closure of some public buildings including smaller libraries and heritage buildings such as Clay

House at Greetland – community or interest groups are being offered the opportunit­y to take on the running of these.

Labour argues it did not want to do this but has been compelled to do so to balance the budget after a decade of funding cuts from Government (with the Conservati­ves arguing this followed a national deficit left by the outgoing Labour Government in 2010 and Liberal Democrats urging Cabinet to step up exploratio­n of commercial operations, for example a council lottery scheme, to fill spending gaps).

But there is no doubt, as shown by petitions on such issues, decisions taken to close the Threeways centre at Ovenden and, in current form, Mixenden Activity Centre, Halifax, have proved talking points and it remains to be seen if these have impact at the ballot box.

Also, last year saw hearings into Calderdale’s draft Local Plan, with more set for June – in some parts of Calderdale, particular­ly Brighouse, Rastrick, Hipperholm­e, Northowram and Shelf and Greetland and Stainland, where the plan includes potential sites for hundreds or even thousands of new homes.

The Government requires every authority to have a Local Plan, which earmarks where new homes might be built into the 2030s and the soundness of any of these plans is decided by a Government-appointed Planning Inspector who runs the hearings.

Labour have argued that their plan allows for potential economic growth in the future but this model is challenged by some other parties and groups, with residents concerned about issues ranging from infrastruc­ture to loss of green areas.

There have been major developmen­ts in council policy which could play out in the election poll

 ??  ?? DECISIONS: Local voters will have their say in elections for Calderdale Council and who will be the first metro mayor of West Yorkshire.
DECISIONS: Local voters will have their say in elections for Calderdale Council and who will be the first metro mayor of West Yorkshire.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom