Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Extra council scrutiny on major planning schemes

‘AD-HOC SCRUTINY PANEL’ TO DISCUSS PROJECTS - INCLUDING £250M BLUEPRINT

- By TONY EARNSHAW tony.earnshaw@trinitymir­ror.com @LDRTony

MASSIVE regenerati­on projects in Kirklees such as the £250m Huddersfie­ld Blueprint are to come under extra scrutiny following an agreement by councillor­s.

All parties on Kirklees Council will join together to inspect, analyse and dissect major schemes before decisions are taken on spending or to move forward with planning.

Core programmes set to come under the microscope are the Huddersfie­ld Blueprint and its £210m “cultural heart”, the £200m Dewsbury Blueprint, and the Small Centres Programme, which will see £6m invested in Holmfirth, Heckmondwi­ke, Batley and Cleckheato­n.

The decision to establish what is being described as an ad-hoc scrutiny panel follows calls for greater clarity on major projects as well as transparen­cy around the decision-making process.

It means members of the decisionma­king Cabinet, the officers running the projects, and the consultant­s hired to deliver them will all feed informatio­n to the four-member panel.

Describing the new body as “a platform” for early pre-decision inspection of “very important regenerati­on projects” the chair of the council’s Overview and Scrutiny Management Committee, Clr Liz Smaje (Con, Birstall and Birkenshaw), said: “We really need to scrutinise these projects in depth and this is hopefully a way of providing that.”

Clr Andrew Cooper (Green, Newsome), whose ward includes Huddersfie­ld town centre, said for the panel to operate effectivel­y it needed to undertake scrutiny well in advance of decision-making.

He said: “We do need to be able to look at the developmen­t and the ideas of schemes at an early stage for us to be able to have a meaningful input. Otherwise Cabinet will just shrug their shoulders and do what they were going to do anyway.”

The Labour-led authority has previously been criticised for not sharing detail on its blueprint plans. That prompted the Liberal Democrats last summer to call for a “cross-party, crosspartn­ership” arrangemen­t as well as a pause to the project in the light of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

At the same time the Greens suggested that a partnershi­p board be formed that as well as councillor­s from all parties might also include key businesses, the college, the university and Huddersfie­ld Civic Society.

In recent weeks the Conservati­ves have warned against over-reaching on the Huddersfie­ld Blueprint as interest rates sky-rocket and the estimated cost of delivery goes up. They have asked to see a business case for the mammoth scheme.

Recently released designs for the Huddersfie­ld Blueprint show a new library, events space and multi-storey car park, and a town park.

The Queensgate Market is earmarked to become a food court and the Central Library will become a new museum for Kirklees with an extension providing space for a new art gallery.

 ?? ?? Clr Andrew Cooper
Clr Andrew Cooper

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