The Chronicle (UK)

Public must see the details of devo deal

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I WAS interested to read of the warm endorsemen­t by North East business organisati­ons of documents relating to the region’s bid for a further devolution deal, which will reportedly lead to an extra £100m a year for the region and a promised 17,000 new jobs, along with a new regional elected mayor.

Few would turn their noses up at such an inviting offer, or the principle of greater devolution to the region, but it is striking that as yet, there has been no public scrutiny of the proposals and no details published of the deal.

The only involvemen­t in behind closed doors negotiatio­ns with the Government has been from local authority leaders and chief executives. At the time of writing, no substantiv­e proposals have been presented to elected councillor­s, let alone the public.

It is perhaps inevitable that the great and the good of the region will proclaim their warm support for more money for the region, and that council leaders will assure us that the difficulti­es and disunity which have prevented a previous region-wide deal are a thing of the past and we can look forward to a future of harmony and prosperity.

Similar proclamati­ons were made when the North of Tyne deal was concluded, only for the region to belatedly realise that it was under-powered and resulted in transport governance arrangemen­ts that all now accept are sub-optimal.

Would it be asking too much to seek an assurance that the details of the deal will be subject to wider public scrutiny and public debate and perhaps even a public mandate before councils proceed to rubberstam­p it?

It would be a shame for the region to be asked to unquestion­ingly accept another pig in a poke.

COUN GREG Stone, Lib Dem,

Newcastle City Council and North of Tyne Overview and

Scrutiny Committee

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