The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

UK Government delays put ‘6,000 jobs on line’

FINANCE: Politician­s voice anger at failure to sign off funding for Cities Deal

- SEAN O’NEIL soneil@thecourier.co.uk

The UK Government has been accused of letting 6,000 jobs “hang in the balance” across Tayside and Fife by refusing to finalise the Tay Cities Deal following 20 months of inaction.

Politician­s from the region have stepped up their calls for Westminste­r to sign off on its £150 million share of the £700m investment, with major developmen­ts unable to break ground because of the ongoing uncertaint­y.

Projects at the James Hutton Institute and the regenerati­on of Perth City Centre as a tourism and cultural hub all rely heavily on the funding.

Chris Law, SNP MP for Dundee West, urged Boris Johnson at Prime Minister’s Questions to get the deal signed following months of delays.

Mr Law said: “Six thousand jobs hang in the balance while this constant delay continues, and the situation has been described, quite rightly, as ‘ridiculous’ by the chief executive of the region’s chamber of commerce.”

Pete Wishart, MP for Perth and North

Perthshire, backed his SNP colleague’s calls for action.

He said: “This project commenced in 2016, so it remains extremely concerning that by July 2020 we still have no final signing of the Tay Cities Deal. I have been in talks with a number of the projects who are just really waiting on the green light from the UK Government.

“Without that final say-so, they cannot risk the financial uncertaint­y of putting the first shovel in the ground.”

The latest calls come after the council leaders of Tayside and Fife demanded the UK Government finalise the deal, fearing the £700m project had been “forgotten”.

All four local authority leaders claim there has been “extensive slippage” in the deal since the Head of Terms were agreed by both the Scottish and UK Government­s in November 2018.

They lambasted the slow process as “unacceptab­le”, saying the 6,000 jobs and £400m of investment outlined in the deal would be key to the economic recovery on the region following

“I have been in talks with a number of the projects who are just really waiting on the green light.

MP PETE WISHART

the Covid-19 crisis. The cross-party political heads of Dundee, Perth and Kinross, Angus and Fife wrote to the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rishi Sunak, asking him to get his government’s £150m part of the deal signed as a matter of urgency.

Signed by John Alexander, Murray Lyle, David Fairweathe­r and David Ross, the letter states: “We are sure you will understand the frustratio­n that the deal has not yet been signed after almost 19 months. To the outside world, it might appear that the Tay Cities Deal has been forgotten about.”

The prime minister said: “I know that we have done a number of growth deals in Scotland recently and that we intend to do more.”

A Treasury spokespers­on said: “The government is committed to investing in all parts of the UK, and is providing £150m for the Tay Cities Deal to create jobs and enable growth in Dundee, Perth and the wider region, which is part of our investment of £1.4 billion in City and Growth Deals across Scotland.”

 ?? Picture: Mhairi Edwards. ?? Waiting game: The audience listen intently during public discussion­s on the Tay Cities Deal.
Picture: Mhairi Edwards. Waiting game: The audience listen intently during public discussion­s on the Tay Cities Deal.

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