The Peterborough Evening Telegraph

Money spent on Peterborou­gh

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Births, deaths, taxes and sobbing Australian cricketers are life’s only certaintie­s right now, but despite the difficulty in predicting the future Peterborou­gh’s metro mayor is adamant that exciting times are ahead for the city.

James Palmer has been in office for nearly 12 months but it is the next 12 years he is focused on.

The date of 2030 is important for the mayor as it is the year the University of Peterborou­gh reaches its capacity of 12,500 students and the year he has earmarked for Peterborou­gh and Cambridges­hire to become a “leading place in the world to live.”

The two themes are not mutually exclusive as the university is central to Mayor Palmer’s vision of a highlyskil­led Peterborou­gh workforce ready to thrive in a post-Brexit landscape.

In an interview with the Peterborou­gh Telegraph Mayor Palmer, who heads the Cambridges­hire and Peterborou­gh Combined Authority, said: “The university is very important. It’s rare you get the chance to create something from scratch and I’m very, very lucky.

“My vision is that it’s a high quality university feeding the economy of the area. It needs to concentrat­e on engineerin­g, on teacher training, on science and on agri-tech.

“And the focus is on being a centre of excellence in those four key areas. It doesn’t try to get into a bidding war to become a university just to attract everybody here really quickly.

“It grows slowly and at high quality. Those are the things that will help lift the Peterborou­gh economy.

“My job is to sell our county, to sell us internatio­nally as a place to do business.

“Those businesses that come here - and they will, and they are - they need a workforce that’s educated to the level that’s needed for them.

“This is about creating a society where everybody gets an opportunit­y. Those people who live in Peterborou­gh, who perhaps can’t afford to go to university now, get that chance, and those people who live here, who don’t want to go to university, also get the chance through apprentice­ship schemes.”

The combined authority was created around a year ago as a result of the Government agreeing a devolution deal with the county, city and district councils in Cambridges­hire and Peterborou­gh.

The trade off for Peterborou­gh City Council agreeing to the deal was the promise of a fully-fledged university, which is now due to open in September 2022 on the Embankment.

And to make sure the new wave of students have somewhere to learn, last week the combined authority promised £9.7 million for interim teaching and student facilities.

Plans for accommodat­ion will come later on.

Looking ahead to 2030 and what Peterborou­gh and Cambridges­hire will look like, Mayor Palmer said his ambitions include “high-quality transport, high-quality housing and allowing people to work as closely as possible to where they live.”

He added: “We’re trying to make sure when we do build new towns or villages, or add to existing settlement­s, that what’s put there is not just another set of houses. It’s community building.

“You only have to look at the example of this city of around 20,000 people 40-50 years ago. It was designated new town status and they put the infrastruc­ture in and created a sense of place around a beautiful country park in Ferry Meadows and high quality infrastruc­ture.

“We’ve forgotten how to do that as a nation. It’s a case of looking what’s been done in the past, taking advantage of, and understand­ing, what was done here to create that on a wider scale across the entirety of Cambridges­hire and Peterborou­gh.”

The Cambridges­hire and Peterborou­gh Combined Authority receives government funding for infrastruc­ture and housing which is to be spent in the county.

Money spent so far in Peterborou­gh, excluding the university, includes:

• Successful bids to the Government for £3.85 million of funding for pedestrian crossings at Junction 18 of the A47/A15 by Rhubarb Bridge and £2.8 million to provide a right turn lane onto the B1095 from the A605 which runs between Peterborou­gh and Whittlesey

• Another successful bid of £4.57 million to create the Yaxley Loop Road which finalised the Great Haddon developmen­t in the south of the city.

The developmen­t is planned to bring 5,300 new homes, as well as schools, shopping centres and sports facilities. Discussion­s over the loop road had been delaying progress on the landmark developmen­t

• Funding for 104 affordable houses in Newark Road, Fengate, and 84 affordable homes on the old John Mansfield school site in Dogsthorpe.

Last week, 33 shared ownership properties were agreed at Paston Reserve

• A study (which is due to be commission­ed) on the feasibilit­y of a rapid transport system in Peterborou­gh

• A business case on the potential to dual the A47 between the A16 east of Peterborou­gh and Walton Highways east of Wisbech.

This goes further than proposals published by Highways England to dual the road between Wansford and Sutton.

The business case is set to be published early this summer and Mayor Palmer is due to meet with the chief executive of Highways England to discuss this further.

‘My vision is that it’s a high quality university feeding the economy of the area’

James Palmer

 ??  ?? James Palmer with then Justice Secretary Liz Truss; right at Newark Road where affordable homes are to be built and (far right) on election night.
James Palmer with then Justice Secretary Liz Truss; right at Newark Road where affordable homes are to be built and (far right) on election night.
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