The Peterborough Evening Telegraph

Proud of what we have achieved

- Peterborou­gh City Council leader gives his view on the council and news and issues affecting you... John Holdich

It’s hard to believe that it’s nearly a year since the outbreak of Covid-19 in the UK. The past 12 months have been highly challengin­g, with the council’s resources severely tested.

I’m extremely proud that we’ve kept frontline services running whilst branching out to help vulnerable residents. It’s been a tough balancing act, but we have a duty to help those in need and we will continue to fulfil it.

The success of our Countywide Co-ordination Hub shows how committed we are to doing this. The hub was launched in April 2020 and has supported many vulnerable people across Peterborou­gh.

This includes providing food parcels, checking in with clinically extremely vulnerable people while they are shielding and, more recently, arranging transport to vaccinatio­ns.

Hub staff have made 1,985 calls and emails to 1,400 individual­s, resulting in over 3,000 enquires being dealt with.

Just over half of these enquiries were from residents under 65, showing that all ages, not just the elderly, have been impacted by the pandemic.

More than 850 enquiries were from people needing access to food or help with their shopping and getting prescripti­ons to people selfisolat­ing accounts for 10% of enquiries.

The hub team, which includes re-deployed council staff, have worked with organisati­ons and community groups to ensure residents have access to mental health support, public health informatio­n, debt and financial advice, befriendin­g and much more.

Our drive to help those in need has also assisted local businesses. We’ve worked with the government to administer grant funding to firms affected by the pandemic.

During 2020 we delivered over £35.5million in business grants. This benefited around 2,800 local businesses and I’d urge firms to get in touch to see if they are eligible for support.

In the meantime, rest assured that we will continue to keep the city moving forward.

The pandemic has changed our daily lives and been particular­ly hard for school children. I’m sure many are currently missing the classroom and their friends.

We know it’s especially tough for children from disadvanta­ged background­s, so we’ve decided to help by purchasing around 1,000 new laptops.

These are specifical­ly earmarked for children and young people who cannot access their school’s lessons from home.

A significan­t number of local children do not have a computer, meaning they cannot access lessons and online resources, support from their teachers, or even interact with their classmates.

This places them at serious risk of falling behind in their learning and developmen­t, so their need for a laptop is urgent.

We are currently working with officers to ringfence funding for the laptops and are confident this will make a positive difference.

Regular readers will know how excited I am about our city’s new University. With constructi­on under way, I’m counting down the days until September 2022 when its doors will open to students.

The university will greatly benefit Peterborou­gh for generation­s to come, attracting people, businesses and investors.

I recently had a virtual meeting with a group of businessme­n interested in investing in Peterborou­gh. They cited the university as a big attraction, pointing out that any city looking to build one is clearly ambitious and forward-thinking.

They’re not wrong – our regenerati­on plans are the most ambitious this city has seen for decades, with the university a key component.

Part of our university developmen­t includes plans for a Research and Developmen­t Centre on the main campus and residents and businesses are invited to have their say on this.

A planning applicatio­n for the centre, which will be jointly delivered by the Combined Authority (CA) and Peterborou­gh-based business Photocentr­ic, will be submitted later this month and the CA are keen to engage with the community beforehand.

An online survey has been launched, running until Monday February 15. Visit https:// arupeterbo­rough.co.uk/haveyour-say/ to have your say.

Our rapid Covid testing drive is well under way, aimed at testing key workers and those who cannot work from home. The initiative, focussed on testing those who do not have Covid symptoms, will help track virus cases and drive down transmissi­on rates which are still high in Peterborou­gh.

This week a new walkthroug­h testing site is opening in Bretton specifical­ly to help people with symptoms.

The site at Peterborou­gh Lions Rugby Club will be in place for at least the next three months as part of the Government’s UK-wide drive to improve the accessibil­ity of coronaviru­s testing for local communitie­s. People who have symptoms are advised to book a test by visiting www. gov.uk/get-coronaviru­s-test or by calling 119.

This additional testing site will increase our testing capacity in the city, allowing us to identify more people who have the virus. If you have symptoms of coronaviru­s - a fever, new continuous cough and/or a loss or change in sense of taste or smell - please get a test.

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