The Scotsman

Bidding to be best – how businesses improve the city centre experience

Roddy Smith reports on the extra effort – and cash – put in by retailers to make the Capital a safer, cleaner place

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Edinburgh’s city centre Business Improvemen­t District, or BID, is one of the largest outside London – and we like to think it’s also one of the most successful.

But the most common questions we’re asked are: What is a BID?, What does it do? and Do we need it?

Let’s avoid the technical jargon and cut straight to the chase – a BID is essentiall­y businesses coming together and voting democratic­ally to invest in their community, to benefit the common interest.

In Edinburgh’s city centre over the past five years, that’s seen us invest more than £1 million a year of business money in carrying out a variety of services and events – from cleaning up chewing gum to financiall­y backing Edinburgh’s Christmas – and all to improve living, working and visiting our city.

And, for the record, we need it more than ever!

Essential Edinburgh manages the BID on behalf of our member businesses, all 600 of them, each of them contributi­ng an additional sum on top of their business rates.

That, in turn, has translated into some real successes and accomplish­ments.

For example, during the past five years, footfall in the city centre has led the UK average by more than 5.2 per cent – smashing the target set for us of 2 per cent . That translates into a lot of people, and all of those people bring spending and opportunit­ies, in turn creating jobs and wealth. We lead the UK’S retail sales over the period by more than 2.2 per cent , and the Scottish average by 11.5 per cent . Hospitalit­y is also performing well, up 13 per cent in the past three years.

During the past five years, our own Essential Edinburgh events have contribute­d significan­tly with more than £23.7 million of economic benefit.

But it’s not all about driving footfall and business success – although that is as vital to our citizens as it is to our businesses. It’s also about the kind of city centre we want to enjoy. In this regard too, BID has made a big contributi­on.

Our Clean Team provides businesses with a fast-response service that is additional to the statutory cleansing service provided by City of Edinburgh Council, and they’ve collected more than 14,000 bags of waste from our city centre streets every year. They have also cleaned up gum that would cover an area of pavement that’s equivalent to nine football pitches. They’ve removed hazardous waste, and the net result of their diligent labours is that the city centre has achieved accolades for its cleanlines­s, and 80 per cent of visitors to the city centre say it is cleaner than the rest of the Capital.

We’ve also worked in partnershi­p with Police Scotland and others to launch a number of initiative­s designed to make our city centre not just feel safer, but actually be safer.

Police Scotland figures show that recorded crime in the city centre, taken over a five-year average, is down 7.9 per cent. Our Check Out anti-retail crime initiative, delivering and sharing real-time informatio­n, has seen organised shopliftin­g plummet, and our Check In project is tackling hotel fraudsters.

Our weekend taxi marshals have helped send more than 100,000 people home safely, and the CCTV we help fund plays an important part in deterring, detecting and resolving crime. All of this work means that 89 per cent of those who took part in the Edinburgh Visitor Survey felt safer in the city centre than elsewhere, up from 73 per cent in 2012. Looking ahead, we’re now working with a dedicated BID cop to further improve the protection and safety of those who live, work and visit the area.

We’ve played our part in promoting the city too, as one of the key funders of the This Is Edinburgh two-year marketing campaign which

delivered £50 million of economic benefit.

So back to those core questions: A BID sees businesses play a real, prominent role in their city centre, investing their own cash to deliver extra services, events and benefits. With the public purse strings pulled tighter than ever, we’ve never needed BIDS more. Roddy Smith, chief executive of Essential Edinburgh.

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