Yorkshire Post

Haskins doubts commitment to protect rural areas after Brexit

- KATE_LANGSTON WESTMINSTE­R CORRESPOND­ENT

YORKSHIRE BUSINESS leader and former government advisor Lord Haskins has cast doubt on Ministers’ commitment to defending the interests of rural communitie­s after Brexit.

Addressing a panel of his fellow peers, the Humber LEP chairman expressed concern the department in charge of rural policy – the Department for Environmen­t, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) – will not compete as “vigorously” as its rivals for a replacemen­t to EU funding.

This followed an earlier warning that rural areas have now become “entirely” dependent on EU grants for their economic and social developmen­t.

And with local funding cuts being compounded by the Government’s focus on urban devolution deals, he suggested there is an rising risk of rural needs being “neglected” at the expense of cities.

The dire appraisal came during a House of Lords select committee inquiry to assess whether the UK’s rural and environmen­tal legislatio­n is “fit for purpose”.

Yesterday’s evidence session focused on the legacy of the 2006 Natural Environmen­t and Rural Communitie­s Act, which paved the way for the creation of Natural England and the now-disbanded Commission for Rural Communitie­s (CRC).

Lord Haskins led the 2003 Rural Delivery Review which is credited with influencin­g key parts of the 2006 Act – earning him the title of “rural tsar” to Tony Blair’s Labour government. He was quizzed alongside the former CRC chairman Dr Stuart Burgess, who led the commission until it fell victim to the coalition Government’s “bonfire of the quangos” in 2013.

Responding to questions about the impact of disbanding this rural “watchdog”, both experts expressed concern about the lack of an independen­t advocate for rural communitie­s in the current government. Despite praising the work of organisati­ons like Natural England and the Environmen­t Agency, Lord Haskins warned any emphasis on tackling economic and social disadvanta­ge in the countrysid­e has been lost.

He went on to claim that central government funding for rural developmen­t has been “decimated” in recent years, with communitie­s now “entirely” dependent on EU funding programmes such as the European Agricultur­al Fund.

“The Treasury is going to have to find very substantia­l funding to replace what is coming at the moment, and I would be concerned that Defra will not defend its priorities as vigorously as BEIS (the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy) in that fight,” he said.

The former Northern Foods chairman also criticised the longrunnin­g squeeze on local authority budgets. He suggested that these funding cuts, combined with the focus on devolution of powers to city regions like Manchester and Liverpool, could see “rural needs... neglected at the expense of the metro need”.

Meanwhile, Dr Burgess questioned Defra’s decision to draw up two 25-year strategies to cover farming and environmen­tal policy, with no mention of the rural economy and communitie­s. He called for the appointmen­t of a new independen­t advocate to represent rural interests.

A Defra spokesman said: “We are determined to secure a good Brexit deal for rural communitie­s. That is why we are making sure the right infrastruc­ture, from broadband to transport, is in place.” DALES:

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom