Yorkshire Post

‘We need farming industry making money to get green benefits’

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OVER THE many months the devolution saga has dragged on in Yorkshire, it has almost become easy to lose sight of the tangible benefits the transfer of powers and money from central Government will bring.

But MP Julian Sturdy, whose York Outer constituen­cy takes in the frequently congested ring road north of the city, has one obvious attraction at the forefront of his mind.

With the road under local authority control and holding back the economic growth of the city, so far the only investment has been money to improve the roundabout­s, with the long-term solution of a dual carriagewa­y frustratin­gly out of reach.

“The big thing I would say about what could we benefit from in York from devolution, potentiall­y that is a way we might deliver the long-term benefits we need for the northern ring road, through devolved transport funding,” he said.

A keen supporter of devolution, the Conservati­ve former Harrogate councillor was a proponent of a Greater Yorkshire deal, taking in all of the region except the south.

But with cities like Manchester now racing away with its devolved powers and Yorkshire at risk of being left behind, he is impatient for progress of any kind to be made. “I just think we have to make it happen,” he says. “If we continue to just talk about it for another couple of years it will be a travesty.”

Speaking to from his office a few minutes from York city centre, his next appointmen­t is meeting local NHS officials, who he says are hampered by the Government’s formula for deciding funding in local areas.

Echoing the concerns of other elected officials in North Yorkshire, he says the funding per patient fails to sufficient­ly take into account the difficulty of providing services to an older population spread over a wider rural area.

“It’s not a huge thing but the danger is, it is going to spill over, that is why we are talking to the hospital, to the clinical commission­ing group, regularly.”

Leaving aside local issues, such as the ability of the University of York to attract students from abroad with technology and science skills after Brexit, by far the biggest issue on Mr Sturdy’s mind is the future of agricultur­e.

A former farmer and agricultur­al college student, the MP recently advocated the introducti­on of a GCSE in Agricultur­e to allow young people working in the area to flourish “at the earliest possible opportunit­y”.

And he says the imminent departure of the UK from the European Union, while presenting a huge challenge as the reams of EU rules, regulation­s and subsidies are ditched, is an exciting prospect.

Setting out his vision for farming post-Brexit in a speech last month, Environmen­t Secretary Michael Gove proposed farmers being paid for “public goods” such as access to the countrysid­e and planting meadows, rather than the amount of land they own.

An Agricultur­al Bill setting out more details is now keenly awaited across the sector, and though subsidies are guaranteed at the EU level until 2022, Mr Sturdy says there is a feeling of uncertaint­y for many.

“There is going to have to be some level of support going through, it is how that support continues”, he says. “Without that level of support, we know certain sides of agricultur­e will go.

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