Yorkshire Post

Peer steps into help resolve mayor row

- ROB PARSONS POLITICAL EDITOR Email: rob.parsons@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

The former head of the Civil Service has stepped in to resolve the dispute between South Yorkshire’s four local councils over the future of devolution in the county. Lord Bob Kerslake hopes to secure an agreement between civic leaders in Barnsley, Doncaster, Sheffield and Rotherham.

I hear the enthusiasm he has set forward for Yorkshire devolution. Prime Minister Theresa May responds to Keighley MP John Grogan

THE FORMER head of the Civil Service has stepped in to resolve the long-running dispute between South Yorkshire’s four local councils over the future of devolution in the county.

Lord Bob Kerslake, who served as chief executive of Sheffield City Council between 1997 and 2008, hopes to secure an agreement between civic leaders in Barnsley, Doncaster, Sheffield and Rotherham. The Yorkshire Post understand­s that the crossbench peer met two weeks ago with the chief executives of the four councils, who have been at odds for months over the proposed transfer of powers from Whitehall.

He has drafted a proposed letter to the Government on behalf of all four, which has been signed by Barnsley and Doncaster but is yet to be agreed by Sheffield and Rotherham councils.

Lord Kerslake is understood to have offered his services as an ‘honest broker’ to end the bitter dispute over the future of the Sheffield City Region devolution deal.

The agreement signed by the four authoritie­s and then-Chancellor George Osborne in 2015 meant a directly-elected mayor would get a host of new powers from central government and £900m in extra funding over 30 years.

But last year Doncaster and Barnsley pulled out of the deal, meaning the mayor will have virtually no new powers or money when they are elected in May. The two authoritie­s instead want to join a so-called One Yorkshire deal covering the widest possible geography in the region.

This week they joined 16 of Yorkshire’s 20 local authoritie­s in urging the Prime Minister to commit to an election for a mayor for the whole region in 2020.

Under this proposal the Sheffield City Region mayoral term would only last two years, after which Barnsley and Doncaster would be free to join a wider devolution deal.

The involvemen­t of Lord Kerslake, who was head of the Home Civil Service between 2012 and 2015, was discussed on Tuesday when Yorkshire’s MPs and council leaders met Communitie­s Secretary Sajid Javid.

The meeting of the All-Party Parliament­ary Group on Yorkshire and Northern Lincolnshi­re saw the Minister challenge leaders to come up with more details on their proposals for a pan-Yorkshire devolution deal.

Mr Javid did not rule out a One Yorkshire agreement or elections in 2020, saying the door was open for new proposals, but refused to commit himself to any particular timescale. He said he did not want to jeopardise the Sheffield City Region deal.

Lord Kerslake was not available for comment last night.

In the Commons yesterday, Theresa May responded to Keighley MP John Grogan about Yorkshire-wide devolution during Prime Minister’s Questions.

Mr Grogan asked if she supported the “joint endeavours of 18 Conservati­ve and Labour council leaders, the Yorkshire CBI, the Yorkshire Institute of Directors, the Yorkshire TUC, and his Grace the Archbishop of York in their efforts to get an all-Yorkshire devolution settlement by 2020 with the first directly-elected mayor for God’s own county”.

Mrs May said the Government was “committed to devolving powers to local areas where it will deliver better services and greater value for money”.

She said: “I hear the enthusiasm he has set forward for more devolution in Yorkshire and I am pleased to say the Housing Secretary actually met with a group of councils from Yorkshire to discuss these very ideas.”

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