Yorkshire Post

Yorkshire council planning £40m property investment­s

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LEADING MEMBERS of a rural Yorkshire council which has maintained the third lowest council tax in the country look set to approve launching a £40m commercial property investment arm to help protect frontline services.

Hambleton District Council’s cabinet will consider extending the amount of taxpayers’ money it uses to generate £600,000 annually as it seeks to become selfsuffic­ient by 2020/21 and not rely on Government grants to support its budget.

Declining Government funding will lead to the council having to generate an extra £400,000 from April next year and £800,000 in 2022/23.

Leading councillor­s said using public funds on projects which carry an element of risk would be key to underpinni­ng its ten-year financial strategy. The authority’s leaders say it is therefore crucial to acquire assets where a balance is struck between an acceptable return on investment­s – thought to be about four per cent – and a low risk of income shortfall.

Said council would only invest in low risk schemes.

A cabinet report states: “A robust decision-making process for making commercial investment­s would be devised to ensure that appropriat­e oversight, quality assurance and risk management is in place.”

Should councillor­s approve the strategy, the authority will follow neighbouri­ng Darlington and North Yorkshire councils in seeking to fund services through property ventures.

Hambleton’s deputy leader, Coun Peter Wilkinson, said the authority was acutely aware that it was dealing with public money.

He said the council would only invest in schemes considered to be low risk, such as the scheme it had already approved at the former Northaller­ton Prison site.

Coun Wilkinson said the council had bought the southern side of the site as a long-term investment and would act as a landlord to a supermarke­t chain.

To ensure risk is minimised, the council would seek to invest across the UK and in different sectors, such as the industrial, warehousin­g and office sectors.

However, he said Government policy “seems to be changing,” which may stop local authoritie­s from investing outside of their areas in future.

Government policy (on investment) seems to be changing Hambleton’s deputy leader, Coun Peter Wilkinson sounds a cautious note.

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PETER WILKINSON:

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