Yorkshire Post

‘Genie is out of the bottle’ when it comes to region’s devolution

- CHARLES BROWN NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: yp.newsdesk@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

THE LEADER of Leeds City Council has claimed the “genie is out of the bottle” when it comes to Yorkshire-wide devolution, and urged the Government to work together with regional leaders.

The authority leaders’ comments came during yesterday’s One Yorkshire devolution conference in Leeds, where regional leaders and captains of industry met to discuss future prospects for central government to hand more powers to Yorkshire.

But Northern Powerhouse Minister Jake Berry responded with a speech of his own, hinting that the Government favoured smaller city region deals.

Coun Blake told the conference: “For generation­s, Yorkshire, along with other communitie­s across the North, have not had the investment and infrastruc­ture that should rightfully have been theirs.

“We did actually go for a Leeds City Region deal after George Osborne became Chancellor – unfortunat­ely that was not backed by Government. We were then told that Yorkshire was a priority for devolution, and to come back and talk to our partners and our communitie­s about the way forward.

“We did this, and that is the background to the One Yorkshire deal.

“We have worked with business partners, trade unions and our communitie­s, and we have made a coherent and powerful economic case. We want to work with government, not against it.

“There is a huge sense that, at the moment, our ambition is being held back, and we are being thwarted in being able to achieve things we want to do.”

She added: “I think the genie is out of the bottle when it comes to talking about Yorkshire devolution.”

Leaders of 18 of Yorkshire’s 20 councils, plus South Yorkshire metro mayor Dan Jarvis, submitted plans last year to form a socalled One Yorkshire mayoral authority which would have powers passed down from Westminste­r.

Such an authority would be given devolved powers and budgets from central government, with similar deals already in place in Manchester, Liverpool and the Tees Valley among others.

But the Government has rejected the proposals, with Communitie­s Secretary James Brokenshir­e saying Yorkshire was too big and diverse for it to fit criteria for devolution.

Ministers urged leaders to fully implement the Sheffield City Region deal, which was signed in 2015 but has yet to be implemente­d because after talks broke down between local leaders.

Mr Berry suggested that the Government would prefer a deal covering West Yorkshire.

He said: “I’m disappoint­ed that, although we had a successful election [for the Sheffield City Region] and Dan Jarvis is rapidly becoming a powerful spokesman for his region, progress is doggedly slow.

“I find it deeply, deeply frustratin­g that by the end of 2018/19, the people of South Yorkshire will have missed out on £90m of government funding that would, could and should have been invested into their economy because we are not able to complete the final stages of that deal.”

He also claimed Leeds was an “anomaly” as the largest city in England without a devolution deal. He added: “Our approach to devolution in the Leeds City Region is clear: we believe there is huge potential and we stand ready to make rapid progress to make it happen.” still

There is a huge sense that our ambition is being held back. Coun Judith Blake, leader of Leeds City Council.

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