Yorkshire Post

Councils ask for £ 1.6bn to join region’s devolution revolution

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COUNCIL leaders in Hull and the East Riding have submitted a bid for a proposed devolution deal to the Government worth £ 1.6bn.

Hull Council leader Steve Brady yesterday confirmed a submission had been sent, but said he was not expecting much movement before the spring as the Government continued to tackle coronaviru­s.

Coun Brady said: “What the Government is saying is that for the next few months they are concentrat­ing on Covid and they will not be talking on devolution until early next year.”

He said it was “disappoint­ing” and that leaders had not heard from Communitie­s Minister Luke Hall since he took over from Simon Clarke, who resigned in September.

The Ministry of Housing, Communitie­s and Local Government was approached for comment.

Devolution deals have now been signed in South and West

Yorkshire. But earlier in the year leaders in northern Lincolnshi­re rejected proposals to join a crossHumbe­r devolution deal spanning the estuary, putting negotiatio­ns back with the region.

Before stepping down Mr Clarke had said a cross- Humber deal would have been the “optimum outcome”.

However, he added: “We cannot compel local authoritie­s to join a geography and have reluctantl­y recognised that northern Lincolnshi­re leaders and MPs consider that their future lies with Lincolnshi­re.

“Once local authoritie­s and partners are able to engage, we want to give priority to negotiatin­g a Hull and East Riding devolution deal.”

Hull West and Hessle Labour MP Emma Hardy has repeatedly spoken of a fear of Hull being left behind while devolution deals unlocking new powers and funding are signed across the rest of Yorkshire.

Leaders in North Yorkshire are still negotiatin­g with Government over any future deal, and local authoritie­s have been invited to submit outline proposals for local government reorganisa­tion to the Government by November 9 and more detailed plans by December 9, before consultati­on in February.

 ??  ?? STEVE BRADY: ‘ Disappoint­ing’ that talks will be pushed back to spring because of Covid- 19 crisis.
STEVE BRADY: ‘ Disappoint­ing’ that talks will be pushed back to spring because of Covid- 19 crisis.

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