Yorkshire Post

£ 15m plan for young to get jobs guarantee

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

POLITICAL leaders in Hull and the East Riding hope to set up a £ 15m- a- year scheme to guarantee work for young people as part of a devolution deal with the Government.

An agreement on handing a host of new powers and up to £ 1.6bn in extra funding to the region could see a new elected metro mayor and a mayoral authority dedicated to economic growth in place by 2022.

Council leaders have submitted their bid to government in the hope of joining West Yorkshire and the Sheffield City Region in getting a devolution deal which could help tackle some of the entrenched problems affecting the area.

The document says social cohesion is “relatively strong” across the population of 600,000, which is evenly split between the city of Hull and the surroundin­g area and more than 300 market and coastal towns, villages and hamlets.

But the average annual salary is only 87 per cent of the national figure and the relative lack of higher- paid jobs limits the area’s ability to retain and attract highskille­d workers.

It says: “We also have some of the most extreme variations in economic prosperity in the country and key challenges related to inter- generation­al worklessne­ss and path- dependency.

“Health inequaliti­es and an ageing workforce are also major challenges and underline the need to retain and attract younger workers with the skills and adaptabili­ty to respond to economic opportunit­y.”

It is hoped that with the help of the extra funding currently under the control of government new programmes can be set up which will improve access to jobs for young people and stop poverty from being passed down the generation­s.

Leaders want to work with the Department of Work and Pensions to set up a Young People’s Work Guarantee Programme for Hull worth £ 15m a year.

This would include setting up an “active labour market model” in Hull where state programmes intervene in the labour market to help the unemployed find work, as well as providing start- up and micro- finance to young entreprene­urs and wrap- around support for vulnerable families and children.

Other asks in the document include setting up a new Tourism Action Zone which supports a “sustainabl­e, post- Covid- 19 tourism offer”.

Officials see devolution as the only way of making serious headway on the issues that are holding back the local economy.

They had hoped to join forces with North Lincolnshi­re and North East Lincolnshi­re councils to form a cross- Humber combined authority, but leaders south of the Humber wanted to reach an agreement with the rest of Lincolnshi­re.

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