Yorkshire Post

York Council set to give WtY £ 55,000

- CHLOE LAVERSUCH LOCAL DEMOCRACY REPORTER Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

TOURISM: York Council is set to support Welcome to Yorkshire – putting more than £ 55,000 towards helping the organisati­on – despite admitting to a challengin­g relationsh­ip with the body in recent years.

Welcome to Yorkshire has asked councils across the region for £ 1.4m in total to help it stay afloat.

YORK COUNCIL is set to support Welcome to Yorkshire – putting more than £ 55,000 towards helping the organisati­on – despite admitting to a challengin­g relationsh­ip with the tourism body in recent years.

Welcome to Yorkshire ( WtY) has asked councils across the region for £ 1.4m in total to help them stay afloat.

Wakefield Council and Hull City Council have publicly refused to provide the extra funding, but a York council report says the body is believed to have received £ 1.16m of the £ 1.4m requested from local authoritie­s including the National Parks.

Twenty per cent of jobs in York are in tourism.

Senior councillor­s will be asked to approve funding from York at a meeting on Thursday, and a report says: “Anecdotal feedback from York’s tourism sector suggest that although the past relationsh­ip between Welcome to Yorkshire and Make It York has not always been mutually beneficial, there are significan­t benefits for commercial businesses being members of Welcome to Yorkshire, such as business support and to amplify marketing.”

It says that while the council’s tourism recovery plans are focused on immediate targets of increasing the amount of visitors to the city and how much money is spent in shops and attraction­s, WtY aims to help businesses adapt, promote Yorkshire as a safe destinatio­n and encourage people living within a two- hour drive of Yorkshire to visit.

If York signs up, the city will get at least 167 WtY social media posts and four Instagram story takeovers per year, as well as features including marketing campaigns, data breakdowns and event support, according to the service level agreement.

A council report compares WtY and Make It York’s tourism campaigns – showing that WtY reaches many more people.

Tourism brings £ 765m and 24,000 jobs to York, according to Visit York. And TripAdviso­r ranks the National Railway Museum as the top attraction in Yorkshire.

“Following a difficult year, Welcome to Yorkshire has approached all the Yorkshire local authoritie­s and National Parks, including City of York Council, for replacemen­t funding to enable it to continue trading,” a council report says.

It continues: “Welcome to Yorkshire’s issues are well documented.

“A change in board and leadership took place in January 2020, just prior to the pandemic, which has severely affected the tourist sector across the county.

“The organisati­on’s recovery plan … represents a significan­t change in approach with the aim of recasting their relationsh­ip with local authoritie­s.”

It warns that if councillor­s turn down the funding – there will be a “greater risk of failure” at WtY and extra strain on Make It York – which has already requested a bailout from the council as a result of losses during the pandemic.

The report adds: “This would impact on tourism marketing for York, putting greater emphasis on Make It York as the city’s destinatio­n management organisati­on.

“In the current climate, having two organisati­ons working at different levels on similar work spreads our risk as a city, and funding both organisati­ons is a positive approach to risk management.”

Earlier this month Harrogate Borough Council agreed to a £ 31,000 bail- out for Welcome to Yorkshire in the hope the troubled tourism body will help resurrect the economy.

Funding both organisati­ons is a positive approach to risk management. Findings of a report to York City Council.

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