The Sligo Champion

PLAN PUTS SLIGO IN A GOOD POSITION TO VIE FOR FUNDS

DR CHRIS VAN EGERAAT (RIGHT) OF MAYNOOTH UNIVERSITY OUTLINES WHAT THE NATIONAL PLAN MEANS FOR SLIGO AND THE REGION

- Dr. Chris van Egeraat is attached to Department of Geography, Maynooth University and is a member of the Ireland 2040 Ministeria­l Advisory Group

The National Planning Framework (NPF) aims for a more balanced regional developmen­t and seeks to address rural decline by selecting regional cities as centres for concentrat­ed developmen­t outside Dublin.

These cities should serve as energisers for regional developmen­t. This is a sound strategy. Economic growth sectors, notably those related to the informatio­nal economy, have been observed to gravitate to sizeable urban centres that provide access to producer services, infrastruc­tural connectivi­ty, education provision, and a quality of life for workers - requiremen­ts which can only be catered for in a select number of centres.

The NPF by necessity must make hard choices and has identified four regional centres that should grow by at least 50 percent over the next 20 years: Cork, Limerick, Galway, Waterford.

This seems logical in that these are the main regional cities where much existing infrastruc­ture and economic activity is already concentrat­ed.

But the northwest of Ireland was justified in its concerns regarding the content of the first draft of the NPF.

The city-led regional developmen­t strategy involved large swathes of the country being effec tively overlooked by the framework.

The northwest of Ireland has a problem in that it is one of the most vulnerable regions, characteri­sed by rural and peripheral decline, and it has no urban centre of the scale deemed necessary for a regional growth centre.

Relying on the North-West city-region, focussed on Derry City, has not been a particular­ly successful strategy to drive developmen­t in the northwest of Ireland thus far and is unlikely enjoy greater success in a post-Brexit landscape.

Sligo City should be nurtured as a regional centre - not because it is of the requisite size, or will reach this size during the NPF planning period, but for regionally strategic reasons.

A certain level of infrastruc­ture, quality of education, advanced producer services and quality of life are needed to support informatio­nal- type economic activities and businesses.

In the absence of a centre that can provide these items, certain economic activities will not operate in the region and specific groups of workers will migrate out of the region.

If these resources are lost, the region risks entering a vicious circle of regional economic decline.

In the first draft of the NPF, targeted population growth for Sligo, as a large town in the Northern and Western Regional Assembly area, was 40%.

With a current population of about 20,000, Sligo would still be far smaller than the other five cities by 2040.

But if supported by focussed infrastruc­tural investment, it could function as a regional centre, providing important employment opportunit­ies in the informatio­nal economy for a large hinterland.

Most crucial is investment in connectivi­ty - to Dublin and other cities, internatio­nally and, as importantl­y, to smaller centres within its own hinterland. Internatio­nal air connectivi­ty is one of the main location factors for multinatio­nal investors.

The travel time to Knock Airport needs to be shortened and services out of the airport should be upgraded. Investment in the highest capacity broadband connectivi­ty is important for companies of all sizes.

At least equally important is connectivi­ty to Sligo’s hinterland. For Sligo to have an employment function for a large hinterland, workers need to be able to commute into Sligo from that extensive hinterland.

But Sligo is already among the most congested urban centres in Ireland. Therefore, it will only work if we plan for more concentrat­ed developmen­t in the hinterland - as opposed to one-off housing - which would allow for the provision of quality bus commuting services into Sligo.

For Sligo to function as a centre of employment, additional investment is required in urban functions, “liveabilit­y”, and focused third-level education.

Finally, the enterprise agencies play an important role in stimulatin­g and directing investment­s to specific locations.

The IDA building programme, involving advance office buildings and advance technology buildings, is a particular­ly strong tool. With such concentrat­ed investment, in spite of its relatively small population,

Sligo will attract investment in the important informatio­nal economy sectors and play its role in the developmen­t of the northwest of Ireland.

In the new draft of the NPF, Sligo is not identified as one of Ireland’s regional cities but, although the document is careful not to use the term “designate”, Sligo is specifical­ly identified as a regionally significan­t centre that should lead the growth in its region.

This is important. Not because it will allow for greater population growth over the planning period, but because it will influence national investment planning, sectoral investment priorities, and the policy frameworks of government department­s.

It puts Sligo in a better position to compete for projects funded by the €2bn Urban Growth Fund earmarked to support compact developmen­t of urban centres.

It secures continued effort of IDA Ireland to promote Sligo as a location for foreign direct investment. Finally, it provides guidance to the Northern and Western Regional Assembly.

The Regional Assembly now has the unenviable task of fleshing out the NPF in their Regional Economic and Spatial Strategy.

The identifica­tion of Sligo as a regionally significan­t centre will make it easier for the Assembly to make politicall­y sensitive, hard, choices at the regional level. However, the parish-pump game is yet to start at the regional level!

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