Voters ready to decide who will be in charge in Calderdale
Calderdale voters will go to the polls on May 4 after a year in which some significant decisions have been made locally, against a national backdrop of rising inflation, high energy prices and a cost of living crisis.
How voters perceive the mix of local and national events will determine whether Labour retains overall control of the council, which it has held since 2019.
Unlike many areas, the fight is always tight in Calderdale which for many of its 49 years has been a “hung” authority with no overall control at Halifax Town Hall.
Labour’s success in recent years has seen it achieve the party’s current five seat majority over all other groups following the 2021 and 2022 elections – not massive by any means, certainly compared to majorities various parties hold in other areas, but about as large a majority as any one party in Calderdale has ever held.
Locally, two big decisions have been at the forefront, both having local and national considerations in play.
The closure of North Bridge Leisure Centre, Halifax, and a decision, following the Covid-19 pandemic, not to re-open Halifax Swimming
Pool has meant the borough’s main town has currently more limited leisure provision.
The ruling Labour group ‘paused’ demolition of North Bridge Leisure and building a planned new sports complex, including a swimming pool, on the site last autumn after building inflation costs pushed up estimated costs from the budgeted £28 million to £31 million with, at that time, likelihood these would rise even further.
Labour say economic issues were exacerbated by actions of the Conservative Government led for seven weeks by Liz Truss last summer and autumn, and ordered a review of all the borough’s leisure services to find the best way forward.
But opposition groups, including Calderdale’s Conservatives say decisions to close the old Halifax pool and demolish the leisure centre were too hasty and money should have been marked for refurbishment instead.
All options are now under review.
Coupled with, for different, health and safety, reasons, closure of the north Halifax leisure facility at the Threeways centre, Ovenden, it could play into the Halifax seats being a key battleground – though in the north Halifax’s case Labour will point to the long-promised Mixenden Hub, which will include a library and medical provision, now at starting point.
A major decision, made this spring, was the decision to adopt Calderdale’s Local Plan, which could see around 10,000 new homes potentially built in the borough as well as other land earmarked for business.
This has been particularly controversial in areas including Brighouse, Rastrick, Hipperholme, Lightcliffe, Greetland, Northowram and Shelf, where the lion’s share of these might go on green field sites, subject to planning applications being approved.
The proposal to adopt the plan was passed with Labour councillors supporting and Conservatives, Liberal Democrats, Green and Independent councillors opposing.
Levels of satisfaction with national politics, where the Conservatives are in Government, will also likely to come into play with squeezed financial settlements for councils an issue in being able to provide services and pursue projects amid rising prices, although the Government argues some of these factors are more global.
No cuts have had to be made to Calderdale budgets this year but all parties recognised the financial outlook is tight for the next few years when they submitted their respective budget proposals earlier in the year.
Last year it is arguable the local/national mix played out in the shock result of the 2022 election which saw Tory stalwart