Huddersfield Daily Examiner

‘The fog of Brexit will start to clear’

COUNCIL DISCUSSES EU EXIT PLAN

- By TONY EARNSHAW AND LOTTIE KILRAINE editorial@examiner.co.uk @Examiner

BREXIT preparatio­ns are progressin­g apace in Kirklees - even though no-one yet knows what the fine detail will be around how the UK leaves the EU.

Meanwhile there are concerns for the future of businesses, jobs and workers, including migrants.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson has said the UK’s Brexit deadline will be January 31.

That means local authoritie­s across the nation are tasked with preparing for life outside the European Union, with a focus on how that will affect their specific areas.

But one senior Kirklees councillor has cautioned that whilst preparatio­ns are on-going there is a “fog” around the detail of Brexit that will only clear in the months ahead.

Kirklees Council set up a Brexit Tactical Group “to fulfil its role of ensuring an appropriat­e level of preparedne­ss for the withdrawal, encompassi­ng likely scenarios following the UK’s exit from the EU with a particular focus on supporting vulnerable people.”

The team has written a report that anticipate­s the various possible impacts of Brexit on the Kirklees economy.

However, it warns that “there is no way to judge the true impact on any given sector” as the extent of regulatory changes or levels of agreed tariffs are yet to be determined.

The report shows approximat­ely 13,000 EU workers in Kirklees as of December 2019, with around a third having applied for settled status.

Many workers are in low skilled jobs, with 47% in elementary process plant occupation­s such as packing.

It identified 79 companies in Kirklees that are subsidiari­es of EU-based parent companies, with five groups accounting for more than 3,000 employees and a turnover of £475m.

In Kirklees there are 19 businesses that have EU-based subsidiari­es, all of which are subsidiari­es of larger parent companies of which four are also EU-based.

The report said: “This latter group presents a particular risk of suffering restructur­ing for logistical or tax reasons, which could place jobs at risk.”

Up to 10% of social care workers in Kirklees are EU citizens. Concern

has been expressed that earnings post-Brexit will be “far below” the potential minimum threshold.

The Brexit debate that has gripped the country since the referendum in 2016 continued in the council chamber at Huddersfie­ld Town Hall as politician­s argued over the meaning of the January 31 deadline.

“We aren’t really leaving on the 31st of January,” said committee chair Clr Andrew Cooper (Green, Newsome). “The real Brexit is at the end of the year.”

In response Clr John Taylor (Con, Kirkburton) said: “Politicall­y we are leaving on the 31st.”

Clr Will Simpson (Lab, Denby Dale) said he agreed with Clr Taylor but added: “If I can steal and distort Peter Mandelson’s phrase for a minute - he said ‘We’re all Thatcherit­es now’ - we’re all Brexiteers now, whether we like it or not.”

Clr Graham Turner, the council’s political lead on Brexit, said officers would be working on the authority’s plan throughout the coming year.

“It’s all a bit foggy but the fog will start to clear and I can ensure you that we will work to maximise the opportunit­ies for us as a council and the residents of Kirklees.”

 ??  ?? Clr Graham Turner outlines preparatio­ns for Brexit in Huddersfie­ld Town Hall, and inset, committee chair Clr Andrew Cooper
Clr Graham Turner outlines preparatio­ns for Brexit in Huddersfie­ld Town Hall, and inset, committee chair Clr Andrew Cooper

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