Teesside Evening Gazette

Government hub set to bring hundreds more jobs

- By NAOMI CORRIGAN naomi.corrigan@reachplc.com @NaomiCorri­gan

A NEW £118m government hub in Darlington is set to bring hundreds more civil service jobs to the region.

Cabinet Office Minister Alex Burghart visited the town on Thursday to announce the plans for the building which he said would “create further opportunit­ies for people from across the country to work in the civil service.”

An applicatio­n has been submitted to Darlington Council with building work at the Brunswick Street site expected to begin later in the year.

Mr Burghart told The Gazette the location was chosen due to the opportunit­ies in the area, transport links and close proximity to the town centre.

As well as creating new jobs, he said it would also provide more opportunit­y for cross-Government collaborat­ion while allowing existing workers to further build their careers.

The four-storey hub, which will be built using stone to mirror that of the St Cuthbert’s Church on the market square, is aimed at supporting the growth of the Darlington Economic Campus which was establishe­d in August 2021 and includes Feethams House and Bishopsgat­e House. More than 800 civil servants are currently based in the town across eight department­s, including the Treasury, the Department for Education and the Department for Business and Trade with the number increasing to 2,300 with the creation of the hub.

Mr Burghart said: “Not only will this help drive regional economic growth, but it will also ensure that we create a civil service that better represents the diverse communitie­s it serves.”

Moving civil service roles out of London is part of the Government’s “levelling up” plans.

In 2021, Rishi Sunak said 22,000 civil servants would move from the capital by the end of the decade.

Welcoming the news, Tees Valley Mayor Ben Houchen said: “Securing the Treasury and seven other Government department­s in Darlington has already proven a huge success for the town with 800 workers in post, many of them recruited from Teesside and the surroundin­g area, cementing Darlington’s status as a centre for Government in the North.

“The Brunswick Street site has stood empty for decades, so to see the start of constructi­on later on a permanent base this year will be another big step forward for

Darlington

Town Centre, bringing muchneeded redevelopm­ent on top of the hundreds of extra good-quality jobs this building will bring.” Clive Anderson, director of capital projects at the Government Property Agency, said the campus is increasing investment in the area while “supporting the Government’s Levelling Up and Places for Growth agendas.”

An Institute for Government paper, published in June last year, said the relocation of civil service roles to Darlington, was proving beneficial to Government and had provided a “modest” boost to the local economy.

However, it also said the number of relocated roles had not been sufficient to “meaningful­ly reduce regional inequality”. It also found, with almost 80% of the civil service already based outside London, relocation “could not be a primary tool of levelling up.”

 ?? ?? How the new hub in Darlington is expected to look
How the new hub in Darlington is expected to look
 ?? ?? MP Alex Burghart
MP Alex Burghart

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