The Chronicle

Mayor angry over plans to scale back new zones

‘NO WAY TO TREAT’ HARD WORKING OFFICIALS

- By DANIEL HOLLAND Local democracy reporter daniel.holland@reachplc.com

A NORTH EAST mayor has hit out at the Government over plans to heavily scale back one of Liz Truss’ flagship policies.

Chancellor Jeremy Hunt confirmed in his Autumn Statement last week that he would “change” the Government’s approach to investment zones, proposed areas where businesses would have been given tax breaks under plans in his predecesso­r Kwasi Kwarteng’s infamous mini-budget in September.

It was claimed bids to create two such zones, where planning rules would also have been relaxed, across Newcastle, Northumber­land, and North Tyneside, would create 23,000 new jobs and see 8,000 new homes built.

But with Rishi Sunak’s administra­tion now seeming to backtrack on the idea, North of Tyne mayor Jamie Driscoll has slammed the Government for performing such a quickfire U-turn after council officials across the country had scrambled to put bids together.

The Labour mayor told a North of Tyne Combined Authority (NTCA) meeting on Tuesday that the rapid policy reversal was “no way to be treating hard-working officers across the country”.

He said: “We were given almost no notice of those things and they [NTCA officers] spent about a fortnight working late every night – I was getting emails asking if we are all right to sign this off at midnight.

“Then for the government to say ‘actually we aren’t sure, we are going to have a rethink’, is no way to be treating hard-working officers across the country.

“It won’t just be us, it will be in every authority across the country. Thank you very much to our team who run through walls to get this stuff done, they really do.”

Mr Hunt announced last Thursday that revised investment zone plans, expected to be announced ahead of next spring’s Budget, would “focus on leveraging our research strengths, to help build clusters for our new growth industries”.

One of the North of Tyne bids included land surroundin­g the Northumber­land Line railway, in the hope of attracting employers and housebuild­ers to towns served by the route between Newcastle and Ashington ahead of it re-opening to passenger trains next year for the first time in decades.

The second bid focused on an “Arc of Energy Innovation” based around clean energy industries.

Durham County Council had also lodged bids for investment zones at NETPark in Sedgefield and Aykley Heads in Durham City, while the Internatio­nal Advanced Manufactur­ing Park and Sunderland riverside were also put forward as possible locations.

 ?? ?? North of Tyne mayor Jamie Driscoll
North of Tyne mayor Jamie Driscoll
 ?? ?? Chancellor Jeremy Hunt
Chancellor Jeremy Hunt

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