The Scotsman

City centre BID has already delivered and must decide now on future plans

Edinburgh’s Business Improvemen­t District can still enhance the delivery of core services and address some key issues, says Roddy Smith

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What does a Business Improvemen­t District actually deliver? It’s a question worth pondering, immersed as we are in the process to decide if Edinburgh city centre’s BID will carry on for another five years.

Answering it is a bit like deciding on the length of a piece of string. What does it deliver? – it really depends on what you want it to do, and the perspectiv­e you view it from.

However, there is no doubt that one, general answer that can undeniably be supported by evidence is – a lot.

In Edinburgh city centre, we’ve seen our retail and hospitalit­y sectors significan­tly outperform the Scottish and UK markets generally, and we’ve also seen our footfall strengthen as many other areas have gone down. All good in terms of helping our businesses thrive, creating jobs and opportunit­ies.

But there have been many other successes – the city centre is safer, cleaner, more welcoming, easier to navigate, and livelier than other parts of the city. Don’t take our word for it, that’s the view of surveyed visitors to the city centre.

What’s the evidence?: l Hospitalit­y sales up 13.5 per cent over three years l Retail sales in the BID area up 9 per cent over the five year term, 3 per cent ahead of UK average and 13 per cent ahead of the Scottish average l Our footfall averages led the UK averages by 5.2 per cent – smashing our 2 per cent target l Our “This is Edinburgh” campaign generatedm­orethan£50millione­conomic benefit l 89 per cent of city centre visitors feel the area is safer than other parts of the city l Theft dropped 23 per cent in 201617 over the five year average l 80 per cent of visitors to the BID felt it was cleaner than the rest of the city l 1,809 tonnes of trade waste was recycled by our award-winning partnershi­p with Changework­s, and our Clean Team removed 14,050 bags of waste each year

We’ve also been integral to bringing the city’s festivals right into the heart of the Capital, again helping drive footfall and ambience at the vital summer and Christmas trading periods, enhancing the attraction of the area, and creating an unmatched atmosphere.

All in all, plenty to be proud of as our member businesses have put their money into their city, investing more than £1 million a year into making the city centre even more successful.

However, while we should be proud of the achievemen­ts to date, we absolutely cannot afford to become complacent. That is why we consulted with businesses over a two year period, listened to what they had to say, and produced a new business plan for the next five years – one we think will build on the successes to date and help tackle one or two key business and social issues.

The cornerston­es of our new business plan are: l A £1 million marketing campaign focused on the BID area, as part of a £2.35 million package to promote the area throughout the next five years l We will help resource a multiagenc­y approach aimed at helping rough sleepers in the city centre find accommodat­ion, following concern expressed by our members at the levels of homelessne­ss and begging in the area l We will enhance our ongoing partnershi­p with Police Scotland aimed at providing targeted policing for the BID area, affording everyone who uses the city centre even greater levels of safety and security l We will continue to deliver work to enhance the city centre through our Clean Team and our wayfaring, street furniture, and the provision of all the city centre’s Christmas decoration­s

In addition, we will of course continue to work across a number of partnershi­ps developed over recent years to deliver in all of the areas we currently work in.

Our new plan will enhance the delivery of our key core services whilst evolving to address some key issues, such as the above, which our mem-

bers have asked us to tackle. Over the next few weeks we will see how our members have voted. It’s an opportunit­y for them to reaffirm their commitment to their city centre. And we all benefit from that commitment. Roddy Smith, Chief Executive of Essential Edinburgh

 ??  ?? 0 The city centre is safer, cleaner, more welcoming, easier to navigate, and livelier than other parts of the city while retail and hospitalit­y sectors outperform the Scottish and UK markets generally,
0 The city centre is safer, cleaner, more welcoming, easier to navigate, and livelier than other parts of the city while retail and hospitalit­y sectors outperform the Scottish and UK markets generally,
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