Wokingham Today

Empty shop fronts darken town like lost teeth

- Cllr Marie-Louise Weighill Cllr Marie-Louise Weighill is Labour ward member for Norreys on Wokingham Borough Council

WE recently have lost long-standing and fondly remembered shops in Wokingham as well as some new ones which have bravely set up in difficult times but been unable to continue.

We are all dishearten­ingly familiar with the litany of high streets in crisis – the loss of department stores, 50 shops closing a week, the empty shop fronts that darken like lost teeth.

The loss of retail does not only affect shoppers – the demise of flexible yet steady retail jobs is a real loss to the community. We hear of endless initiative­s but the decline seems to continue.

The Council is often blamed in discussion­s of this – at least on social media – and the impact of parking charges, overzealou­s parking enforcemen­t and business rates is often, and intemperat­ely, held as responsibl­e for our current situation.

This is a partial and shallow explanatio­n – it is central government choices that have brought this about and it is at central government level where the most significan­t steps to improvemen­t will have to be made.

The ‘cost-of-living-crisis’ is not a natural phenomenon like the weather, it is the product of years of austerity that have failed to achieve their stated purpose - the bringing down of debt - and have instead brought us to the situation we face today.

It is utterly wrong to talk as if the operating environmen­t for local government and local businesses is just a fact of life or a law of physics rather than the outcome of a series of deliberate political choices by the Conservati­ve party

First, continuing and Inexorable cuts to local authority funding meant that charges have had to be raised to protect services necessary for the survival of many.

Second, austerity and its associated decline in productivi­ty and spending power have meant a decline in people’s discretion­ary spending.

Finally and most damagingly, a doom loop of underinves­tment and wage stagnation undermines the innovation that our town centres need

To address this we do not need helpless nostalgia for a never-existing golden age but an awareness that towns should and, with the right support and investment, can adapt to the new reality.

The Labour Party has stressed the importance of small businesses as the beating heart of our economy and will act to support businesses and communitie­s working to improve and protect Wokingham shops and services:

Pushing active travel reforms that will make the shopping areas of the Borough easier, safer and more pleasant to reach by foot, bicycle and public transport

Reforming business rates to a system that is fairer by shifting the burden from bricks and mortar businesses to online shopping giants

Enhancing powers for councils to end the blight of empty shops by strengthen­ing their capacity to step in in cases of persistent vacancy

Promoting and supporting the developmen­t of community-owned spaces and businesses to affordable appropriat­e services and products that can more nimbly meet shifting local demand than traditiona­l chains.

A Labour government will provide the support that businesses need to offer our High Streets and shopping areas the flexible and resilient shops, services and experience­s that we need and deserve.

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