Yorkshire Post

Figures that give lie to the ‘Powerhouse’

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From: Dr Peter Williams, Newbiggin, Malton.

IT is over four years since the Northern Powerhouse initiative was announced by George Osborne. In their recent report State of the North 2018, the IPPR North has revealed how little has actually been achieved (The Yorkshire Post, December 5).

The figures are damning: since the inception of the ‘Powerhouse’, spending per head in London has increased by twice as much as spending in the North. Northern productivi­ty is 12.6 per cent lower than the national average; two million working-age people and one million children in the North live in households below the poverty line; and many neighbourh­oods with the lowest life expectancy are in Northern cities.

Our congested roads and railways are a national disgrace and our broadband speeds are in the bottom third of the EU – and behind Bulgaria.

For almost 10 years, successive Conservati­ve-led government­s have let the North down badly.

We deserve better than this: a national rebalancin­g plan and some real joined-up thinking. to peddle to the politician­s and general public.

Many of us have been practising no ploughing and straw incorporat­ion to improve soil structure for years. Growing cover crops is also beneficial, but it is neither easy, nor a quick fix, as the vagaries of our climate dictate success or failure. The very thought of creating more pasture land is also doubtful as current thinking says we should cut the number of animals to reduce the CO2 levels.

However politician­s and advocates of HS2 have in some parts of Church Fenton solved all our problems at a stroke. Build a railway, and what they don’t cover with track turn into a flood plain. That, coupled with Brexit could finally solve this farm’s “neglectful farming practices” and guarantee Donald J Trump’s entry into the UK with his less scrutinise­d grains and meat.

Be careful what you wish for.

On phoning the helpline for Housing Benefit in Sheffield, I was informed that the council is still processing change in circumstan­ces notificati­ons from the beginning of August. This could lead to correspond­ence being sent to the wrong address if this has not been updated, a boon for any prospectiv­e fraudsters.

I have also heard of people allegedly having to wait months for benefits applicatio­ns for Discretion­ary Housing Payment and Housing Benefit.

I wondered what measures the council is taking to improve waiting times for processing benefits applicatio­ns and change of circumstan­ces notificati­ons.

From: J Hemingway, Liversedge.

I WAS interested to read the article by Father Neil McNicholas (The Yorkshire Post, December 3) about unanswered letters sent to various official bodies.

At present I am awaiting replies to 12 letters, all addressed to various parts of HMRC, with delays ranging from 30 weeks to 103 weeks

After only one more week, that will be two years! Even when letters are recorded and signed for upon delivery (per Royal Mail’s records), no response is forthcomin­g.

Besides the absence of replies, my experience­s include the receipt of telephone calls to save the trouble and expense of replying in writing, repeated failure to correct obvious errors in official records and discourtes­y in face-to-face behaviour. It seems there is a need to pull some socks up! Does anyone understand that phrase nowadays?

From: Dr John Rayner, North Ferriby.

I AM delighted that Father Neil McNicholas has at last acknowledg­ed (The Yorkshire Post, December 6) that humanity may truly have some influence on climate change.

He accepts that “global warming may well be something we are responsibl­e for and can influence for the better.”

Since global temperatur­e is a fundamenta­l aspect of global climate, he is incorrect to claim that global warming and climate change are “two distinct factors” and “not the same thing.”

In truth, the two are intricatel­y intertwine­d, even two aspects of exactly the same thing!

Elizabeth Green. When the next General Election happens, will the losing parties demand a second vote, and will they get one?

Christian I’Anson. Surely we are not so diminished that we rerun the referendum until we get the answer the Eurocrats seek.

Malcolm Ward. A second referendum will be the final nail in the coffin of democracy in the UK.

Theresa May’s Brexit deal is ‘terrible’, claims Wetherspoo­n boss Tim Martin

Ian Rea. Having watched him on Question Time, he was the only one who had the decency and bottle to tell it as it is. No deal is the best option, and we then have a strong bargaining stance.

Nigel Wooler. Most people have a lot to loose, including his customers.

Exclusive: Anger as plans to electrify North’s freight network are scrapped

@LeedsZac. Better start getting the barges sorted on the Leeds Liverpool Canal.

@wgarymckin­ney. Don’t understand this. If you are going to install electrific­ation infrastruc­ture, surely you want it to be utilised as much as possible?

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