Yorkshire Post

Action needed to stem rural exodus of young, warns council leader

- RUBY KITCHEN NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: ruby.kitchen@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @ReporterRu­by

THE LEADER of a North Yorkshire council has warned that a more co-ordinated approach is vital to counter the exodus of younger generation­s from countrysid­e communitie­s.

Richmondsh­ire District Council has become the first authority to formally back a major initiative aimed at preserving communitie­s across the Yorkshire Dales.

The Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority has been staging a series of meeting with councillor­s from Richmondsh­ire as well as Craven, Eden and the South Lakes to draw up a clearly defined vision to halt the decline in the number of young people living across parts of the Dales.

“For far too long, we’ve been doing a lot of things piecemeal,” said Coun Yvonne Peacock, Richmondsh­ire District Council’s leader. “What is important is that we are actually getting together and putting together a plan.”

The council has set aside funding of £20,000 towards a strategic action plan and the key priorities

in Richmondsh­ire will be community-led and self-build housing, jobs creation and support, improving digital communicat­ions and strengthen­ing services in main settlement­s.

The Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority warned a year ago this month that it was faced the biggest crisis in its history amid a “perfect storm” of social and economic pressures.

AN INITIATIVE aimed at reviving a resilient future for some of Yorkshire’s most rural economies is gathering pace as formal funding has been agreed by the first of five authoritie­s.

There has been a marked decline in the number of young people living across parts of the Yorkshire Dales, authoritie­s have long recognised, with 44 per cent fewer residents aged 16 to 34 when compared to the national average.

Meetings have been held over recent months by a coalition of authoritie­s to agree a strategy for the future, amid warnings over school closures and a potential loss of services.

Now, as Richmondsh­ire District Council has become the first to formally set aside funding of £20,000 towards a strategic plan of action, leaders have claimed that the move is absolutely “critical” to the countrysid­e’s vitality.

“For far too long, we’ve been doing a lot of things piecemeal,” said Coun Yvonne Peacock, the leader of Richmondsh­ire District Council. “What is important is that we are actually getting together and putting together a plan.

“We want to attract young people to live and work in the national park. We are losing young people, and school numbers are down. If this carries on, it will become very serious.

“We have a lot of work to do. But we are determined – and that is important. We are not letting this go.”

The Yorkshire Dales National Park, warning it faced the biggest crisis in its history, set out a vision last year for further growth amid a “perfect storm” of social and economic pressures.

Meeting with council leaders in Richmondsh­ire, Craven, Eden and the South Lakes, it outlined a range of practical steps which could be taken to halt, and then reverse rural community decline, seeking funding from each authority to create a working plan.

Each partner authority will lead on its own specific actions, injecting £20,000 into a joint £100,000 fund to deliver them. The Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority is expected to be next to agree its funding investment, with a decision set to be taken in March.

In Richmondsh­ire, the key priorities will be community-led and self build housing, jobs creation and support, improving digital communicat­ions and strengthen­ing services in main settlement­s.

There will also be a focus on ways to better market the area sharing its strengths to attract new people. Coun Peacock, citing recent survey results which name Richmondsh­ire as among the best places to live in England, said there are a wealth of assets to celebrate, from green fields to village schools and active lifestyles.

Yet it may be, she added that the area is still perceived as a ‘holiday destinatio­n’ rather than as a vibrant community to live within, and a clear marketing strategy could change that.

“This action plan is looking for evidence so we actually know why the decline is happening,” she said.

“It’s clear we need to build houses that are affordable,” she said. “We need jobs. We need to work towards better technology – you don’t have to live in a city to run a business.

“We must stop the decline, and attract new people. We need to encourage those that have left to come back.”

We have a lot of work to do. But we are determined.

Coun Yvonne Peacock, leader of Richmondsh­ire District Council.

 ??  ?? YVONNE PEACOCK: ‘For far too long, we’ve been doing a lot of things piecemeal.’
YVONNE PEACOCK: ‘For far too long, we’ve been doing a lot of things piecemeal.’

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