Yorkshire Post

Reasons to be cheerful as Yorkshire leaves lockdown

- Nicky Chance-Thompson Nicky Chance-Thompson DL is chief executive of the Piece Hall Trust and chair of Welcome to Yorkshire’s Tourism Recovery Task Group.

These past months have been nothing less than traumatic for so many people. I hope we can move forward with hope, kindness and a renewed spirit of optimism for what is to come.

AS CUSTODIANS of one of Yorkshire’s brightest jewels in the regional heritage crown, myself and the trustees of the Piece Hall in Halifax have seen the impact of the past year at close quarters.

Perhaps uniquely, the Piece Hall values community as much as we do commerce, with our 40 independen­t traders representi­ng a more eclectic, but no less vibrant force for good within our region than their forebears in the days of the cloth trade.

Needless to say, seeing these businesses closing multiple times over the past year has been heartbreak­ing

– in much the same way as witnessing first-hand the impact that closing our own great gates has had upon our local communitie­s and the wellbeing of individual­s from near and far.

But we now have hope. It’s nearly time to welcome people back to the Piece Hall from April 12. That hope is palpable amongst our staff, volunteers, trustees and tenants, as well as the wider community.

Yorkshire has unique attributes, valuable assets and strongly determined people that will help see us not just survive, but thrive again as we all tentativel­y emerge from the horrors of the 12 months. Those Yorkshire assets and strength of character are reflected in our first annual review, published today, which tells the story of our highly successful trading period 2019-20.

Amongst the challenges faced, from the impact of Storm Dennis to those early months when the pandemic began to take hold and tragically disrupt our way of life, there still remained significan­t cause for optimism which extended far beyond our own courtyard.

Since reopening after a £22m refurbishm­ent in 2017, we have welcomed upwards of seven million people through our doors.

In 2019-20 alone, we saw 2.5m visitors, some 900,000 above initial expectatio­ns, and welcomed guests from every continent.

Staging world-class acts such as Elbow and Embrace, and welcoming the Tour de Yorkshire, offered further proof that our region is home to the versatilit­y and creativity needed to thrive in a new landscape.

The region’s ability to blend retail, arts, culture, heritage and tourism will be key to rebuilding and levelling-up beyond Covid-19.

Looking at the challenge faced by the retail and hospitalit­y industries, these past 12 months, means we need to reimagine how we use our high streets and create town centres which bring communitie­s together and create a sense of local identity.

We’re so lucky in Yorkshire to have world-class goods of the very finest provenance together with businesses which champion our regional offering.

Creating jobs and keeping hard-earned cash within in the local economy local really is a win/win situation.

These businesses are the very fabric that connects our communitie­s and the lifeblood of our economy.

A key economic contributo­r, as highlighte­d across numerous reports including studies from the NP11, is the fact that the arts are worth some £4bn to the northern economy.

With exceptiona­l home-grown talent from David Hockney and Barbara Hepworth, to the Kaiser Chiefs and Sally Wainwright, Yorkshire has always excelled in the arts, but we are now starting to become recognised internatio­nally.

We must use this burgeoning reputation not only to attract new visitors to our region, but to promote the ability of the arts to enrich people’s lives across different cultures and communitie­s.

And speaking as a custodian of the only remaining Georgian cloth hall in the world, it would be remiss of me not to mention heritage – something which Yorkshire has in spades and is intrinsica­lly woven into our collective regional conscience.

For me, tourism is the thread that links all of these strands, underpinni­ng our collective Yorkshire identity. The Piece Hall was built on trade and the venue is founded on ideas of resilience and reinventio­n.

Our cloth workers for the 21st century can be found in the form of our traders and retailers today, crafting and grafting and making a real difference.

We simply cannot be a successful economy without a thriving tourism sector, and with a likely focus on UK holidays this year, it can provide the jump-start that is much-needed and so richly deserved.

We are already in an unrecognis­able place from just a few months ago, and there are significan­t signs that life will improve for many of us in the coming weeks.

These past months have been nothing less than traumatic for so many people. I hope we can take lessons from our experience­s, and move forward with hope, kindness and a renewed spirit of optimism for what is to come.

 ?? PICTURE: TONY JOHNSON ?? JEWEL IN REGION’S CROWN: The refurbishe­d Piece Hall in Halifax is looking forward to rediscover­ing its success story once lockdown restrictio­ns are eased.
PICTURE: TONY JOHNSON JEWEL IN REGION’S CROWN: The refurbishe­d Piece Hall in Halifax is looking forward to rediscover­ing its success story once lockdown restrictio­ns are eased.
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