Yorkshire Post

Council defends its strategy after £639,000 losses

Tax-payer backed ventures hit by Covid

- STUART MINTING LOCAL DEMOCRACY REPORTER ■ Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

NORTH YORKSHIRE County Council has defended its strategy to create numerous companies to generate funding for frontline services after a report revealed the tax-payer backed ventures had been hit hard by Covid-19.

The authority’s leader and deputy leader, Councillor­s Carl Les and Gareth Dadd, were speaking ahead of the council’s first meeting to discuss the performanc­e of its Brierley Group of firms through the first year of the pandemic.

An officers’ report to the meeting said the ventures, to which the council has committed to loaning some £54m at preferenti­al rates, had seen a continued “mixed performanc­e” from the previous year.

Provisiona­l figures show the group, which includes education and business services, housebuild­ing, internet, legal and waste enterprise­s, delivered a loss after tax for the 2020/21 financial year of £639,000. The report stated the total revenue generated of £59.9m was under budget by £4.8m.

Officers said its education services had faced unique challenges throughout the year and that the pandemic had an adverse impact on the school catering business due to school closures.

While First North Law’s trading in the first half of the year resulted in a £14k underperfo­rmance, officers said NYnet experience­d some challengin­g trading conditions throughout 2020-21, particular­ly with regard to new customer sales.

The report states Yorwaste performed well during the last quarter despite trading continuing to be difficult and the business services Veritau group exceeded its budgeted profit for the year.

Coun Les said: “The pandemic has had an impact across not only the council, but the council-owned companies and we are looking at the business plan for the future post-pandemic.”

He said he was optimistic about the firms staging a recovery this year, providing Covid variants did not have a major impact on the county.

Coun Dadd, who is also the council’s finance executive member, said he was very proud of what the authority had achieved with its commercial­isation agenda.

He said: “It’s been done in a cautious manner, but nonetheles­s has provided and post-pandemic will provide vital resources to the county council’s budget on behalf of the tax-payer.”

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