The partnership that really helped to hit the jackpot
You need to keep the lights on and feed folk – it’s as simple as that, but I’m still out and about talking to people making sure our rural areas don’t get overlooked.
Securing a significant £122m infrastructure ‘Growth Deal’ a year ago from government came with quite some responsibility.
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Hide AdTo most, our rural areas don’t look like centres of growth. Fortunately, times have changed.
Experiences, leisure time and a beautiful environment are increasingly important to people. Increasingly, many don’t have to go into fixed offices or factories, they can choose where to work.
Our area is known for its quality of life – one of the happiest places to live.
With our eyes fixed on our massive growth targets: helping create thousands more jobs, new homes and connecting students to business, much of our work is about convincing people to invest.
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Hide AdAs a partnership between the public and private sectors, we leverage public funds with private sector investment.
It’s a great way to maximise resources.
Our board too, is a great mix – of extremely well regarded, highly skilled business and local authority people, bouncing ideas off each other and getting the best for our local economy and residents.
For me, now is an opportunity to reflect. None of us thought our area would pull off one of the largest private sector investments in the North, a deal about which I feel immensely proud.
York Potash, the £1.6bn mine, will help create a thousand direct jobs and add six per cent to our local economy. A much-needed rural boost, to complement our natural assets.
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Hide AdDeals like that don’t come along every day – it’s one that only a highly skilled team of strategic planners can set up.
Ours realised early on that the mine wouldn’t happen without the right infrastructure, which is how the extension to Whitby Business Park and its supply chain came about.
It perfectly demonstrates our work here at the LEP – creating the right conditions for growth.
On the back of these developments, for the nearby coast we have negotiated twice as many train services between York and Scarborough.
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Hide AdLess packed roads on a sunny bank holiday we hope! On a more serious note, more journeys to this part of the world during others times of the year, are a must. The Yorkshire coast really is becoming the opportunity coast.
We have also used our growth deal to invest in housing. We know it is not all about increasing house building numbers, but building houses for families and increasing affordable housing for young people that are most important too.
Alongside all this of course is our agricultural backbone. That’s why we made agri-tech – i.e. innovation in agriculture and the bio-economy – central to our plans.
And yet, even some Yorkies still don’t know about FERA just outside the city at Sand Hutton where 350 scientists are researching agricultural innovation.