Latest News Tue, May 30, 2023 5:59 AM
The laudable aim to level up the country risks failure unless the Government can provide the long-term substantive funding necessary to help local councils to deliver economic growth for their communities, says the cross-party Levelling Up, Housing and Communities (LUHC) Committee’s latest report.
The Funding for Levelling Up report is critical of the funding, delivery, allocation and funding methods, and the competitive bidding processes involved in levelling up funds. The report finds that the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities has limited strategic oversight and has failed to coordinate these funds across departments.
Clive Betts, Chair of the Levelling Up, Housing and Communities (LUHC) Committee, said: “There is cross-party consensus in tackling the regional and local inequalities that are holding back communities across the country. But the complexity of the levelling up challenges mean they cannot be remedied by the Government’s current approach of one-off short-term initiatives.
“The Government should heed the lessons of projects such as German reunification which were accompanied by long-term funding and internationally recognised for the benefits delivered in terms of long-term, substantive growth. The levelling up policy requires a long-term and substantive strategy and funding approach, elements this policy currently lacks. Without this shift, Levelling Up risks joining the short-term Government growth initiatives which came before it.
“The Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities (DLUHC) is primarily responsible for delivering levelling up but is currently failing to drive forward the policy across Government. It’s concerning that DLUHC does not even appear to know which pots of money across Government contribute towards levelling up. The lack of strategic oversight from DLUHC of how levelling up is delivered across Whitehall raises doubts about whether the policy can be successfully delivered.”
The Committee’s report highlights that local authorities have seen revenue funding from central Government significantly reduced since 2010 and notes that levelling up funds generally do not replace grant funding because they are capital not revenue and that they cover specific projects rather than necessarily covering the priorities of the local authorities.
The report recommends that, as a starting principle, local authorities who most require prioritising within the Levelling Up policy should be allocated money through revenue to achieve objectives in line with their local circumstances and need.
The report recommends a change in approach within DLUHC and across Government when it comes to funding for levelling up to ensure that local authorities are given the flexibility to use allocated funds in the most effective way they can. The report calls on DLUHC to move away from an overemphasis on bid and judgement-based funding pots which may impede effective local decision-making.
The report notes that competitive bidding is a resource intensive and costly activity for councils and makes a series of recommendations for reform, pressing the Government to follow through on its commitment to simplify funding streams and reduce requirements to access competitive funding pots.
The Committee’s report notes, in contradiction to DLUHC’s evidence, that Devolved Governments in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland pointed to a stark lack of meaningful consultation and engagement on the creation, compatibility, and implementation of levelling up funds including the UK Shared Prosperity Fund.
The report emphasises concern at the lack of consideration by DLUHC for the circumstances in which the Northern Ireland Executive and its officials operate. The report calls on DLUHC to ensure that, in future, officials in Northern Ireland can engage through the provisions set out at a devolved level with the DLUHC, including in the absence of an Executive.
Cllr Kevin Bentley, Chairman of the Local Government Association’s People and Places Board, said: “Levelling up has the potential to transform people’s lives and livelihoods, with councils best placed to make this happen.
“This should be locally led by evidence of where crucial investment needs to go to, not based on costly competitive bids between areas, as this important report confirms.
“Awarding relatively small pots of cash is not a sustainable approach to economic development or public service delivery. It also falls short of the challenge set out by the Levelling Up White Paper and the ambitions of local leaders for their residents and places.
“The Government can boost local sustainable productivity and save money, by building on the White Paper’s commitment to streamline the long list of individual local growth funds. It should also commit to providing better information about total public spending in a local area, to support a greater co-ordinated approach across government and with local leaders.
“Greater powers for councils with local and national support, without them needing to negotiate costly funding competitions, will also help make levelling up a reality.”
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