Chancellor George Osborne hailed the ‘unstoppable momentum’ in the drive to strike devolution deals with cities and regions, as Tees Valley on Friday (23 October 2015) became the latest area to make a historic agreementwith the government to take on new powers.
The agreement delivers another significant boost to the Northern Powerhouse as the Chancellor and Northern Powerhouse Minister James Wharton signed a deal with the Shadow Tees Valley Combined Authority.
Voters will choose a directly elected Mayor in 2017, who will take on a raft of new powers as part of plans to take power out of Whitehall and hand it back to local people.
The deal presents a significant financial boost for Tees Valley who will receive £15 million a year over the next 30 years with a new Investment Fund being set up thanks to a guaranteed £450 million from the government. Local leaders will have the potential to grow the fund with investments over this period.
The new Mayor for the region will oversee a range of powers devolved from government and the Chancellor announced recently that Mayors will also have the power, if they have the support of the local business community, to raise business rates to help fund new infrastructure, enabling them to build for their city’s future.
The Tees Valley deal provides for the transfer of significant powers for employment and skills, transport, planning and investment from central government to the region. It enables the Combined Authority to create its Investment Fund, through the 30 year initial allocation of funding for capital financing of at least £15 million a year and it will in addition have access to the Local Growth Fund and will benefit from new Enterprise Zones, subject to the current bidding round.
Today’s announcement, alongside a similar deal also being announced in the North East, brings the number of city regions across the north signing up to game-changing mayoral devolution deals to four, with Greater Manchester and Sheffield also creating powerful new metro Mayors.
The deal requires support from each of the local councils within the region, as was the case with previous deals to Sheffield and Greater Manchester.
Devolution deals underline the government’s commitment building a Northern Powerhouse to help rebalance the economy and ending the old model of running everything out of London.
Chancellor George Osborne said:
Teesside leaders have today joined the unstoppable momentum of devolution and once again they show that the Northern Powerhouse is leading the way. Today’s deal is brilliant news for Tees Valley and means that civic leaders here will take control of their own affairs in a way that would have been unthinkable even just a few years ago.
Rebalancing our economy and giving local leaders the power to manage their own affairs is a key part of our long term plan and I want to thank the leaders across Tees Valley for their hard work in reaching this historic agreement.
Northern Powerhouse Minister James Wharton said:
Today’s Tees Valley deal marks yet another example of Teesside leading the way. It means local people will have a direct say over the support available to boost jobs and skills, and to encourage new businesses to start, grow and prosper.
We have listened to local people and are devolving significant resources and powers from the banks of the Thames back home to where they belong on the banks of the Tees. As a proud Teessider, I very much look forward to seeing how we use this deal to make our ambitions a reality.
Chair of the Shadow Combined Authority and Leader of Redcar and Cleveland Borough Council Sue Jeffrey said:
I’m pleased that the government has put a devolution deal on the table and if it is agreed by all the Tees Valley councils, there is no doubt it will enable us to do more locally to strengthen our economy and secure a more sustainable future for the Tees Valley. Over the coming months we will be speaking to local residents and businesses about what the proposals mean for them. But we must not lose sight of the fact that while this is good news, there is still an immediate need to focus on actions to help the shock to our borough and our people which has been caused by the current crisis at SSI.