PM launches £1.1bn town regeneration fund
More than 50 towns will each get a £20m “endowment-style” fund for regeneration projects as part of a £1.1bn government package.
The Long-Term Plan for Towns, announced at the Conservative Party Conference in Manchester, will hand out the cash over 10 years to 55 towns that have been “overlooked and taken for granted”.
As well as the funding, which will need to be supported by a long-term plan, the towns will set up town boards, bringing together community leaders, employers, local authorities and local MPs.
More than 50 towns will each get a £20m “endowment-style” fund for regeneration projects as part of a £1.1bn government package.
The Long-Term Plan for Towns, announced at the Conservative Party Conference in Manchester, will hand out the cash over 10 years to 55 towns that have been “overlooked and taken for granted”.
As well as the funding, which will need to be supported by a long-term plan, the towns will set up town boards, bringing together community leaders, employers, local authorities and local MPs.
They will be encouraged to use a suite of regeneration powers to unlock more private sector investment by auctioning empty high street shops, reforming licensing rules on shops and restaurants, and supporting more housing in town centres.
The towns chosen include six in the North East, 10 in the North West and four in the West Midlands, as well as seven in Scotland and four in Wales.
Prime minister Rishi Sunak said: “Towns are the place most of us call home and where most of us go to work. But politicians have always taken towns for granted and focused on cities. The result is the half-empty high streets, run-down shopping centres and antisocial behaviour that undermine many towns’ prosperity and hold back people’s opportunity – and without a new approach, these problems will only get worse.”
He added: “That changes today. Our Long-Term Plan for Towns puts funding in the hands of local people themselves to invest in line with their priorities, over the long term. That is how we level up.”
The government has also announced a new Towns Taskforce, sitting in the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities and reporting directly to the PM and the levelling up secretary. A new High Streets and Towns Task Force will also be established.
The towns receiving funding are:
Mansfield
Boston
Worksop
Skegness
Newark-on-Trent
Chesterfield
Clifton (Nottingham)
Spalding
Kirkby-in-Ashfield
Clacton-on-Sea
Great Yarmouth
Eston
Jarrow
Washington
Blyth (Northumberland)
Hartlepool
Spennymoor
Darwen
Chadderton
Heywood
Ashton-under-Lyne
Accrington
Leigh (Wigan)
Farnworth
Nelson (Pendle)
Kirkby
Burnley
Hastings
Bexhill-on-Sea
Ryde
Torquay
Smethwick
Darlaston
Bilston (Wolverhampton)
Dudley (Dudley)
Grimsby
Castleford
Doncaster
Rotherham
Barnsley
Scunthorpe
Keighley
Dewsbury
Scarborough
Merthyr Tydfil
Cwmbrân
Wrexham
Barry (Vale of Glamorgan)
Greenock
Irvine
Kilmarnock
Coatbridge
Clydebank
Dumfries
Elgin
To send feedback, e-mail piers.wehner@eg.co.uk or tweet @PiersWehner or @EGPropertyNews
Photo by Wiktor Szymanowicz/Shutterstock (14014859c)