Devolution For The Regions - Gtr Manchester

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jrb

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It might finally be happening properly?

The first government meeting with mayors to discuss "shifting power out of Westminster" towards the regions will take place on Tuesday, the new deputy prime minister has said.

England's regional mayors are due to meet with Angela Rayner, who is also communities secretary, and Prime Minister Keir Starmer at 10 Downing Street where they will discuss "a major programme of devolution", the government said.

Ms Rayner said "for too long" Westminster has "tightly gripped control" and "held back opportunities for towns, cities and villages across the UK".

In the meeting, local mayors will be asked to identify local specialisms which could contribute to a "national industrial strategy".

Ms Rayner said the new government is focused on "a full reset of our relationship with local government".

 
It might finally be happening properly?

The first government meeting with mayors to discuss "shifting power out of Westminster" towards the regions will take place on Tuesday, the new deputy prime minister has said.

England's regional mayors are due to meet with Angela Rayner, who is also communities secretary, and Prime Minister Keir Starmer at 10 Downing Street where they will discuss "a major programme of devolution", the government said.

Ms Rayner said "for too long" Westminster has "tightly gripped control" and "held back opportunities for towns, cities and villages across the UK".

In the meeting, local mayors will be asked to identify local specialisms which could contribute to a "national industrial strategy".

Ms Rayner said the new government is focused on "a full reset of our relationship with local government".

Probably should be in the politics forum.
 
It might finally be happening properly?

The first government meeting with mayors to discuss "shifting power out of Westminster" towards the regions will take place on Tuesday, the new deputy prime minister has said.

England's regional mayors are due to meet with Angela Rayner, who is also communities secretary, and Prime Minister Keir Starmer at 10 Downing Street where they will discuss "a major programme of devolution", the government said.

Ms Rayner said "for too long" Westminster has "tightly gripped control" and "held back opportunities for towns, cities and villages across the UK".

In the meeting, local mayors will be asked to identify local specialisms which could contribute to a "national industrial strategy".

Ms Rayner said the new government is focused on "a full reset of our relationship with local government".

Would this include construction of a new Swamp?
 
Be careful what you wish for, remember Burnham thought a lower emissions charge for greater Manchester was a good idea. When it would just be a further tax on numerous small struggling businesses.


Clean Air Zones is a Tory Policy that should have been implemented across 5 major conurbations by 2020 .

Burnham , Khan etc are simply doing what they have been told...... shame the Conservatives had to weaponise their own legislation.

 
Clean Air Zones is a Tory Policy that should have been implemented across 5 major conurbations by 2020 .

Burnham , Khan etc are simply doing what they have been told...... shame the Conservatives had to weaponise their own legislation.

Didn't they chop a load of trees down to put the signs up and then put the scheme under review so the signs were made pointless? At least our money isn't being wasted eh?
 
Clean Air Zones is a Tory Policy that should have been implemented across 5 major conurbations by 2020 .

Burnham , Khan etc are simply doing what they have been told...... shame the Conservatives had to weaponise their own legislation.

That is true but Burnham defended the scheme several times, it was also clear in his interviews that he was in charge of its geographical extent, which could have been much smaller if needed and still met the clean air obligations and he also quite obviously didn't understand the impact it would have on many small businesses. At times he looks woefully out of his depth.
 
That is true but Burnham defended the scheme several times, it was also clear in his interviews that he was in charge of its geographical extent, which could have been much smaller if needed and still met the clean air obligations and he also quite obviously didn't understand the impact it would have on many small businesses. At times he looks woefully out of his depth.
What have you got against clean air?
 
How do they expect to formulate a national industrial strategy if they just let the regions decide where funds are to be directed to and what industries should be supported?

Just sounds like a load of meaningless guff to me. Is Andy Burnham really the best person to make these decisions, rather than people with proper experience in commerce?
 
Nothing at all. But you need to see the wider implications of this huge scheme on thousands of small struggling businesses in the greater Manchester area.
If London is anything to go by, 95% of vehicles are compliant anyway, and if a tradesman has to pay an extra tenner a day, he’ll just add it on to the already exorbitant bill that the consumer will have to pay. This mythical impact on business is way overblown as far as I can make out.
 
How do they expect to formulate a national industrial strategy if they just let the regions decide where funds are to be directed to and what industries should be supported?

Just sounds like a load of meaningless guff to me. Is Andy Burnham really the best person to make these decisions, rather than people with proper experience in commerce?

Bev Craig - leader of our council - her expertise is having worked in a Chinese takeaway - i kid you not. Her CV makes Raynor look like a space scientist.
 
That is true but Burnham defended the scheme several times, it was also clear in his interviews that he was in charge of its geographical extent, which could have been much smaller if needed and still met the clean air obligations and he also quite obviously didn't understand the impact it would have on many small businesses. At times he looks woefully out of his depth.
I've never run a business and I wouldn't deign to tell anyone how to do it. Politicians come across a staggering range of situations and it's never stopped them telling those involved how to do it. They are experts in the 'political fix' which often never analyses how a system will work in its entirety. They are intent on having it go ahead as it meets a political aim.
 
Bev Craig - leader of our council - her expertise is having worked in a Chinese takeaway - i kid you not. Her CV makes Raynor look like a space scientist.
Yes but she’s got a degree. I thought that’s all that mattered as far as you’re concerned judging by the amount you went on about Rayner’s NVQ.
 
If London is anything to go by, 95% of vehicles are compliant anyway, and if a tradesman has to pay an extra tenner a day, he’ll just add it on to the already exorbitant bill that the consumer will have to pay. This mythical impact on business is way overblown as far as I can make out.
As always the world is not as simple as this.
 
If London is anything to go by, 95% of vehicles are compliant anyway, and if a tradesman has to pay an extra tenner a day, he’ll just add it on to the already exorbitant bill that the consumer will have to pay. This mythical impact on business is way overblown as far as I can make out.
What is your experience in this area, do you run a small business with vehicles?
 
Bev Craig - leader of our council - her expertise is having worked in a Chinese takeaway - i kid you not. Her CV makes Raynor look like a space scientist.

I guess the others must be non-jobs in your world.

She graduated from Manchester University in 2007 with a degree in politics and modern history and later gaining a postgraduate in Local Government Management from Warwick Business School and a MA in public policy and governance from UoM, both whilst working full time. She has held a range of jobs across local government, higher education and working for the trade union UNISON.

Before she was appointed as deputy leader of the council in May 2021, she spent four years as executive member for adult services, health, wellbeing and inclusion. She was also deputy chair of Manchester Health and Care Commissioning and co-chair of the Manchester Local Care Organisation
 

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