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Economic Development

Chairman appointed to lead new Hull and East Yorkshire LEP

East Riding resident James Newman OBE has spearheaded Sheffield City Region emergence

James Newman OBE will take the lead role for the North Bank of the Humber as chairman of the new Hull and East Yorkshire LEP.

Hull and East Riding has turned to South Yorkshire for a new chairman of the emerging Local Enterprise Partnership.

James Newman OBE, founding chair of the Sheffield City Region LEP has been appointed ahead of the April 1 launch.

He oversaw it from new entity in 2010, under David Cameron’s Conservative-Lib Dem coalition abolition of regional development agencies, to the signing of one of the first city devolution deals in October 2015.

An East Riding resident, he is currently chair of Finance Yorkshire and the South Yorkshire Community Foundation and has a number of other business and charitable roles, nationally and in Yorkshire.

Mr Newman said: “I am delighted to have been given this opportunity to take this role. The creation of this LEP marks the beginning of a new era for the region and I look forward to working with both the leaders, their councils, the business community and voluntary sector to create a successful partnership, which will bring more funding to the region, allowing our strategically important industries and all our businesses to drive economic growth, which will benefit the region and all its employees and communities.

“It will also be important to make sure we continue the excellent work of the current Humber LEP and work closely with our colleagues across the Humber Estuary, where our combined assets and expertise are of national importance.”

“Our first task will be to recruit a new board for the LEP, alongside other advisory boards and committees, so as to ensure the new LEP is ready to start its important role as soon as possible.”

It has come to being after the government ruled local authorities could not sit in two LEP areas. Previously North and North East Lincolnshire councils had been in the Humber LEP with Hull and East Yorkshire. The South Bank pairing was also part of Greater Lincolnshire LEP, with whom their allegiances were pledged when the Westminster directive emerged.