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Economic Development

Town deal pilot authority chief backs levelling-up call for devolved five-year infrastructure budgets

New compact sought 'between Whitehall and town hall' with £6b figure for outside London projects stressed to government

North East Lincolnshire council chief executive Rob Walsh has given his insight to the National Infrastructure Commission, who chose the borough to launch levelling up recommendations in a new report, Infrastructure, Towns and Regeneration, for Secretary of State Michael Gove's team to consider. Grimsby was the Town Deal pilot and learnings were heard. Main image, Mark Booth, training and delivery manager at Catch, left, and chief executive David Talbot, second right, welcome National Infrastructure commissioners Neale Coleman and Bridget Rosewell, alongside Sir John Armitt, chair of the National Infrastructure Commission and James Heath, chief executive, to the site.(Image: Jon Corken Photography / Reach Plc / PA)

The chief executive of the local authority granted the first ever town deal has endorsed calls for a “new compact between Whitehall and town hall” with a five-year infrastructure budget at its heart.

Rob Walsh oversees the civic administration of North East Lincolnshire, within which the port town of Grimsby sits.

Three years ago it became the pilot for an ambitious new relationship between central and local government, building on the regeneration led by offshore wind sailing into the void left by deep sea fishing’s long-mourned departure.

Read more: Full recommendations from National Infrastructure Commission to level-up from Grimsby launch

Endorsing the National Infrastructure Commission’s levelling-up recommendations - launched in the borough by chair Sir John Armitt, with Cabinet Office eyes on the report-issuing event, he told how money had been pulled in, but a sought-after special relationship hadn’t emerged as envisaged.

And underlining how useful a share of a proposed £6 billion for out-of-London areas would be as it steers the Humber Freeport as accountable body, Mr Walsh said: “The first Town Deal was a huge moment for us, we had invested in the development of a relationship with government that served to heighten wider awareness of the huge economic opportunities in this part of the world and also the challenges we have faced over a multi-generational period.

“That Town Deal was founded on four very clear and still very relevant areas of focus: providing economic growth; accelerating housing delivery; town centre and port regeneration and education and skills.

“The infrastructure theme is permeating all of those to some extent. Crucially for us it was always about a lot more than money; our early dialogue and engagements with government centred more on our aspiration to have a single conversation with government to support those areas of focus. One department, acting as the de facto conduit into wider government, with knowledge, wider awareness and understanding of the Grimsby ambition and Grimsby story. That was the idea we aimed for. The Town Deal and the role of the Ministry for Housing, Communities and Local Government, as was, to act as the umbrella for any funding, freedoms and flexibilities that would come our way to support local regeneration, investment and growth.