close
close

Lancashire’s devolution deal moves forward but council leaders blast ‘breach of trust’ over who has a say

Lancashire’s devolution deal moves forward but council leaders blast ‘breach of trust’ over who has a say

A government minister will be among a delegation of Whitehall officials who will travel to Lancashire in the coming weeks to start preliminary talks over how the county can secure a long-awaited devolution deal, the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS) can reveal.

Dehenna Davison, the parliamentary under-secretary of state for Levelling Up, will join the bureaucrats making the trip to the region for the discussions during June. The meeting could prove the most significant step so far on Lancashire’s eight-year journey towards gaining the kind of extra powers and cash that have been enjoyed by its neighbours in Greater Manchester and the Liverpool City Region throughout that time.

However, South Ribble and Preston’s leaders have blasted the basis for the gathering after Lancashire County Council revealed that it would be putting on the table the creation of a combined county authority (CCA). That is a new entity to oversee devolution arrangements in areas like Lancashire, where local government functions are split between county and district councils and there is no appetite to install an elected mayor.

READ MORE: Laughing one-punch killer who sent gloating texts after attacking victim to have ‘unduly lenient’ sentence reviewed

Under government rules, only so-called top-tier councils can be members of a CCA – in Lancashire’s case, that would mean just the county council and the authorities covering Blackpool and Blackburn with Darwen would sit at the top table.

Lancashire’s dozen district councils would not be part of the formal set-up, although County Hall leader Phillippa Willaimson has said that she is committed to ensuring that they nevertheless have “a voice”.

While the majority of district leaders are so far keeping their powder dry over the plans – at least in public – the response from some in Central Lancashire points towards the re-opening of the divisions that have dogged Lancashire’s devolution attempts for the best part of a decade.

See also  First look inside Darwen Cricket Club after £250,000 refurb
  • June 1, 2023