Town Regeneration 2020-11-16
2020-11-16
TAGS
Response quality
Questions & Answers
Q1
Direct Answer
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Context
The questioner asks about steps being taken to support regeneration in towns, emphasizing the need for action due to ongoing impacts from COVID-19.
What steps he is taking to support regeneration in towns as covid-19 continues to impact communities?
We are witnessing a profound reshaping of our towns and high streets as covid-19 continues to have a very significant impact on our communities. Our towns fund is investing £3.6 billion in an initial 100 towns, which will help to renew town centres and high streets across the country. In September, all 101 towns received their share of over £80 million to help deliver immediate improvements, and I was pleased to announce the first seven comprehensive town deals last month, with further deals and the results of the future high streets competition being announced very shortly.
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Assessment & feedback
Response accuracy
Q2
Direct Answer
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Context
Uttoxeter, a market town in the constituency of Kate Griffiths, is poised for growth according to its local plan. The questioner seeks a meeting with Robert Jenrick to discuss potential regeneration opportunities.
Will my right hon. Friend meet me to discuss the potential that the regeneration of Uttoxeter town centre offers and how we can ensure it meets the needs of those who live and work in the area as the population increases?
My hon. Friend has the privilege of representing a historic market town in Staffordshire that I know well, and she is absolutely right to say that covid-19 presents great opportunities for the repurposing of offices and retail. We need to seize that moment and ensure that we get more housing in our town centres. That is the way that we will drive footfall, and we will turn empty shops into thriving homes. We have already put in place new planning reforms to enable people to do just that, as well as to demolish vacant buildings and turn them into housing, and we will continue to find new flexibilities in the months and years ahead to do just that.
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Assessment & feedback
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Q3
Direct Answer
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Context
Blyth, a constituency represented by Ian Levy, has applied for funds from the high streets fund and the towns fund. The questioner requests assurance that efforts will be made to support the regeneration of Blyth.
Will my right hon. Friend assure me that he will do all he can to help the people of Blyth in the Conservative aim to level up? Let's build back better.
My hon. Friend is absolutely right. Blyth is one of the initial places chosen to develop proposals for the towns fund and for the future high streets fund, and we recently provided £750,000 to make immediate improvements to Bowes Street. I was also pleased that, as part of our £900 million getting building fund, two projects in Blyth are seeing investment from the Government, including £2.6 million for the creation of the UK's first offshore wind centre for robotics. So, from improving one of the town's historic streets to green jobs for the future, the Government are investing in new opportunities for Blyth.
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Assessment & feedback
Response accuracy
Q4
Direct Answer
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Context
Bolton's average number of visits per person has fallen by 37% over the last four years, with vacancies and crime increasing. The questioner requests efforts to reverse this trend.
Can my right Friend assure my residents that the Government will make efforts to reverse this trend by encouraging growth in the markets of the future?
I certainly can. We have taken a number of steps throughout the pandemic to help small businesses, particularly in retail and hospitality, so that when, as we hope and expect, the national measures are eased on 2 December, it will be easier for those businesses to move forward. I was pleased last week to announce that I am extending the right that allows pubs, restaurants and cafés to provide takeaway services until March 2022. I have also extended the option for local authorities, such as the council in Bolton, to host outdoor markets and events, and for businesses such as pubs to use their land temporarily without planning permission, for example for marquees in pub gardens.
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Assessment & feedback
Response accuracy
Q5
Partial Answer
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Context
The long-term trend of reduced demand for office space due to the likely response to covid is expected to impact future approaches to distributing housing numbers.
Given that the likely response to covid will mean that office space is needed much less in the future, and that that is likely to be a long-term trend, does my right hon. Friend agree that that should have a profound impact on the algorithmic distribution of housing numbers anticipated by the planning White Paper?
My hon. Friend makes an important point. We are seeing the most substantial change to our city centres and town centres since the second world war, and that does give us pause for reflection. We now need to consider what the opportunities will be for the repurposing of offices as residential and for turning retail into mixed use, and that will, I think, lead us to a different approach to distributing housing numbers across the country. The consultation that he refers to has closed; we are considering the responses, and I will make a statement on that in the weeks ahead.
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Assessment & feedback
specific changes or commitments related to office space repurposing for residential use
Giving Pause For Reflection
Considering The Responses
Response accuracy