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Leeds v Sheffield arena row erupts



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Published Date: 17 November 2008
A row has broken out over Yorkshire Forward's support for the new concert arena planned for Leeds.

City council bosses want the Government-backed regional development agency to foot part of the multi-million pound bill for the 12,500-seater complex. But that prospect has been greeted with dismay by politicians in Sheffield, who fear the facility could damage trade at their city's existing arena.

They claim it would be inappropriate for Yorkshire Forward to invest public funds in a project that favours one part of the county over another, as its brief is to improve the economy of the Broad Acres as a whole.

WILL AN ARENA IN LEEDS HARM SHEFFIELD? HAVE YOUR SAY BY CLICKING HERE - WE'LL PUBLISH THE LOT

Sheffield MP Clive Betts (Lab, Attercliffe) is now ready to lobby the agency against ploughing money into the Leeds scheme.

He said: "There is no justification for it and I'll be asking Yorkshire Forward to think through what they are doing."

Yorkshire Forward said it was confident the Leeds proposals WOULD benefit the region as a whole.

It also stressed that although it backed the arena "in principle," it had yet to decide whether to invest in the project. A spokeswoman said it hoped to make a decision early next year on what, if any, financial support to offer.

Council bosses in Leeds announced earlier this month that their preferred location for the arena was Clay Pit Lane, on the northern outskirts of the city centre.

The local authority also revealed it intended to build the complex itself, rather than use a private developer.

It says taking direct charge of the job should help it ensure the public sector contribution to the scheme does not rise above £30m.

Senior council sources have previously said they are "hopeful" that Yorkshire Forward will come up with a significant chunk of the public cash needed for the project. It was not clear how the scheme would go forward if the Leeds-based agency decided against investing.

Leeds is the only major northern city not to have an arena.

Experts say plugging that gap would create more than 300 jobs and generate £28m a year for the local economy.

Sheffield Arena was built in the early 1990s with Sheffield City Council cash but is now privately run. Up to 40 per cent of the people who use it are thought to come from the Leeds catchment area.

paul.robinsons@ypn.co.uk

Comment: Page 10

The full article contains 420 words and appears in EP Leeds First & County newspaper.
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  • Last Updated: 17 November 2008 10:03 AM
  • Source: EP Leeds First & County
  • Location: Leeds
 
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M Carter,

Leeds 18/11/2008 23:53:08
I agree with Clive Betts. What is the point of spending taxpayers' money on yet another arena when there is already one in Sheffield, another in Manchester and one in Gateshead/Newcastle.

Contrary to what so-called 'experts' (un-named) say, it is unlikely that any new money would be brought into the local economy by a Leeds arena - it would simply move the revenue from somewhere else (e.g. Sheffield).

The worst aspect of this proposal is the fact that the Council wants to build and own the thing itself. Not content with either owning or running virtually every major leisure activity in the City already (every theatre, for example, is owned by the Council) it obviously wants even more. So that will be more six-figure public sector salaries and pensions coming up.......and the taxpayers of Leeds footing the bill through their Council Tax.

It really has to stop.
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