Northern leaders urge Government to work with them after new lockdown rules leaked to media

Northern leaders are urging the Government to work with them to ensure the North does not experience the same "scarring effects we saw in the 1980's" during the coronavirus pandemic.
Watch more of our videos on Shots! 
and live on Freeview channel 276
Visit Shots! now

It comes after Government plans to impose harsh lockdown measures across the North were leaked to the media without local leaders being told.

Strict plans to close pubs and restaurants across the north were reported in The Times on Thursday, October 8.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Now the Convention of the North and NP11 are urging the Government to work with them on a joint plan of action for a more localised approach to lockdown restrictions.

The Convention of the North and NP11 outlined a detailed plan for a more localised approach to lockdown restrictions.The Convention of the North and NP11 outlined a detailed plan for a more localised approach to lockdown restrictions.
The Convention of the North and NP11 outlined a detailed plan for a more localised approach to lockdown restrictions.

The plans call for urgent dialogue between mayors, local leaders and Government before any restrictions are agreed.

They also call for greater transparency about the evidence that restrictions are based on.

The plans urge the government to create a tailor financial support package for local businesses, organisations and employers affected by local lockdowns.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Devolved financial and human resources are also urged so local leaders can create an integrated and localised Track and Trace system.

A Convention of the North and NP11 spokesman said the action is needed to safeguard the Northern communities, protect local economies and avert mass job losses and business closures.

The statement reads: "In the face of the recent surge in COVID-19 infection rates across the UK, northern leaders and businesses have come together to call for urgent dialogue with the government on a joint plan of action.

"As leaders of councils and business-led Local Enterprise Partnerships across the north, we are deeply concerned about the rapidly growing health and economic impacts of the pandemic, and we want to work with government to jointly devise a path forward that protects our communities and economies.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

"We support restrictions where these are effective at reducing the spread of the virus, but we want to see these kept to a minimum, both in scope and duration, and we need greater transparency about the evidence on which they are based.

"The unclear and inconsistent rationale underpinning measures like the 10pm curfew is causing widespread confusion, hitting local businesses but also having potentially unintended and harmful health impacts. This risks undermining the concerted national effort that the Prime Minister is calling for.

It added: "As we head into what will be a challenging winter, government must now engage with the north to create a more effective response.

"This is a moment of great fragility for our local economies. The partial recovery we saw in the summer is already at risk of evaporating, as we face further restrictions and the end of furlough.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

"The north has been doubly hard hit by COVID-19, having to bear the lion's share of local restrictions, and suffering a harsher economic impact - jeopardising the UK's future wellbeing and economic prosperity.

"Both the Convention of the North with NP11 and government want to ensure that this does not generate the scarring effects on people and communities that we saw in the 1980's.

"That’s why we are united in our commitment to levelling up. The immediate challenge is to avert mass job losses and business closures.

"We now need urgent and far-reaching action to prevent a permanent and devastating levelling down effect.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

"We need urgent, co-ordinated action to safeguard our communities and to protect our local economies from falling over. "

The Convention of the North and NP11 plan of action in full:

"1. An urgent dialogue between mayors, local leaders and government to agree the basis of any new system of local restrictions, including any potential tiered framework for local lockdown. This should include the full sharing of data and evidence that underpins the case for any further restrictions. No decisions should be made or announced before this has happened.

"2. A financial support package for places, businesses, organisations and employees. This should be tailored to the severity of the restrictions, and their likely impacts on specific sectors, as well as on local jobs.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

"It should support affected businesses to remain viable and to be able to adapt to COVID-19 and support people to remain in work.

"Measures should include full financial support for those employees who need to isolate, local extensions of furlough support for at-risk sectors and workers where their place of work is closed by government, enhancing and extending the COVID-19 business grant scheme, and local retraining and reskilling employment support packages for at-risk employees.

"3. An integrated and localised test and trace system that uses vital local knowledge and respects diverse community needs, as well as local control of infection rate monitoring. Devolved financial and human resources will be essential to ensure an effective system is implemented.

"4. Clear and consistent communication between the north leaders, mayors and government, where business voices are heard, and northern leaders and mayors act as the main channels of communication with the public and as the system’s leaders, coordinating and managing interventions in their local areas.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

"5. A pathway that goes beyond lockdown with ideas to help businesses in vulnerable sectors manage and adapt to COVID-19 transition.

"Given the importance of critical retail and hospitality milestones like Christmas, we want to be able to help local businesses plan and innovate within a rational framework of town and city centre management. This could include an Innovation Fund to support the development of localised COVID-19 Kitemark schemes for hospitality businesses linked to innovation in safety and outdoor provision."