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Home > News > Work and enterprise key priorities for Newcastle and Gateshead

Work and enterprise key priorities for Newcastle and Gateshead

Published: Mon, 30 Jun 2008 13:18:10

Encouraging more entrepreneurs to set up in business and getting out-of-work teenagers back into education and training will be two of the most important tasks for Newcastle/Gateshead in the next three years.

All local authorities in the area - North Tyneside, Newcastle, Gateshead and Sunderland - will be giving these issues special attention alongside a drive to reduce assaults and specific efforts to ensure local people feel they have influence over decisions for their area.

Every local area in England has now agreed its own set of priorities with central government and must devote resources, time and effort to tackling the challenges that will improve the lives of local people in their areas. Extra cash will be available to the highest performing councils. Local people will also be able to see what their council has chosen to prioritise at www.localpriorities.communities.gov.uk

Called Local Area Agreements (LAAs) - local authorities have worked with local service providers such as the Police and Jobcentre Plus to identify key priorities individual to each area.

Nick Brown MP, Regional Minister for the North East said:

I congratulate Councillor Mick Henry and Councillor John Shipley on the agreement that has now been made with central government for Gateshead and Newcastle. The agreement identifies priorities and brings extra money to Gateshead and Newcastle. Cooperation between Gateshead and Newcastle is benefiting both.

Hazel Blears MP, Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government, said:

"These new local priorities mean that councils and their partners can concentrate their efforts on the specific needs of the local people they serve. The prizes are enormous: better, more locally relevant public services, a higher quality of life and ultimately more prosperity in communities across the country.

"If knowledge is power, then this is more power to local people. They will be able to see exactly what local government and service providers plan to do in their area, check out how well they are doing, and ask questions if they have not delivered. This means less red tape and more freedom for local authorities to deliver what local people want."

Progress will be tracked by independent auditors and results published, so any need for improvement can be identified quickly and local authorities and service providers be held to account by local people.

The chosen priorities in every local area in Newcastle and Gateshead can be viewed 30 June at: www.localpriorities.communities.gov.uk


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