WHITEHALL

Councils prepared to lose cash after Brexit

Council negotiators have resigned themselves to taking a financial hit from Brexit as they continue talks with ministers, The MJ understands.

Council negotiators have resigned themselves to taking a financial hit from Brexit as they continue talks with ministers, The MJ understands.

The Treasury has guaranteed that EU structural and investment projects that are signed before Brexit will continue to be funded ‘provided they represent good value for money and are in line with the UK's strategic objectives'.

This includes £5.3bn EU structural funds allocated to local areas for the 2014 to 2020 programming period.

However, chief executive of the Northern Ireland Local Government Association (NILGA), Derek McCallan, has admitted that council negotiators would not be asking the Government for the same amount of funding after Brexit.

Speaking after a meeting of the Local Government Association's (LGA) Brexit task and finish group in London last week, Mr McCallan said demanding that the funding should continue in full would not be the ‘basis of any rational negotiation'.

He added: ‘We need to concentrate on the funding that achieves the biggest net impact.

'We need to start preparing contingency plans.'

NILGA is also keen to maintain a link with the European Investment Bank (EIB) after Brexit and is expected to press the case in Brussels next week.

Mr McCallan said: ‘The EIB and other European-wide lenders are open to discussions, though there may be changes to the terms and they way they lend.'

LGA vice-president, Andrew Lewer, who has met communities secretary Sajid Javid to discuss the future of the EIB, said he understood the UK government was ‘not ruling out' future participation in the bank.

WHITEHALL

Radical thinking for real solutions

By Rob Miller | 17 July 2024

Rob Miller argues councils need to remember their innovative past and sets out his five crucial steps for empowering local authorities to seize the challeng...

WHITEHALL

It's time to rewrite the social contract

By Tess Godley | 16 July 2024

There are tools to address the challenges facing public services without big spending commitments. Tess Godley calls for more social outcomes contracts

WHITEHALL

PFI troubles ahead

By Caroline Mostowfi | 16 July 2024

Caroline Mostowfi outlines the challenges of Private Finance Initiative expiry and why it is time for councils to act now to proactively influence the way th...

WHITEHALL

Matching up to a new Government

By Paul Marinko | 16 July 2024

New LGA chair Louise Gittins tells Paul Marinko how she plans to pick up the pace to net the sector’s key asks of Sir Keir Starmer’s new administration

Dan Peters

Popular articles by Dan Peters