- Deal includes regeneration and levelling up package and more
local control over transport, regeneration, skills and culture
- Greater Manchester to take control of local spending with new
funding settlement alongside local retention of business rates
- Shift of powers and funding from Whitehall to an English
region takes devolution to new level
Levelling Up Minister and Greater Manchester
Mayor Andy , along with the ten local council
Leaders, have today (21 March) signed a landmark deeper
devolution deal for Greater Manchester, marking a seismic shift
in power, funding and responsibility from Whitehall to the
region.
The deal puts more cash and power in the hands of local leaders
to invest in the priorities that local communities truly care
about, such as better bus and train services, skills and housing.
A new long-term funding settlement will enable the Mayor and the
Combined Authority to plan for the long term, with certainty, and
unlock tangible benefits for almost 3 million people living in
the area.
Levelling Up Minister said:
I’m proud to have agreed a historic and trailblazing new
devolution deal with the Greater Manchester Combined Authority,
providing the Mayor with more powers, money and an even greater
say on how this iconic region is run.
This is the very essence of devolution – leaders taking decisions
and being accountable to the communities they serve.
Covering everything from Bee Network buses to affordable home
building, this deal will give leaders the opportunity to deliver
economic growth, better services and high quality jobs for people
in Greater Manchester.
Greater Manchester Mayor said:
I’m really pleased to welcome Levelling Up Minister to Greater Manchester to
sign what is the seventh devolution deal for our city-region -
but this is by some way the deepest. This Deal takes devolution
in the city-region further and faster than ever before, giving us
more ability to improve the lives of people who live and work
here.
I have always been a passionate believer in the power of
devolution, and I’ve been in the privileged position of being
able to exercise those powers and make a positive difference to
people’s lives.
We’ve worked hard to secure this Deal and have achieved a
significant breakthrough by gaining greater control over post-16
technical education, setting us firmly on the path to become the
UK’s first technical education city-region; new levers and
responsibilities to achieve fully integrated public transport
including rail through the Bee Network by 2030; new
responsibilities over housing that will allow us to crack down on
rogue landlords and control over £150m brownfield funding; and a
single block grant that will allow us to go further and faster in
growing our economy, reducing inequalities and providing
opportunities for all.
With more power comes the need for great accountability and I
welcome the strengthened arrangements announced in the Deal.
We will continue to engage with government moving forward on
other areas we’d like to see more local control over in the
future which will help us to continue to improve life for people
in Greater Manchester and those visiting. For now, our focus will
be on getting ready to take on the new powers and be held to
account on the decisions we will be making on behalf of the
people of Greater Manchester. The signing of this deal marks a
new era for English devolution.
The deal confirmed today deepens existing powers which have
already delivered significant wins for the region. New measures
include:
- A new long-term funding settlement, including the right to
retain 100% of business rates for 10 years and 25-year business
rate retention in designated growth zones.
- A wide-ranging partnership with Homes England, with a
commitment to work towards investing £400m in Greater Manchester
by 2026.
- Further support for regeneration and infrastructure with
£150m of brownfield funding, £3.9 million to eliminate the use of
bed and breakfast accommodation for homeless families in Greater
Manchester and £10 million to support levelling up and growth
priorities for Greater Manchester.
- A new rail partnership with Great British Railways to support
the delivery of the Bee Network by 2030.
- New ‘pay as you go’ ticketing pilots across the region and
better integration of local stations.
- More oversight and control over adult skills funding and more
responsibility over developing and delivering careers advice.
- Devolution of funding to retrofit buildings, to bring down
energy bills for households across Greater Manchester.
- A new partnership with national arts and culture
organisations to harness Greater Manchester’s globally renowned
cultural strengths.
- Tools to support the roll-out of high-speed broadband across
the region.
Alongside these powers, a new framework will ensure that
decision-makers in areas with devolution deals are accountable to
their residents and deliver value for money, with a clear ladder
of intervention to respond to underperformance.
The milestone comes days after Greater Manchester was announced
as one of 12 new Investment Zone areas backed with £80 million
over five years including generous tax incentives to drive local
growth.