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MINUTES OF THE THIRTY NINTH MEETING OF SOUTH
EAST ENGLAND DEVELOPMENT AGENCY
HELD ON THURSDAY 25 JULY 2002 AT SEEDA HEADQUARTERS, GUILDFORD
Present
Allan Willett CMG (Chairman), Professor Clive Booth (Deputy Chairman),
Cllr. Ken Bodfish OBE (Deputy Chairman), Cllr. Kit Oliver OBE
DL, Caroline Williams, Cllr. Kevin Wilson, Janis Kong OBE, James
Brathwaite CBE, Barry Camfield, Robert Douglas, Elizabeth Brighouse,
Dr Peter Read CBE, Sarah Ward OBE DL, Mary McAnally (from 14.00hrs)
Apologies for absence
Cllr. Ken Thornber CBE
In Attendance
Anthony Dunnett (Chief Executive), Paul Bevan (Chief Executive,
Regional Assembly), Jeff Alexander (Agency Secretary and Director,
Strategy and Corporate Services), Phil Bailey (SEEDA, Head of
Secretariat), Marianne Neville-Rolfe (Director, Business and International
Division), Paul Hudson (Director, Infrastructure and Regeneration)
Summary of Meeting
- The Board approved the minutes of the previous meeting.
- Noted the Declaration of interests by Members;
- Reviewed progress against the Agency's Core Output Targets;
- Noted the report by the Chairman;
- Noted the Chief Executive's update on the Hastings and Bexhill
5-point plan;
- Noted and endorsed work on the Freedom of Information Act
2000;
- Agreed that SEEDA should progress work on a partner survey;
- Ratified SEEDA's membership of Finance South East Limited;
- Approved, in principle and subject to full appraisal, the
Newhaven Enterprise Gateway;
- Discussed with the Regional Assembly, the White Paper on Regions
and the Regional Economic Strategy;
- Noted and agreed SEEDA's Transport and Environment Accountability
Plans;
- Reviewed and noted the Finance Report and various SEEDA programme
investments.
- Approved the revised Terms of Reference for the Audit Committee
and noted the record of a meeting of the Audit Committee held
on 20 June 2002.
Declaration of Interests
1. Jim Brathwaite declared an interest in item 7 - Newhaven Enterprise
Gateway - because of his involvement with Sussex Enterprise and
item 12 - Environment Accountability Plan - because he had recently
acquired a company involved in waste recycling. It was agreed
that Jim Brathwaite was not debarred from participating in the
discussion on these items.
Tier 3 Core Outputs
2. The Board received a brief presentation on the Core outputs
(Jobs created/safeguarded, Brownfield Land remediated/recycled,
Learning Opportunities and businesses created or attracted to
the region that begin trading and those sustained for 12 months).
SEEDA has now established common definitions for outputs under
various programmes.
3. A provisional assessment of progress against each target
was provided to the Board. Validation of SEEDA's achievements
is undertaken through a rigourous process involving Internal Audit
and the National Audit Office.
Chairman's Report
4. The Chairman reported to the Board on a number of issues including
various meetings: the RDA Chairs Forum, the RDA Chairs meeting
with the Chancellor, Margaret Ford, the new Chairman of English
Partnerships and meetings with Charlotte Dixon and David Shakespeare
before they stood down from their respective positions as Acting
GO-SE Regional Director and Chair of the Regional Assembly.
Comprehensive Spending Review 2002 (CSR 2002)
5. The Chairman noted that the Board would be discussing the
recent announcements later but he viewed the CSR 2002 outcome
as extremely positive for RDAs. RDA funding had been increased
by 4.5% but, more importantly, additional responsibilities had
been given to RDAs. SEEDA's own funding would not necessarily
increase by this level as it was subject to a formula approach
for allocating funding between RDAs.
Housing
6. The Chairman noted that he would be meeting the Deputy Prime
Minister on 8 August to discuss recent announcements on housing
in the South East. Members noted that Milton Keynes, Thames Gateway
and Ashford had been identified as areas to locate additional
housing and that there were many associated issues such as availability
of funding for supporting infrastructure such as schools, hospitals
roads etc. Members stressed the importance of local authorities
and communities being fully engaged in taking this forward.
Successor to SEEDA Chairman
7. The Chairman noted that the new Chairman was due to be announced
shortly.
Hastings and Bexhill
8. The Chief Executive updated Members on the development of
the 5 point plan and progress made since the Government's announcement
on 21 March 2002. In particular he stressed that SEEDA has sought
assurance from Lord Rooker, who has taken over responsibility
for regeneration from Lord Falconer at the Office of the Deputy
Prime Minister, that there will be no change in support from Government
for implementation of the 5 point plan. The Minister has agreed
to visit Hastings on 31st July.
9. Members welcomed the progress report.
Freedom of Information Act 2000
10. Members noted the paper that had been provided on how SEEDA
was responding to the requirements of the Freedom of Information
Act 2000. A 'Model' Publication Scheme was being developed by
the North West Development Agency on behalf of RDAs and SEEDA
was fully involved in the process.
Finance South East
11. The Board recalled that it had agreed at its meeting on 26
July 2001 to establish Finance South East as a company limited
by guarantee and that rigourous efforts had been made to establish
a fund of £30m. The Board now agreed that the Fund should
close at its present levels, albeit leaving open the option of
securing additional funds.
12. The Board ratified SEEDA's membership of Finance South East
Limited.
Newhaven Enterprise Gateway
13. Members noted that this was the first proposal for an enterprise
gateway to be brought to the SEEDA board. Enterprise Gateways
are a new SEEDA concept aimed at providing the same level of incubation
as enterprise hubs but targetting a broader business market which
will include businesses in deprived wards, social and community
businesses and businesses being run by ethnic minorities and women
entrepreneurs. SEEDA is in close partnership with Business Links
on Enterprise Gateways.
14. This first enterprise gateway would be based at a new incubator
centre at Denton Island. It will provide physical incubation space
and offer intensive business support to tenants and aspiring entrepreneurs
within the Newhaven area.
15. Members welcomed the concept of Enterprise Gateways and agreed
that Newhaven was an appropriate location for an Enterprise Gateway.
They stressed the importance of involving the local community
and local voluntary organisations as the project is developed
and appraised
Regional Assembly Liaison
16. The following issues were discussed:-
White Paper - Revitalising the English Region
17. Paul Bevan briefly set out the Assembly's initial views.
The Chairman emphasised that SEEDA would be contributing to a
collective RDA response and would stress the view that regionalisation
had to have demonstrable benefits for sustainable economic development
and that regions should be allowed to adopt a flexible approach.
Regional Economic Strategy Review
18. Paul Bevan referred to the discussion at the Assembly Plenary
on 17 July of the responses to SEEDA's RES Consultation document
and commented that this had been a useful process. He noted that
the Assembly had asked for a special meeting to consider the draft
RES in full once it had been developed and that this meeting had
now been arranged for 4 October.
19. Paul Bevan also noted the recent announcements on housing
in the South East and confirmed that the Assembly's Planning Committee
would be considering a response.
Transport Update and SEEDA Accountability Plan
20. The main areas of progress since the Board last considered
the Transport SAP (July 2001) were highlighted. SEEDA had made
a substantial contribution to the development of the draft Regional
Transport Strategy (RTS) and the multi modal studies (ORBIT, South
Coast, Thames Valley, South West and Wales). Members noted the
update and approved changes in the Transport accountability plan
for inclusion on SEEDA's website.
21. The Board was updated on the 'Transport Compact'. This envisaged
a solution which embraced new investment in the road and rail
infrastructure, a firm recognition of the environmental assets
of the region, restraining traffic growth, investment in public
transport and recognising the gateway role of the region's ports
and airports. The Regional Assembly has commissioned some research
which will enable the relationships between these factors to be
explored and understood.
South East England Comparator Regions Analysis
22. The Board were reminded that SEEDA had commissioned research
comparing the South East with top performing 40 regions across
Europe, North America and Asia Pacific. The original list of 40
regions included a wide range of economies and the second phase
of the project identified a list of 14 regions with similar profiles
to that of the South East, in terms of sector mix, economic structure,
and functions.
23. The Board welcomed this work and agreed to further work on
specific dimensions of inter-regional comparison should be pursued.
Review of Regional Economic Strategy (RES)
24. The overall messages of the consultation process were:-
- Overwhelming support for overall approach, and analysis of
the region;
- Smart growth endorsed as the central aim of the RES;
- Strong support for the broad thrust of policy proposals, with
no fundamental disagreements or entirely new policy directions
being proposed;
- Clearer recognition of the environment as an asset rather
than a constraint;
- More clarity required on the role of SEEDA, and of other partners;
- Fewer, more distinctive, SEEDA actions.
25. A draft strategy will be presented at the September Board
meeting and, following their consideration, a draft will be considered
by a special meeting of the Assembly on 4 October. Final approval
will be sought at the Board meeting on 17 October.
26. The Board took the opportunity to discuss a number of issues
that had arisen or been announced prior to the Board meeting:-
RDA Lead Roles
27. The Chairman explained that RDA Chairs had agreed lead roles
for each RDA. A key point was that the 'lead' rested with the
RDA, not the individual RDA Chair. SEEDA's lead areas were:-
- Manufacturing
- Competitiveness/Clusters/innovation
- Broadband/ICT/e-commerce
- Science & Research/Research Councils
- Corporate Social Responsibility
- Renewable Energy (as since confirmed)
Comprehensive Spending Review 2002 (CSR 2002)
28. The Chief Executive outlined the key proposals contained
in the CSR 2002.
RDA Budget Increase
29. Increase in RDA budgets of 4.5% per year in real terms in
the next 3 years with a budget switch of £200 million per
year from capital to revenue to help ensure the RDAs have the
right mix of funding for their evolving role.
Tourism
30. RDAs collectively given an initial £2 million per year
from the DCMS for their greater role in regional tourism promotion.
Transport - Multi Modal Study Budget Increase
31. RDAs collectively given an additional £2 million per
year from 2004-05 through DTI to play an increased role in commissioning
of multi-modal transport studies via the Regional Planning Bodies,
to ensure that transport links within and between regions support
increased productivity.
LSCs & Business Links
32. The piloting of an enhanced role for RDAs in working with
the LLSCs on Adult Learning and in the management of the SBS service
at the regional level.
Housing and Planning
33. RDAs will be invited to participate in the reforms being
made to the institutional framework on housing and planning. Increasing
the supply of affordable housing is a particular priority in the
South East and adjacent regions.
Innovation
34. £1.25 billion additional Government spending by 2005-06
compared to 2002-03 and a stronger role for the RDAs. Part of
the funding will be used to create a new enhanced Higher Education
Innovation Fund to stimulate the commercialisation of scientific
research.
35. The Board welcomed the key proposals contained in the CSR
2002. The recognized that significant additional responsibilities
had been passed to RDAs and that DCMS was now a sponsoring Department
of RDAs.
South East Regional Airport Study (SERAS)
36. The Board noted that the Government had launched its consultation
paper setting the strategic direction for airport policy for the
next 30 years
37. Members recognised the importance of this consultation to
the South East. The Infrastructure Committee would now consider
the report and it was noted that the Regional Assembly would be
commissioning a specialist to review the Study.
Review of the Environment Accountability Plan
38. The Board briefly discussed progress on Waste. It was agreed
that SEEDA had a role to develop a market in waste recycling and
a supporting role in the preparation of a regional waste strategy.
39. Members noted the update and approved changes in the Environment
accountability plan for inclusion on SEEDA's website.
Date of Next Meeting
40. The next meeting of the SEEDA Board will be held on Wednesday
18 September at SEEDA Headquarters, Guildford.
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