Breakthrough Basildon - Creating Inclusive Growth

Breakthrough Basildon - Creating Inclusive Growth

On 30 September 1948 Lewis Silkin, Clement Atlee’s Minister of Town and Country Planning, came to Laindon and addressed a large gathering at the High Road School with the words: “Basildon will become a city which people from all over the world will want to visit. It will be a place where all classes of community can meet freely together on equal terms and enjoy common cultural recreational facilities.”

Fast forward to today and Basildon is the largest economy in Essex and home to global companies like Ford Motor Company, New Holland Agriculture and Konica Minolta. In the early 1950s its population was around 30,000 it is now home to more than 180,000 people.

We are home to over 7,000 thriving businesses, providing more than 80,000 jobs, with new start-ups increasing faster than anywhere else in Essex.

We are 35 minutes from central London, have major road links and rail lines to two London main stations, three airports within 40 minutes and are the nearest town to the London Gateway Port.

The Borough of Basildon is alive with opportunity and has the ingredients to be one of the most successful and desirable places in the South East.

Yet it doesn’t feel like that for many people who live in the borough. We are also home to some of the most economically disadvantaged areas in the country. Something is holding us back. For far too long now, too many people in Basildon have been locked out of the economic opportunities that exist in Basildon.

While this sort of two track economy is not unique to Basildon, it clearly has its own characteristics and dynamics. When I took office in Basildon Council in May this year, I was determined we would make it a prime purpose of the council to do what it can to break down the barriers that separate these twin tracks and open up the way to a more inclusive future. Without this, we cannot fulfil the ultimate purpose of the council – to improve the health and wellbeing of all its residents.

So, I have established the Breakthrough Basildon Borough Commission to point the way forward.

The commission will be independent of the council, though supported by it. We’re fortunate to have on the commission figures of real stature with a wealth and range of knowledge and experience in local government, public policy, business, skills and learning and with real links to our local community as well as national stature. The commission is being chaired by Dr Jonathan Carr-West, chief executive of the Local Government Information Unit, and he is joined by David Johnston, Chief Executive of the Social Mobility Foundation, Kate Willard of the Stobart Group, Neil Bates former principal of Procat and now of the Education and Training Foundation and local priests Father Dominic Howarth and Father Daniel Kelly.

Over the coming months the commission will engage and involve the people who know Basildon best – its residents, communities and charities. It will be free to make its own investigations, consider the evidence, talk to residents, businesses, schools, colleges and elected representatives.

The commission will then make recommendations to the council in March 2018 that can inform policy developments that can begin to make a real impact in our borough.

Brexit, the new national Industrial Strategy and devolution has highlighted that in order for the country to be progressive, it must be inclusive of the people that reside within it. This change has not gone unnoticed in our borough. Our recently updated corporate plan, alongside various local economic and social policies have spoken openly about how the future of the borough will rely on its ability to be socially and economic sustainable, aspirational and inclusive.

The Breakthrough Basildon Borough Commission will bring together these local, regional and national suggestions and strategies and map strategic ways forward. It is increasingly recognised that growth is not all about increasing GDP, but about using wealth and resources in a different way. Prosperity does not trickle down to all automatically.

We must ensure that that growth and its benefits can translate to all groups in the borough, including those who currently feel most marginalised. We must consider participation, not just distribution outcomes. We must involve the community in both its process and its outcomes.

Then we can start to give a rebirth to our new town and build a next generation Basildon that offers a bright future to all its residents.

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