
Blackpool's £90m housing revamp plan not ambitious enough
A £90m plan to regenerate deprived areas in central Blackpool "doesn't go far enough", the leader of the Conservative group on the council has said. The authority was awarded the funding from the government last year to demolish about 400 properties, which are no longer fit for purpose, and replace them with up to 280 bigger new homes.Conservative councillor Paul Galley said the scheme needed to be "far more ambitious".But Labour MP for Blackpool South, Chris Webb, said the project was "a brilliant first step in transforming Central Drive".
The BBC has contacted Blackpool Council and the government for a response. The first phase of the housing regeneration work will likely focus on one of Blackpool's most deprived areas - the area south of the town centre, between Chapel Street and Rigby Road to Park Road, and the Promenade and Central Drive corridor, the council said.The exact area has not been confirmed yet.
'Look like Didsbury'
But Galley told BBC Radio Lancashire: "There's a big chunk in there that talks about adding plazas to Central Drive and this feels more like gentrification than actually regeneration and supporting people."What's needed is a scheme that's far more ambitious, but also connects the private sector into it - sole traders, small business individuals, people who want to invest."This is just relying on a big government grant than only covers a small fraction of what's required."I don't think they go far enough." However, Webb said the Central Drive area had been "desperately needing this kind of transformation for decades, pretty much since I've been in this town in the mid-eighties"."This is a great first step for the town working with the council but also working with private business to start investing in that area for that partnership to turn that £90m into £400m," he added."For me there is no reason why Central Drive can't look like Didsbury. "That's the ambition, we have to be bold."We've got the first outline coming out soon, so we know exactly where it's going to be."
Listen to the best of BBC Radio Lancashire on BBC Sounds and follow BBC Lancashire on Facebook, X and Instagram and watch BBC North West Tonight on BBC iPlayer.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Spectator
an hour ago
- Spectator
Does the BBC doubt Iran wanted a nuke?
I don't monitor this stuff all the time. It would be soul destroying. All that happens is that I tune in, often by accident, and here something. Something which once again betrays the long term, institutional, anti-Israel bias of the BBC. So, Friday night's television news and the Middle East Correspondent Lucy Williamson. Reporting on the Israeli rocket attack upon Iran's nuclear bases, Lucy told us that Israel 'says' Iran is working towards a nuclear bomb. Attribution, you see. Let us hear what the International Atomic Energy Agency had to say in its report on 9 June this year. 'As you know, the Agency found man-made uranium particles at each of three undeclared locations in Iran – at Varamin, Marivan and Turquzabad – at which we conducted complementary access in 2019 and 2020. Since then, we have been seeking explanations and clarifications from Iran for the presence of these uranium particles, including through a number of high-level meetings and consultations in which I have been personally involved.' And later in that report: 'The rapid accumulation of highly enriched uranium – as detailed in my other report before you: Verification and monitoring in the Islamic Republic of Iran in light of United Nations Security Council resolution 2231 (2015) – is of serious concern and adds to the complexity of the issues I have described. Given the potential proliferation implications, the Agency cannot ignore the stockpiling of over 400 kg of highly enriched uranium.' The IAEA believes Iran is working towards a bomb. So do the governments of virtually every other country on earth. Israel says?


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
Keir Starmer: I'll face down rebels on benefit cuts
Sir Keir Starmer has faced down Labour rebels on his welfare cuts package, insisting the reforms must be pushed through. The Prime Minister said the welfare system was not 'working for taxpayers' and gave no indication he was prepared to offer new concessions to angry backbenchers. A package of £5 billion in annual savings from the disability and sickness benefits bill was unveiled earlier this year, including cuts to the personal independence payment (PIP). Legislation unveiling the specifics of the changes is expected to be published this week before a crunch vote at some point before Parliament breaks for summer recess next month. More than 150 Labour MPs have signed a private letter indicating opposition to the welfare cuts, in what has become the biggest rebellion of Sir Keir's premiership to date. Downing Street advisers have identified the vote on the measures as the most politically challenging issue facing the Government in the coming weeks. The Prime Minister was asked, during a trip to Canada for the G7 summit, whether he was confident the disability benefit cuts would pass Parliament. Sir Keir replied: 'We've got to reform the welfare system. Everybody agrees with that proposition. So we've got to do that basic reform. It doesn't work for those that need support and help into work and it doesn't work for the taxpayer. 'So it's got to be reformed. The principles remain the same, those who can work should work. Those who need support in to work should have that support in to work which I don't think they are getting at the moment. 'Those who are never going to be able to work should be properly supported and protected. And that includes not being reassessed and reassessed. So they are the principles, we need to do reform and we will be getting on with that reform when the Bill comes.' The Prime Minister also offered up little chance on late changes to the package when asked if more concessions were to be expected. Sir Keir said: 'Well we have got to get the reforms through and I have been clear about that from start to finish. The system is not working, it's not working for those that need support, it's not working for taxpayers. Everybody agrees it needs reform, we have got to reform it and that is what we intend to do.' The Treasury will be loath to lose the £5 billion savings from the package, which were announced to help Rachel Reeves, the Chancellor, restore her fiscal headroom in the spring statement in March. Critics on the Right insisted the reforms did not go far enough, given the sickness benefit bill is expected to continue ballooning by billions of pounds in the years ahead. But the reforms have ignited a fierce backlash from on the Left, with Labour backbenchers putting their names to a private letter to the Chief Whip voicing private opposition. The letter reportedly has signatures of more than 150 Labour MPs. Whether all of those potential rebels end up voting against the measures remains to be seen. The ability of Number 10 and Number 11 to hold the line has been challenged by the decision to reverse winter fuel payment cuts, an about-turn which cost £1.25 billion.


Belfast Telegraph
an hour ago
- Belfast Telegraph
An Garda Síochána facing legal action over Denis Donaldson investigation
Mr Donaldson, formerly a member of the IRA, was murdered in his Co Donegal cottage in 2006 several months after outing himself as a British spy. The Real IRA admitted to shooting the high-ranking Sinn Fein official three years later. The Irish police ombudsman, Fiosrú, said in a letter to the Donaldson family that it believed gardai had failed to fulfil a request for information necessary for its investigation. Fiosrú told the family it would begin legal proceedings in Dublin Circuit Civil Court seeking an order for disclosure, RTE also reported. An Garda Síochána declined for comment adding it did not remark on Fiosrú matters. Enda McGarrity, the Donaldson family's lawyer, said the watchdog's investigation had taken place over the course of three years. 'We now understand that Fiosrú are commencing legal proceedings against An Garda Síochána arising out of a failure to comply with aspects of the investigation,' she said. 'That's a matter of significant concern to the family because the body which is charged with investigating the murder of Denis Donaldson are now not only being investigated, but failing to comply with investigation and that gives rise to family's wider concern that the State are currently not delivering an effective investigation.' It comes after Gerry Adams won a defamation case against the BBC in May following a story in 2016 in which it was claimed he was linked to the murder of Mr Donaldson. In Profile: Former Sinn Féin president Gerry Adams The five-week trial centred on an anonymous source in a BBC NI Spotlight programme claiming Mr Adams had sanctioned the shooting by giving 'the final say'. The 76-year-old, who had always denied the allegation, described it as a 'grievous smear' and accused the BBC of upholding 'the ethos of the British state in Ireland'. Mr Adams was awarded £84,000 in damages by the High Court jury in Dublin. The BBC reported the legal bill could cost up to £4.2m and is understood to be one of the most expensive cases they have ever fought.