UK Pride in Place programme represents a vital shift from top-down renewal to localised empowerment.

  • We strongly welcome the Pride in Place (PiP) programme, which represents a vital shift from top-down renewal to localised empowerment. By delegating authority to a ‘Neighbourhood Board’—not the Council—residents will dictate how £2m p.a. (over 10 years) is spent to address specific local needs.
  • Shortly, this funding enables a 4-year investment plan (to be agreed by UK Government) covering capital improvements, such as traffic management and road maintenance, alongside revenue projects like potentially improving NHS health check uptake, supporting early years learning, or boosting local sports.
  • To succeed, the method of decision-making must be as robust as the investment itself. We must establish strong, supportive frameworks that ensure local voices have genuine agency, fulfilling the promise of true devolution.

About David Smith

A lifelong co-operative activist. Former roles: Co-op Foundation Trustee; Co-op Group Main Board, Specialist Board & National Values & Principles Committee; Co-op Group Senate; Co-op Group Wales Regional Board, South Wales Area Committee. Public service includes Government Food Adviser; UK Healthcare Regulator. David directed the first EC funded Wales Anti-Poverty Programme; and pioneered co-operative & community initiatives: free legal services, community-based housing associations, care and repair, pre-school & adventure play, local Co-op Development Agencies, multipurpose Social Care Co-operatives. Founded: Cardiff Student Community Action, Welsh Food Alliance & Wales Progressive Co-operators. Board Member, Newport Credit Union; Robert Owen Memorial Museum Trustee. Former Lecturer, Gwent Tertiary College, Graduate Ruskin College, Oxford and UC Cardiff + PGCE, MA (European Human Resource Management) Keele; Professional Food & Management qualifications.
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