News RSS Feed Send your news, pictures & videos


Brighton business scheme loses vital funding

A business scheme which could generate up to £2.5 million of investment is under threat.

As part of Government cuts, Brighton and Hove City Council has lost the money earmarked for the Business Improvement District (Bid).

The Bid, which currently covers most of The Lanes and North Laine, funds services such as security and marketing. Council officers and business leaders are now looking to other public and private backers to ensure the scheme continues.

City centre manager Soozie Campbell said: “The current Bid has made real improvements to the area it covers and we want to see it continue.

“Not many people know it is businesses that pay for a lot of things in the city centre, including the Christmas lights.

“But without this money it cannot continue. Quite simply there will be no Christmas lights.”

A survey asking businesses if they wanted to renew the scheme when it expires in June 2011 was planned for spring and would have cost £75,000.

It was to be funded jointly by the economic partnership, Churchill Square and the local authority. The city’s business forum believes up to £2.5m could be raised if the current zone is expanded to a wider city centre area.

The news of the withdrawal, which is part the £3.5 million Government cuts to the council’s 2010/11 budget, was relayed to traders at the St James’s Area Action Group meeting.

A spokeswoman for the council said: “We have no power over Government cuts but we are looking into every possible avenue to ensure the Bid can continue.”

Comments(6)

The Brighton Bear says...
3:51pm Wed 30 Jun 10

Oh well....never mind.

kumquat says...
3:53pm Wed 30 Jun 10

This is extremely misleading. Government cannot directly cut a local Business Improvement District. the money the local authority spends on this is non-ringfenced i.e the council can spend it on anything. Therefore, if the council funding for the BID is withdrawn it is the council's decision. They will simply be deciding it is not a priority as much as other things at this time of cuts. Buisness Improvement Districts have been hugely successful across the country and I think it is likely this BID will continue albeit possibly on a smaller level of funding.

Betty Blue says...
4:42pm Wed 30 Jun 10

The City Council should start looking at all the money it wastes on voluntary organisations who employ consultants on a very high salary. There is one in Hove that comes to mind.

yorkie44 says...
5:04pm Wed 30 Jun 10

Are the Christmas Lights the most important thing to Soooooozie? If so who cares about this money - our money, in fact?

Murgatroyd says...
5:40pm Wed 30 Jun 10

Now I'm confused. As I understand it, each shop in the BID zone pays an additional £300 on top of their rates for the privilege of the security (good), lights (OK, nothing great) and marketing (the less said about this the better). Multiply this £300 by the number of shops in the current area, which spreads from the seafront through the Lanes and North Laine as far as Trafalgar street, and that's a hell of a lot of £300s.
So this raises two questions - 1) is this BID tax, raised from local business, now not going to be ringfenced? 2) if the Council makes a grant in addition to the money raised from the additional BID tax, what the hell are the BID organisers spending it all on?
There needs to be a lot more information because at the moment the whole thing rings of a lack of transparency

Mr Anthony Miller says...
2:29pm Wed 7 Jul 10

What are they spending the BID levy on?

According to my research prosecuting over socially-ambitious cats
http://www.pearshape
dcomedy.com/ban_hist
ory.html

click2find

Most popular






About cookies

We want you to enjoy your visit to our website. That's why we use cookies to enhance your experience. By staying on our website you agree to our use of cookies. Find out more about the cookies we use.

I agree