11/03/2024 - Permalink

Marches Local Enterprise Partnership celebrates legacy at final board meeting

Related topics: Economic growth / Partner organisations

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The Marches Local Enterprise Partnership (LEP) will celebrate its near £200m legacy at its final board meeting – and welcome back some familiar faces from its past to mark the occasion.

The LEP – which for more than 10 years has been the body responsible for driving economic growth across Shropshire, Herefordshire and Telford & Wrekin – is holding its last ever board meeting tomorrow (Tuesday 12 March 2024).

It is marking the occasion with a farewell celebration at The Feathers Hotel in Ludlow, which will see former board members, working partners from councils, education providers and the third sector, and staff, get together with the current board.

The LEP’s functions are being transferred to the three principal councils covering the area from Easter Monday 1 April 2024.

Sonia Roberts, Marches LEP

Sonia Roberts, Marches LEP

Sonia Roberts, the LEP chair, said the final board meeting would be a sad occasion, but one which also reflected the huge contribution the organisation had made to the Marches:-

“There is not a corner of the three counties we cover which has not benefitted from the work of the LEP since we were established in 2011.

“The LEP has been responsible for investing nearly £200m in the Marches, with close to 4,000 jobs created or in the pipeline. We’ve supported thousands of businesses through the Marches Growth Hub and helped hundreds of people realise their dream of starting their own firm.

“Our work with our partners in education has helped create a new generation of apprenticeships and developed the skills our workforce needs to succeed, whilst the Marches Careers Hub has reached thousands of students and hundreds of teachers in its mission to transform careers education by linking education and training providers with the business community.

“We can reflect with great pride on our work in supporting a range of transformative projects, such as the redevelopment of the Shell Store and creation of the Cyber Quarter – Midlands Centre for Cyber Security in Hereford, the Oswestry Innovation Park, Shrewsbury town centre improvements, and redevelopment of the Flaxmill in Shrewsbury, and regeneration projects across Telford, as well as the development of Ni.Park at Newport and Marches Centre of Excellence in Health and Social Care.

“We’ve also helped bring much-improved broadband to all areas of our region, worked to improve transport links, and driven the progress to achieving Net Zero and a sustainable economy which is fit for the future and safeguards our planet.

“I am hugely grateful to everyone who has played a part in the LEP’s success, including our board members who have given up their time for free, our brilliant staff who have worked so hard for more than a decade, and all our colleagues and partners in our local councils and education providers.

“Naturally I am sad to see the LEP’s work come to a close, but I could not be prouder of what we have achieved and the difference we have made to the lives of so many people across the Marches.”

Rachel Laver, chief executive, said the LEP had played a crucial role in championing the Marches with national and regional government, and had achieved huge success in ensuring the region was not overlooked when funding was allocated:-

“It is vital that a predominantly rural area such as ours does not have its voice drowned out by bigger metropolitan regions, and our success in attracting so much investment to the region is a testament to the role we have played in building strong partnerships with local, regional and national stakeholders.

“Most importantly we have given the business community a real voice in developing the area’s economy and shaping policy in a way which had not been seen before. If we are to continue to develop a thriving, sustainable economy and deliver the sort of highly-skilled jobs our communities deserve, this must continue.”