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Sept 2020
A month of battles over how devolution should look, whether district councils should be scrapped and what benefits a bid would bring to York and North Yorkshire, awaits residents in September.
As the process for grappling back powers from Westminster takes further steps forward, so too does the relentless battle to get each side of the argument out onto the airwaves and in the press.
So far, the battle has been solely on council reorganisation as the districts pitted themselves against the county council and its plan for a single unitary authority.
Ministers set a deadline for proposals from council leaders for a shake-up of local government to be submitted by September.
The latest in the PR war came from outside both camps as the County Council Network released a report which said scrapping upper-tier councils and replacing them with one authority in each area could save £2.94 billion nationally over five years.
This week, Mr Houchen weighed in on the debate in North Yorkshire and called on the county not to be left behind in wrestling powers back from ministers.
He said:
Elsewhere, the effect of devolution and what it will mean for those that work in local government has not gone unnoticed.
Unison branches across local government in North Yorkshire have called for a “jobs first” deal which will protect jobs and redundancies, level up pay and conditions and minimise disruption to staff and services.
Wendy Nichols, regional convenor for Unison, said:
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