Harrogate Borough Council has so far spent £90,000 of government grants which aimed to support businesses on the high street to reopen.
Last June, the authority was given £144,714 as part of the Reopening High Streets Safely Fund to help support businesses to open up after the first lockdown.
Ministers have also allocated further funding, which will also be £144,714, as part of the Welcome Back Fund to help the council support the town centre after the third shutdown.
Both grants have been funded from the European Regional Development Fund.
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The Stray Ferret asked the borough council how much of the first grant has been spent and what it had been used to fund.
A spokesperson for the council said £90,000 of the funding has been spent so far on:
- Business support service for high street and town centre businesses, (supporting them to adapt and become more resilient during covid recovery)
- Social distancing measures on James Street and Albert Street
- The #ShopSafeShopLocal campaign
- The digital tube style cycle map
- Footfall monitoring data
They added that plans for the new funding, which was announced last month, have yet to be confirmed.
Government guidance published as part of the grant scheme says councils should "engage with stakeholders including local businesses, Business Improvement Districts (BIDs), Destination Management Organisations (DMO), town and parish councils".
When asked who it consulted with on the measures, the authority said its business development team had a "distribution list for businesses” which it said it would use for plans for the next grant.
Sara Ferguson, chair of Harrogate BID, said she hoped the authority would listen to ideas from the businesses:
Ms Ferguson said:
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