UK Parliament / Open data

Local Government Bill [Lords]

Proceeding contribution from Robert Neill (Conservative) in the House of Commons on Thursday, 21 October 2010. It occurred during Debate on bills on Local Government Bill [Lords].
I do not think that they were wrong, but although I am always interested in history, I am not a prisoner of it. Since the 1990s local government has developed mature and sophisticated means, which were much less well recognised then, of working jointly across boundaries. It is also worth remembering that several issues, which must be tackled—interestingly, they arise in the case that we are considering—require cross-boundary working. For example, the ambitions for economic growth and development in both Exeter and Norwich involve developing important sites outside the city boundaries. I have been to both cities; I have not simply telephoned. Many of the development sites, which in Exeter stretch towards the airport, involve collaboration with the district councils, which will be the planning authorities, and with the county councils, which will be the highways authorities, in those areas. Ernest Newman described extracts from Wagner operas as bleeding chunks, removed from ““Tannhäuser”” or ““Parsifal”” to be used at a concert. Taking a city out is extracting a bleeding chunk, disconnecting it from its hinterland. The proposals that Labour Members advocate would be the worst thing for the welfare of the citizens of both cities and counties.
Type
Proceeding contribution
Reference
516 c1190 
Session
2010-12
Chamber / Committee
House of Commons chamber
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