Transparency data

Capital regeneration projects: accounting officer assessment

Updated 30 October 2024

1. Background and Context

The second round of the Levelling Up Fund concluded in January 2023, with 拢2.1bn of cross department Levelling Up Fund (LUF) money fully allocated to 111 bids from across the UK.

Since then, the department identified just over 拢200 million of unallocated departmental funding for use on levelling up. Funding must start to be delivered in 23/24. For this reason, the department has opted not to run a further open bidding process, which would also be disproportionately burdensome for places given the funding available. The department has therefore chosen to award funding to bids on the LUF round 2 shortlist because this contains a pipeline of rigorously assessed bids which have been judged as value for money and deliverable.

2. Assessment against the Accounting Officer standards

a. Regularity

There are no regularity concerns because the department holds the powers to issue grants to local authorities across England under Section 31 of the Local Government Act 2003.

An equalities impact assessment was undertaken and submitted to ministers for consideration prior to decisions being finalised.

Funding awards will be provisional subject to further checks on subsidy control.

Overall assessment

My assessment is that the regularity test is satisfied.

b. Propriety

Criteria were applied to the shortlist to drive the selection of bids for funding. These were as follows:

  • Focus only on bids from England and from the 鈥榬egeneration and town centre鈥� theme because funding is coming from DLUHC budgets rather than cross-departmental LUF budgets
  • Local authorities to be capped at 1 successful bid only to maximise the number of places that receive this funding
  • Fund all regeneration and town centre bids above a minimum score of 75 (to ensure quality) that are below 拢10m in value to maximise the number of places that receive investment from this funding
  • Fund regeneration and town centre bids above the minimum score of 75 that are from places in need of levelling up as identified in the Levelling Up White Paper until the target quantum was met (no cap on bid value)

This decision saw just over 拢210 million invested in 16 places in 6 English regions. These are listed at annex A.

Overall assessment

My assessment is that the propriety test is satisfied.

c. Value for Money

All 16 bids had already been rigorously assessed against the published LUF assessment framework. This included a value for money assessment. These bids all have a VFM category of medium or high. To further safeguard value for money, reporting and evaluation requirements will be placed on grant recipients to help monitor the delivery of expected outputs and outcomes.

Overall assessment

My assessment is that the value for money test is satisfied.

d. Feasibility

Delivery of the 16 bids is feasible. The package is affordable and will be funded from departmental budgets. The deliverability of individual bids had been tested through the prior LUF assessment.

We will oversee the delivery of them under our established LUF delivery framework.

Overall assessment

My assessment is that the feasibility test is satisfied.

3. Conclusion

The above represents a summary of the key points which informed my decision. If any of these factors materially change during the lifetime of this project, I undertake to prepare a revised summary, setting out my assessment of them.

This summary will be published on the government鈥檚 website (188体育). Copies will be deposited in the Library of the House of Commons and sent to the Comptroller and Auditor General and Treasury Officer of Accounts.

Sarah Healey

15 March 2023

Annex A

Local Authority Project Grant value
Blackpool Borough Council Hotel Indigo - Former Post Office Redevelopment 拢8,000,000.00
Tendring District Council Dovercourt Town Centre Improvement Corridor 拢6,652,251.00
Northumberland County Council Ashington Town Centre Transformation 拢16,427,044.00
Tameside Metropolitan Borough Council Stalybridge Town Centre Regeneration 拢19,906,620.00
Rotherham Metropolitan Borough Council Principal Areas of Growth 拢19,990,111.00
East Suffolk Council Lowestoft Seafront Jubilee Parade Regeneration Project 拢4,305,874.80
Salford City Council Eccles Town Centre Transformation project 拢5,400,900.00
North East Lincolnshire Council Freshney Leisure Scheme 拢20,000,000.00
Sandwell Metropolitan Borough Council Tipton Town Centre Regeneration 拢20,000,000.00
Blackburn with Darwen Borough Council Blackburn Business Innovation District Phase 1 - Skills and Education Campus 拢20,000,000.00
Wigan Council #OurFutureAshton 拢6,556,272.00
London Borough of Waltham Forest Child-Friendly Chingford 拢8,433,525.00
Wolverhampton City Council Bilston Health and Regeneration Programme (HaRP) 拢20,000,000.00
Redcar and Cleveland Borough Council Levelling Up Greater Eston 拢19,978,713.00
Kirklees Metropolitan Borough Council Marsden New Mills Redevelopment Scheme 拢5,604,369.00
Borough of Telford and Wrekin Economic Transformation Through Wellington Market Town Re-modelling 拢9,807,453.00