Cat Smith writes:
Our rural and coastal communities often feel their voices
aren’t heard in politics.
Turn on the television, the radio or read any
newspaper and you’ll hear plenty of talk about Crossrail, the City, even the
‘northern powerhouse’.
In contrast, you’ll hear very little about coastal
flooding, rural tourism, the fishing industry, access to (or lack of) broadband
and mobile phone signal, and debates about renewable energies like offshore
wind or tidal power.
They may not be as visible in Westminster, but there is a
lot happening in our rural and coastal communities, and government austerity is
hitting them hard.
For example, with rising sea levels and changing weather
patterns, flooding is increasingly the biggest threat to some of our coastal
and rural communities.
The 57 per cent real terms cuts in the Defra budget
means agencies like the Environment Agency do not have as much funds to
maintain flood defences.
This is of course going to have – and anecdotally
already is having – an impact on how we defend our rural, residential, small
business and farming communities.
Over the past few months I have been onto a
couple of flood defences in my constituency.
They are hugely expensive to build
and maintain, but their importance is not underestimated by local residents and
is a crucial investment in our national infrastructure.
Rural tourism is the lifeblood of many communities but to
have a healthy tourism industry, you need tourists.
Whilst there is very little
we can do to compete with the weather of the Mediterranean, one of the biggest
challenges we have in encouraging the UK population to holiday locally is
ensuring they have money in their pockets.
This is difficult when one in five
jobs pay less than the living wage and working families are experiencing the biggest
squeeze in living standards since the Victorian era.
Fishing might not be a topic which often comes up in
Labour circles; but our values could really help revive a sustainable fishing
industry.
Small-scale fishing enterprises comprise the overwhelming majority of
the fishing fleet – 77 per cent last year – and employ the vast majority of
people in the industry.
Yet they get only a tiny proportion, around 4 per cent,
of the overall common fisheries policy quota.
That means that the viability of
many small-scale fishing businesses is jeopardised, despite these being the
people who provide the most jobs in the industry and fish in the most
sustainable ways.
As it stands, the fish quota is largely controlled by a
powerful minority.
Recent reforms to the common fisheries policy have created
measures that reward those who use more selective and low-impact fishing
methods, but the responsibility now lies with implementation.
Member states and
our own government must act to ensure that small-scale fishermen get their fair
share of the fish quota, because it will be better for jobs and better for the
environment, and this must be a big part of our campaigning in the forthcoming
EU referendum.
A big part of why rural communities are getting left
behind is down to infrastructure.
As an MP with a significant rural community I
know that access to broadband is a huge issue which leads to great
frustrations.
We know that far too many parts of the country have no broadband
coverage whatsoever.
The government have missed target after target on basic
and superfast broadband, and yet despite their record of failure, they are
setting themselves another goal to miss: the ambition that ultrafast broadband
should be available to nearly all UK premises.
They plan to review progress
against that ambition annually, starting in April 2016.
There are opportunities to close the gap if we are alive
to them. Renewable energies, for example, offer great potential to our rural
and coastal communities.
Over the mouth of the River Wyre in my constituency
two groups are competing to build a tidal barrage. This could offer a flood
defence to my coastal community and green energy to a wider community.
Off the
North Lancashire / South Cumbria coast we will soon have Europe’s largest off
shore wind farm at Walney.
These projects should be offering more direct
benefits to local communities – and government can, and should, do more to
ensure that communities who welcome new green technologies reap more direct
benefits.
It’s obvious to see that austerity and government policy
has hit rural communities hard.
Labour will have to reach out to rural and
coastal communities over the coming years to ensure our offer in 2020 is one
which speaks to them.
And for any readers who live in coastal and rural communities
– get out there and feed into our party’s policy on these matters.
At the last
election Ed Miliband said there should be “no no-go areas” and the next
election we need to make that a reality.
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