The government has named 72 high streets across England that have been selected to receive £831m of investment to help fund their recovery from the impact of the coronavirus pandemic and to protect jobs. Robert Jenrick, the communities secretary, said the money would “help our much-loved town centres get through this and prosper into the future”. However, the Labour party said the government had originally promised £1bn when it launched the Future High Streets Fund. “The year ahead will be a big one for the high street as it seeks to recover, adapt and evolve as a result of the pandemic,” Jenrick said. “Today’s £830m investment from the Future High Streets Fund is one of many ways the government is working to help our much-loved town centres get through this and prosper into the future. “The role of the high street has always evolved. We want to support that change and make sure that they are the beating heart of their local community – with high quality housing and leisure in addition to shops and restaurants.” Jenrick said the money – which was first promised in 2018 to help high streets struggling long before the coronavirus pandemic – would “help us build back better and make town centres a more attractive place to live, work and visit”. The government said the injection of cash was a “key milestone for the government’s levelling-up agenda”. “The funding will help these areas transform their high streets into vibrant hubs for future generations and to protect and create thousands of jobs,” the Department for Communities and Local Government said. Swindon and Sunderland are to get the most money – £25m each – to fund a “bus boulevard” in the Wiltshire town and to improve Sunderland’s 1960s railway station. A total of 15 towns and cities are to receive all the money they had bid for, totalling £255m. Another 57 areas have received provisional funding offers worth a combined £576m. The £831m total is £169m short of the £1bn Boris Johnson promised in August 2019 would “re-energise and transform” more than 100 high streets across the country. Johnson had said the Future High Streets Fund would support more than 100 high streets. A spokeswoman for the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government said £107m of the missing money had been transferred to the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport to fund the regeneration of heritage high streets. She said a further £15.1m had been spent on helping 101 local authorities make their bids for the cash. Some of the remaining money was spent on “developing a new parking code”, she said. Some high streets that were shortlisted by the prime minister in August 2019 were not selected to receive any funds. They include Barrow, Blackpool, Bideford and Runcorn. The chancellor, Rishi Sunak, said: “We are supporting our high streets to get through this pandemic through business grants, paying people’s wages and tax deferrals. “The Future High Streets Fund will help areas bounce back through regeneration projects that level up opportunities and create jobs right across the country.” Among the projects selected for the funding were £17.9m for the renovation of the Scala Theatre and Corn Exchange in Worcester, a scheme to build 186 homes in Birkenhead and a plan to convert empty retail units in Tamworth, Staffordshire, into community spaces. Jeremy Oates, Tamworth borough council’s cabinet member for heritage and growth, said: ““The projects couldn’t just be a case of smartening up an outdoor space or adding hanging baskets, the government is looking for change on a large and transformative scale, in a way that recognises the changing role of the town centre and enables it to survive and thrive on the basis of what people want. Our bid includes a number of very exciting projects which are focused on creating the right foundations for a town centre that is at the heart of the community.” The government was encouraged to launch the scheme by Sir John Timpson, the owner of the shoe repair chain that carries his name. He had called for councils to be given more money to turn town centres into communities and meeting places, highlighting that high streets were not just about shopping. “By helping our towns create their own individual community hub,” Timpson said at the time, “I believe we will have vibrant town centres to provide a much-needed place for face to face contact in the digital age.” Full list of selected high streets 15 places have been selected to receive all the money they asked for 1. Tamworth £21,652,555 2. Sunderland £25,000,000 3. Sutton £11,346,704 4. Bishop Auckland £19,856,853 5. Blyth £11,121,059 6. Kidderminster £20,510,598 7. Old Kent Road, Southwark £9,605,854 8. Swindon £25,000,000 9. Stockport £14,500,000 10. Winsford £9,980,000 11. Sheffield £15,817,001 12. Blackfriars, Worcester £17,939,000 13. Birkenhead £24,581,011 14. Brierley Hill £9,985,689 15. Stretford £17,605,674 A further 57 places will receive provisional funding offers 1. Leamington Spa £10,015,121 2. Nuneaton £13,362,736 3. Wolverhampton £15,760,196 4. Walsall £11,439,967 5. Newcastle-under-Lyme £11,048,260 6. Stafford £14,377,723 7. Tottenham £10,019,648 8. Woolwich £17,150,964 9. Wealdstone– £7,448,583 10. Putney– £1,058,706 11. Elland £6,310,812 12. Northallerton £6,085,013 13. Rotherham £12,660,708 14. Halifax £11,762,823 15. Barnsley £15,624,456 16. Scunthorpe £10,675,323 17. New Ferry, Wirral – £3,213,523 18. Wigan £16,633,691 19. Crewe £14,148,128 20. Rochdale £17,080,458 21. Farnworth, Bolton £13,306,817 22. Oldham £10,750,237 23. Kirkham, Fylde – £6,290,831 24. Maryport, Allerdale – £11,527,839 25. Carlisle £9,129,874 26. Plymouth £12,046,873 27. Barnstable £6,548,876 28. Newton Abbot £9,199,364 29. Paignton £13,363,248 30. Kingswood £12,555,464 31. Salisbury £9,355,731 32. Penzance £10,403, 112 33. Trowbridge £16,347,056 34. Yeovil £9,756,897 35. Taunton £13,962,981 36. Loftus £5,833,628 37. Middlesbrough £14,170,352 38. Stockton £16,543,812 39. South Shields £5,959,187 40. Derby, St Peters Cross £15,034,398 41. Sutton-in-Ashfield £6,279,872 42. Grantham £5,558,818 43. Grimsby £17,280,917 44. Nottingham, West End Point £12,523,981 45. Heanor £8,592,837 46. Northampton £8,442,730 47. Buxton £6,608,223 48. Dover £3,202,226 49. Newhaven £5,004,939 50. Chatham £9,497,720 51. Ramsgate £2,704,213 52. Commercial Road, Portsmouth £3,122,375 53. Fratton, Portsmouth £3,858,489 54. High Wycombe £11,886,876 55. St Neots £3,748,815 56. March, Fenland £6,447,129 57. Great Yarmouth £13,774,430
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