Question reference: S6W-17717
- Asked by: Willie Coffey, MSP for Kilmarnock and Irvine Valley, Scottish National Party
- Date lodged: 4 May 2023
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Current status: Answered by Joe FitzPatrick on 16 May 2023
Question
To ask the Scottish Government, in light of the Scottish National Party manifesto commitment to spend £275 million via the National Infrastructure Mission on community-led regeneration and town centre revitalisation, whether it will provide a detailed breakdown of how much funding was allocated to (a) associated projects and (b) each local authority.
Answer
To deliver this commitment, the Scottish Government established the Place Based Investment Programme (PBIP) in 2021 to accelerate ambitions for place, 20-minute neighbourhoods, town centre action, community led regeneration and community wealth building. This includes the continued delivery of the £25 million per annum Regeneration Capital Grant Fund (RCGF), support for Clyde Gateway urban regeneration company to help deliver their 20-year operating plan, and £140 million delivered directly to all local authorities over 5 years.
PBIP funding allocated to each local authority for the first 3 years of the programme 2021- 2023 is provided in the following table: It is up to each local authority how they allocate funding to specific projects, within the terms of the PBIP grant award and related criteria.
Local Authority | Allocation 2021-22 £ | Allocation 2022-23 £ | Allocation 2023-24 £ |
Aberdeen City | 975,000 | 847,000 | 590,000 |
Aberdeenshire | 2,040,000 | 1,770,000 | 1,234,000 |
Angus | 720,000 | 624,000 | 435,000 |
Argyll and Bute | 821,000 | 712,000 | 496,000 |
City of Edinburgh | 1,998,000 | 1,741,000 | 1,213,000 |
Clackmannanshire | 512,000 | 444,000 | 310,000 |
Dumfries and Galloway | 1,029,000 | 892,000 | 622,000 |
Dundee City | 827,000 | 717,000 | 500,000 |
East Ayrshire | 1,310,000 | 1,136,000 | 792,000 |
East Dunbartonshire | 600,000 | 522,000 | 364,000 |
East Lothian | 823,000 | 717,000 | 500,000 |
East Renfrewshire | 635,000 | 553,000 | 385,000 |
Falkirk | 1,391,000 | 1,207,000 | 841,000 |
Fife | 3,163,000 | 2,748,000 | 1,915,000 |
Glasgow City | 3,699,000 | 3,217,000 | 2,242,000 |
Highland | 1,963,000 | 1,704,000 | 1,187,000 |
Inverclyde | 675,000 | 584,000 | 407,000 |
Midlothian | 613,000 | 534,000 | 372,000 |
Moray | 770,000 | 668,000 | 466,000 |
Na h-Eileanan Siar | 134,000 | 116,000 | 81,000 |
North Ayrshire | 1,260,000 | 1,093,000 | 761,000 |
North Lanarkshire | 2,807,000 | 2,436,000 | 1,698,000 |
Orkney Islands | 122,000 | 106,000 | 74,000 |
Perth and Kinross | 1,265,000 | 1,098,000 | 766,000 |
Renfrewshire | 1,195,000 | 1,038,000 | 723,000 |
Scottish Borders | 912,000 | 791,000 | 552,000 |
Shetland Islands | 124,000 | 108,000 | 75,000 |
South Ayrshire | 797,000 | 691,000 | 481,000 |
South Lanarkshire | 2,003,000 | 1,740,000 | 1,213,000 |
Stirling | 735,000 | 638,000 | 445,000 |
West Dunbartonshire | 780,000 | 676,000 | 471,000 |
West Lothian | 1,302,000 | 1,132,000 | 789,000 |
Scotland | 38,000,000 | 33,000,000 | 23,000,000 |
Details of the grant awards made to local authorities through the Regeneration Capital Grant Fund (RCGF) over the first 3 years of PBIP are provided in the following table, with details of the individual projects available on the RCGF webpage .
Local Authority | RCGF Award 2021-22
£ | RCGF Award 2022-23
£ | RCGF Indicative* Award 2023-24 £ |
Aberdeen City | 1,408,965 | Nil | 1,900,000 |
Aberdeenshire | 2,577,545 | 1,458,000 | Nil |
Angus | Nil | Nil | Nil |
Argyll and Bute | 2,210,223 | 1,452,590 | 1,057,500 |
City of Edinburgh | 2,450,258 | 4,578,123 | 2,250,000 |
Clackmannanshire | 90,000 | Nil | Nil |
Comhairle nan Eileanan Siar | 550,000 | 1,700,000 | 2,150,000 |
Dumfries and Galloway | Nil | 3,413,889 | 2,623,000 |
Dundee City | 1,059,305 | 593,403 | Nil |
East Ayrshire | Nil | 1,745,008 | 3,141,615 |
East Dunbartonshire | 1,100,000 | Nil | 950,000 |
East Lothian | 150,000 | Nil | Nil |
East Renfrewshire | 200,000 | Nil | Nil |
Falkirk | Nil | Nil | Nil |
Fife | 475,000 | 1,500,000 | Nil |
Glasgow City ** | 8,912,600 | 6,409,008 | 5,315,354 |
Highland | 2,067,651 | 257,000 | 2,510,000 |
Inverclyde | 2,525,804 | 1,301,000 | Nil |
Midlothian | Nil | Nil | Nil |
Moray | Nil | Nil | 270,200 |
North Ayrshire | 2,114,478 | 788,000 | Nil |
North Lanarkshire | 2,591,270 | 1,800,000 | 215,000 |
Orkney Islands | Nil | 985,460 | Nil |
Perth and Kinross | 1,750,000 | Nil | Nil |
Renfrewshire | Nil | 1,084,000 | Nil |
Scottish Borders | 133,710 | Nil | Nil |
Shetland Islands | Nil | Nil | Nil |
South Ayrshire | 729,659 | 400,000 | 1,197,440 |
South Lanarkshire | 300,000 | Nil | 1,775,000 |
Stirling (Including Raploch URC where applicable) | 100,000 | Nil | Nil |
West Dunbartonshire | Nil | Nil | Nil |
West Lothian | Nil | Nil | 1,400,000 |
Scotland | 33,496,468 | 29,465,481 | 26,755,109 |
* The 2023-24 RCGF award allocations are currently indicative only and may be subject to change.
** includes Clyde Gateway URC where applicable.
Clyde Gateway awards in £
2021-22 | 2022-23 | 2023-24 |
8,500,000 | 5,000,000 | 5,000,000 |
In 2022-2023 funding was awarded to four place based demonstrator projects as described in the following table:
Local Authority | Project | Award £ |
Argyle and Bute | Rothesay - Transforming services with the Rothesay community | 665,000 |
Argyle & Bute | Oban – 20 minute neighbourhood hub | 110,000 |
Highland | Caithness - A different way of living, working and learning locally | 750,000 |
Highland | Portree - New build multi-agency co-location, enabling service improvement and multi-site enablement | 800,000 |