Lee Waters: Via Superfast Cymru, we have provided over 111,350 premises across west Wales with average broadband speeds of 82 Mbps, investing over £32.3 million. Our successor scheme will provide connectivity to a further 1,348 premises, alongside support from Access Broadband Cymru and the Gigabit Broadband Voucher Scheme. And a new community fund is also being developed.
Lee Waters: Well, as I say, the money we've announced, for example the £10 million through the Valleys taskforce for bringing empty homes back into use and, as we wanted to expand that to look at empty shops as well, has huge potential within the grounded firms foundational economy space, because it's mostly going to be local firms who are going to be doing that work. I went with Vikki Howells to see in...
Lee Waters: Thank you very much. To address those points quickly, Project Skyline I think is a very exciting project. The first phase, as you know, was a feasibility study, looking at how communities could manage the landscape that surrounds their town or village. And the Green Valleys community interest company worked with Treherbert, Ynysowen and Caerau. Now, they've successfully put a bid into this...
Lee Waters: Thank you very much. And I absolutely must acknowledge the role that Vikki Howells played, with a number of other colleagues, in supporting this agenda to date. And I am keen that we continue to work together on it, and it's only right that that role is a challenging one. So, I welcome the question, which points out that there's still some room to go to break down those silos. The NDF is not...
Lee Waters: Thank you for the comments. They say that imitation is the sincerest form of flattery. So, the fact that I recognised so many words included in your statement is testimony that that is true. I recognise that there is a lot of common ground here. Just to address two specific points that you made—you talked about in the economic action plan that we identified four foundation sectors, and you...
Lee Waters: Thank you. Well, in deference to the warning of the Dirprwy Lywydd, I'll try and keep my answer brief. I'm aware that some community councils did bid into the challenge fund, but I don't think any were successful. It was a competitive fund and there were far more quality schemes than we had funding for, even after tripling the budget. But I think, in my statement, I set out the challenge for...
Lee Waters: And in terms of Arfor, Eluned Morgan, the Minister for international development and the Welsh language, and I recently met with the leaders of the Arfor programme from across Wales, and had a long discussion with them about how that project works, and it struck me then that we were creating a silo here, that there was so much in common between this agenda and the foundational economy agenda,...
Lee Waters: Thank you again. I'll try and take those points in order and again reiterate the point that the support for this agenda has come from across the Chamber, and I appreciate that. And in fact, as I mentioned in the statement, the initial £1.5 million commitment to an experimental fund came from the negotiations and agreement between the Welsh Labour Government and Plaid Cymru. I'm delighted...
Lee Waters: Yes. Was it: how is local procurement defined? As I said, we're looking to move beyond Preston's model, which tried to define it within spending within the local postcode, to taking a relational approach. So, in Carmarthenshire, for example, there's a very exciting project to get local food into local schools and local hospitals. Now if, for example—I'm just using this for illustrative...
Lee Waters: The detail of it—we are finding our way as we go. The Basques, I'm told, use an elegant phrase, that they lay the road as they travel. I use a less elegant phrase, that we were making it up as we went along. This is what I was referring to, specifically this experimental approach, rather than saying, 'We have a template, we know how this works.' The whole point of this agenda—that's why...
Lee Waters: Well, thank you very much. First of all, to address one of the final points about the support being offered, which I appreciate, Members will remember the movement behind this policy agenda came from this Assembly as part of a civil society movement. It was from the universities, it was from the third sector, and from business organisations, as well as a cross-party effort that the impetus...
Lee Waters: Initially, we will focus on spreading the success achieved by Preston council in using local purchasing power to build local wealth. We're appointing a partner organisation to work alongside public services boards to maximise the social value of procurement. Together, they will identify local providers for goods and services. But we don’t just want to copy Preston’s progressive approach...
Lee Waters: Diolch yn fawr, Llywydd. One of this Government’s key areas of focus is on nurturing the everyday parts of our economy. The industries and firms that are there because people are there, the food we eat, the homes we live in, the energy we use and the care we receive: these are the foundations of our economy. They account for four in 10 jobs, and £1 in every £3 that we spend. And they are...
Lee Waters: Dirprwy Lywydd, I'm anxious to avoid creating 52 pilot projects that risk fizzling out. That's why our second focus is on spreading and scaling best practice. The foundational economy agenda is a practical expression of the principles laid out in the Well-being of Future Generations (Wales) Act 2015. So, I'm working with the public services boards as key partners to help apply what works to...
Lee Waters: You tabled the question.
Lee Waters: It's a fact-free zone.
Lee Waters: So, you're quite right, they have been left behind. They've been left behind by your Government, because it is a non-devolved area. If you want to invite people to public meetings, by all means invite Boris Johnson to your consistency and he can explain to them why he's not providing for your areas. We've stepped in, we've set targets, we've hit 95 per cent of premises in Wales. There are...
Lee Waters: Thank you very much. That's interesting, isn't it? So, the UK Government did match fund, that's quite correct, as did Europe, as did we. We put the package together, UK Government came in off the back. Our job to deliver: it's a non-devolved area. Had we not put this package together, there would be nothing for the UK Government to match fund. It is their responsibility, in a key area of...
Lee Waters: Thank you very much to all Members who contributed, and I must sympathise with Mark Reckless—there is an awful lot of jargon and complexity in this area, which I've been working my way through over the last year myself. To answer some of his factual questions, we have invested £200 million of our funds and EU funds in Superfast Cymru, and the successor project is costing £26 million, and...
Lee Waters: Absolutely. On the case of 5G, Simon Gibson of an expert panel has done some great work in putting together a bid that is now with the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport to focus on Monmouthshire and the Heads of the Valleys to roll out a rural focus on 5G and its application in artificial intelligence. And the work of Michaelston-y-fedw is a brilliant example of what...