2. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Local Government and Public Services

– in the Senedd at 2:17 pm on 29 November 2017.

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Photo of Elin Jones Elin Jones Plaid Cymru 2:17, 29 November 2017

(Translated)

The next item is questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Local Government and Public Services, and the first question is from Leanne Wood. 

Photo of Leanne Wood Leanne Wood Plaid Cymru 29 November 2017

(Translated)

1. Will the Cabinet Secretary provide an update on the work of the taskforce for the valleys in Rhondda? OAQ51381

Photo of Alun Davies Alun Davies Labour 2:17, 29 November 2017

The taskforce published a detailed delivery plan on 7 November. It identified how we will take forward actions in three priority areas: delivering good quality jobs and the skills to do them; supporting better public services; and strengthening communities. Many and most actions in the plan will positively impact the people living in the Rhondda valleys.

Photo of Leanne Wood Leanne Wood Plaid Cymru

I thank you for your letter, Cabinet Secretary, which I received this morning, outlining how the recently published Valleys taskforce delivery plan will benefit people in the Rhondda constituency. In your letter, you talk about a number of things that you've just outlined there: improving childcare through a pilot scheme in Ferndale, supporting local builders, and

'improving public service provision through community hubs', whatever that means. All of this is really vague, Cabinet Secretary, and I can't see how it's going to impact at all on the 33.1 per cent of Rhondda working-age population who are economically inactive. That's a figure that's much higher than the Welsh average of 24.8 per cent, and the UK figure which is 22 per cent. The reasons for this economic inactivity are historic, and the economic problems as a result are chronic. That is why the Rhondda needs specific action from your Government. The results of this plan will be determined by the number of people who end up in good jobs. Can you tell us by how much do you hope to reduce economic inactivity in the Rhondda after you've implemented the Valleys taskforce plan? Can you give us a figure, please?   

Photo of Alun Davies Alun Davies Labour 2:19, 29 November 2017

I'm sure the Member for the Rhondda will join me in being very grateful for the way that many people from the Rhondda valleys have contributed to shaping our vision for the future. I'm sure that she's read the plan that we've outlined that we published on 7 November, and I'd be surprised if she could describe that plan as being vague. There are many tens of actions there with timescales and targets that outline exactly how we'll be answering the questions that she raises.

But she does raise an important point, of course, because economic inactivity is a fundamental issue facing all communities in the Valleys, including the Rhondda constituency she represents. We have put in our plan a target for creating 7,000 additional jobs over the coming four years in order to ensure that the communities of the Valleys have the same opportunities to access high-quality work as communities elsewhere in Wales. That target is in the plan and the timescales are in the plan. I would advise the Member for the Rhondda to read it.

Photo of Andrew RT Davies Andrew RT Davies Conservative 2:20, 29 November 2017

Cabinet Secretary, in your original speech on your taskforce activities, you identified the natural environment in the Valleys, and in particular the Rhondda valleys, as a good example of that, where large areas of common land exist at the very top of the Valleys, a hugely under-utilised asset that exists across south Wales. I'd be grateful to understand exactly, now some time has lapsed since your original identification of that environmental asset, how the Government is going to make better use of it to encourage greater economic activity within the Valleys, but, above all, a better lifestyle for people living in the Valleys by using that wonderful natural resource of the commons that exist across south Wales.

Photo of Alun Davies Alun Davies Labour

I would agree very much with the point that the Member for south Wales makes. Not only the common land, but the land across the environment of the Valleys of south Wales is a huge asset not only for those of us who were born in, brought up in, live in and represent the Valleys, but for the whole country. Through creating what we've called at the moment a landscape park in the Valleys, I hope that we will be able to maximise the potential of not only common land, but the environment as a whole, to ensure access for people in the Valleys to access the local environment, but also to protect and enhance that environment, to work with landowners and farmers and others in the area to ensure that we are able to appreciate and value the environment that we have in the Valleys, but also to ensure that we are able to deliver value for the communities that live alongside and within it. I hope that the landscape park is and will be a catalyst for action to enable all the ambitions that the Member has outlined, and which I share, to be met.