Wednesday 12 June 2019

Its now Jamie’s Job To Locate


 Northumberland’s Largest Town


People have said why have a Mayor for the North of Tyne and what benefit will he bring to the County of Northumberland?

The answers are quite simple, the Government insisted that any devolution deal for the North of Tyne region must include a Mayor and in the case of this region the Mayor must seek consensus from the Constituent Councils in delivering its regional plans.

Labour’s Jamie Driscoll won the race to hold that post. The other role the new Mayor has in his remit is to engage the region on transport issue’s.

The BIG ISSUE for people from the Town of Blyth and its Town Council, which is by far and away Northumberland’s largest Town, is how will our new Transport champion help us become a destination, from a backwater?

Blyth has the population to carry a much better retail and business offer than it currently does, it also houses a thriving port, a wonderful theatre and a well historically publicised football team that brings away supporters to the Town no one can find.

So in order to assist the Mayor we have looked at how, without stepping outside of his zone of control he can begin to at least inform his region that Blyth, a town with better beaches than the Costas is worth visiting and that for businesses they can share in whatever new found wealth is created by telling people Blyth exists by opening up a branch of their business in the County’s largest Town.

Jamie will get some help by insisting that the Ashington, Blyth and Tyne Line remains with that name and drops the local Tories insistence on calling it the Newcastle-Northumberland Line. But in helping Jamie we need to give some pointers to where the road signs at least should begin to direct people to what can be his ‘First’ destination project.

Due to the growth and long term future of the River Blyth Energy Central project Jamie can begin his signposting at the Scottish Border, adding Blyth signs as people enter the County via the A1, the A69 destination Boards also need to include Blyth and at the northern exit at the Tyne Tunnel a sign for Blyth as a destination alongside Morpeth, Berwick and Edinburgh, with Blyth joining Ashington and Cramlington repeater signs along its route in Northumberland on the A19.

Jamie help a town that is suffering through the lack of destination signage and bring Blyth in line with the rest of the UK, where Counties Largest Towns are well signposted.
 




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