Local enterprise partnership


In England, local enterprise partnerships were voluntary partnerships between local authorities and businesses, set up in 2011 by the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills to help determine local economic priorities and lead economic growth and job creation within the local area. They carried out some of the functions previously carried out by the regional development agencies which were abolished in March 2012. In certain areas, funding was received from the UK government via growth deals. Funding for LEPs was withdrawn by the Rishi Sunak Conservative government in April 2024 and their functions were assumed by local authorities, some of whom have formed Business Boards as replacements.

History

The abolition of regional development agencies and the creation of local enterprise partnerships were announced as part of the June 2010 United Kingdom budget. On 29 June 2010, a letter was sent from the Department for Communities and Local Government and the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills to local authority and business leaders, inviting proposals to replace regional development agencies in their areas by 6 September 2010. On 7 September 2010, details were released of 56 proposals for local enterprise partnerships that had been received. On 6 October 2010, during the Conservative Party Conference, it was revealed that 22 had been given the provisional 'green light' to proceed and others might later be accepted with amendments. 24 bids were announced as successful on 28 October 2010.
LEPs were set up on a voluntary basis without any public funding and struggled to make progress. A report by Michael Heseltine in October 2012, No Stone Unturned, was largely accepted by Government, and proposed delegating certain funds from central government to LEPs. Changes included:
  • allocating a share of a £1,400m Local Growth Fund to generate growth, through competitive bidding;
  • getting LEPs to draw up plans for local growth as the basis for negotiation on the money in the Fund
  • realigning the management of the EU Structural and Investment Funds in England to follow the plans made by LEPs.

    City deals

The LEP areas of Greater Birmingham and Solihull, Greater Manchester, Leeds City Region, North Eastern, Sheffield City Region, and West of England were included in the first wave of 'city deals' in 2012.

Growth deals

Local growth deals, for projects that benefit the local area and economy, began to be made to some LEPs in 2014.

Abolition and successor bodies

The Rishi Sunak Conservative government withdrew funding for the partnerships in April 2024 and transferred their functions to the Greater London Authority, combined authorities and upper-tier local authorities.
In the months after funding was withdrawn from LEPs in April 2024, many local authorities and combined authorities formed Business Boards to assume the functions previously carried out by LEPs.

List of LEPs

Local enterprise partnership areas were allowed to overlap, so a local authority was permitted to be part of more than one local enterprise partnership. After the March 2017 merger of Northamptonshire LEP into South East Midlands LEP, there were 38 local enterprise partnerships in operation.
PartnershipAreas
Black Country West Midlands : Dudley, Sandwell, Walsall, Wolverhampton
Buckinghamshire Buckinghamshire
Cheshire and Warrington Cheshire East
Cheshire West and Chester
Warrington
Coast to Capital Brighton and Hove
East Sussex : Lewes
Greater London : Croydon
Surrey : Epsom and Ewell, Mole Valley, Reigate and Banstead, Tandridge
West Sussex
Cornwall and Isles of Scilly Cornwall
Isles of Scilly
Coventry and Warwickshire Warwickshire
West Midlands : Coventry
Cumbria Cumberland
Westmorland and Furness
Derby, [Derbyshire, Nottingham and Nottinghamshire Local Enterprise Partnership] Derby
Derbyshire
Nottingham
Nottinghamshire
Dorset Bournemouth
Dorset
Poole
Enterprise M3 Hampshire : Basingstoke and Deane, East Hampshire, Hart, New Forest, Rushmoor, Test Valley, Winchester
Surrey : Elmbridge, Guildford, Runnymede, Spelthorne, Surrey Heath, Waverley, Woking
GFirst Gloucestershire
Greater Birmingham and Solihull Staffordshire : Cannock Chase, East Staffordshire, Lichfield, Tamworth
West Midlands : Birmingham, Solihull
Worcestershire : Bromsgrove, Redditch, Wyre Forest
Peterborough Combined Authority|Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Business Board]
Cambridgeshire
Essex : Uttlesford
Hertfordshire : North Hertfordshire
Norfolk : King's Lynn and West Norfolk
Suffolk : Forest Heath, St Edmundsbury
Peterborough
Previously: Rutland
Greater Lincolnshire Lincolnshire
North Lincolnshire
North East Lincolnshire
Rutland
Greater Manchester Business Board Greater Manchester
Heart of the South West Devon
Somerset
Hertfordshire Hertfordshire
Humber East Riding of Yorkshire
Kingston upon Hull
Previously: North East Lincolnshire
Previously North Lincolnshire
Lancashire Lancashire
Blackburn with Darwen
Blackpool
Leeds City Region West Yorkshire
North Yorkshire
Leicester and Leicestershire Leicester
Leicestershire
Liverpool City Region Halton
Merseyside
London Enterprise Panel Greater London
New Anglia Norfolk
Suffolk
North East County Durham
Northumberland
Tyne and Wear
Oxfordshire Oxfordshire
South Yorkshire
Derbyshire : Bolsover, Chesterfield, Derbyshire Dales, North East Derbyshire
Nottinghamshire : Bassetlaw
South Yorkshire
Solent Hampshire : East Hampshire, Eastleigh, Fareham, Gosport, Havant, New Forest, Test Valley, Winchester
Isle of Wight
Portsmouth
Southampton
South East East Sussex
Essex
Kent
Medway
Southend-on-Sea
Thurrock
South East Midlands Bedford
Buckinghamshire : Aylesbury Vale
Central Bedfordshire
Luton
Milton Keynes
Northamptonshire
Oxfordshire : Cherwell
Stoke-on-Trent and Staffordshire Staffordshire
Stoke-on-Trent
Swindon and Wiltshire Swindon
Wiltshire
Tees Valley Darlington
Hartlepool
Middlesbrough
Redcar and Cleveland
Stockton-on-Tees
Thames Valley Berkshire Bracknell Forest
Reading
Slough
West Berkshire
Windsor and Maidenhead
Wokingham
The Marches Herefordshire
Shropshire
Telford and Wrekin
West of England Bath and North East Somerset
Bristol
North Somerset
South Gloucestershire
Worcestershire Worcestershire
York and North Yorkshire North Yorkshire
York