Local Government
Councillors press cabinet on Freeport jobs, library cuts and Net Zero delays
The questions have been raised ahead of key December council meeting
PEMBROKESHIRE councillors are preparing to challenge the cabinet on Freeport promises, library funding, Net Zero delays and winter road safety when the authority meets on Thursday, 12 December.
The agenda, published today (Dec 1), includes one public question, eleven councillor questions and four notices of motion – many focusing on stalled commitments, uneven investment and concerns about basic services.
Freeport jobs questioned as expectations grow
Independent councillor Huw Murphy has asked how many direct jobs have been created in Pembrokeshire since the Celtic Freeport was formally launched in March 2025. The Freeport was billed as delivering up to 11,500 high-skilled green roles across south-west Wales by 2030, with £8.4bn of investment over the decade.
Early activity has centred on planning work for sustainable aviation fuel and green hydrogen plants in Pembroke. However, no direct local hires have yet been confirmed, prompting calls for clarity on how much of the promised economic benefit is being felt in the county.
Milford Haven library struggles contrasted with Haverfordwest upgrades
Councillor Alan Dennison has raised concerns over “drastic cuts” to Milford Haven Library’s budget, which he says could force volunteers to introduce “a £3 weekly contribution from users”. He contrasts this with what he describes as “unlimited funds” for library facilities in Haverfordwest.
Milford’s library has lacked a permanent home since its former building was sold several years ago, and Dennison says the community feels abandoned. He asks what steps the cabinet intends to take to ensure “sufficient investment” in services for one of Pembrokeshire’s largest towns.
Net Zero 2030: missed meetings and ignored reporting duties
A series of questions from councillors Mike Stoddart and Alan Dennison focus on the county’s Net Zero 2030 commitment. They say the working group established in 2019 – disrupted during the pandemic – has still not recovered momentum.
Members agreed in July this year to reinstate the group, yet it has reportedly not met for four months. Councillors also point to a 2023 requirement for bi-annual progress and cost reports, none of which have been delivered. They argue that cabinet cannot “pick and choose” which resolutions to follow.
Riding school fees row resurfaces
Councillor Murphy has challenged figures used in a November scrutiny report, which suggested riding schools can earn £80 per two-hour session and generate £7,200 per day. Operators say these figures are “misleading” and do not reflect the realities of rural equestrian businesses.
Pembrokeshire’s licensing fees are significantly higher than those in neighbouring Ceredigion under a full cost-recovery model. Murphy wants transparency over what consultation was carried out before the report went to scrutiny.
Education and planning concerns
Councillor Phil Kidney alleges that the consultation on the future of Manorbier School was “misleading” and skewed towards closure in favour of St Florence. Other questions probe the use of Section 106 agreements to support school infrastructure when development takes place.
Councillor Jamie Adams cites a Welsh Local Government Association peer review which referred to a “lack of political leadership”, asking the council leader to set out short-term priorities with elections less than two years away.
Budget terminology challenged and payments queried
Councillor Stoddart questions the use of the term “accumulated funding gap”, describing it as “mathematically unsound”. Meanwhile, Councillor Dennison has queried why the council would endorse payments to senior officials who lose their seats or positions, and whether the authority should lobby Welsh Government to remove exit payments for unelected Senedd Members.
Notices of motion: Gypsy sites, winter roads, epi-pens and digital ID
Four motions will go before the meeting:
• Gypsy Traveller sites – Councillor Aaron Carey calls for a cross-departmental group to review the condition of local sites and work with residents to improve maintenance and services.
• Winter roads – Councillor Murphy urges the reinstatement of a salt outstation near Crymych, highlighting the dangerous state of the A478 during recent snowfall. Rural communities say gaps in the gritting schedule are leaving key routes impassable.
• Epi-pens in schools – Murphy also calls for a county-wide policy to ensure every school has emergency adrenaline auto-injectors. Welsh Government has not responded to an eight-month-old scrutiny recommendation, and while schools may stock epi-pens, it is not mandatory as it is in England.
• Digital ID – A motion modelled on Cornwall Council’s November vote instructs the council leader to oppose the UK Government’s planned mandatory digital ID for right-to-work checks by 2028. Councillors argue the £1.8bn programme risks eroding civil liberties and creating new barriers for rural residents.
The public can attend the meeting at County Hall, Haverfordwest, or watch the livestream online.
Speaking ahead of the session, Cllr Murphy said: “From job creation that must deliver for Pembrokeshire to defending our freedoms against digital overreach, these questions deserve clear answers. Residents need transparency on how their money is being spent and how their futures are being safeguarded.”
Local Government
Final budget published with £1.2bn uplift for Wales
FINAL Budget plans worth £27.5bn for 2026-27 have been published by the Welsh Government, with ministers saying the package will deliver £1.2bn more for people, public services and businesses than in the current financial year.
The Welsh Government said the Final Budget includes £400m of new allocations since the Draft Budget was set out in October, including £300m of revenue funding for local government and the NHS, secured through the budget agreement between Labour and Plaid Cymru.
A further £100m in revenue and capital funding is earmarked for priorities including bus services, apprenticeships, further education, flood prevention and maintenance of school buildings.
Ministers said every Welsh Government department will receive at least the same level of funding in real terms in 2026-27 as this year, with uplifts for inflation and pay intended to help protect frontline services and safeguard jobs.
Key allocations highlighted in the announcement include an extra £112.8m for local government, with all councils set to receive increases of four per cent or above, and a further £180m for health and social care, bringing the total revenue budget for the sector to more than £12.6bn.
A £116m package of support for businesses over two years has also been announced to help firms manage the impact of the 2026 non-domestic rates revaluation.
Finance Secretary Mark Drakeford said the Final Budget would provide extra resources for the services Wales relies on, while delivering certainty for public services.
He said: “This Final Budget provides extra resources to support the services Wales relies on. Every department has been protected with at least the same funding in real terms as this year, including extra funding for inflation and pay – recognising the vital work of our public service workforce.
“By working across the Senedd, we are providing certainty and stability for public services now, while ensuring the next Welsh Government has the resources it needs to deliver its priorities from day one.”
The Final Budget will be debated and put to a vote in the Senedd on Tuesday, January 27. The timetable published by the Welsh Government shows the Draft Budget was released on Tuesday, October 14, with the detailed Draft Budget published on Monday, November 3, before the budget agreement with Plaid Cymru was reached on Tuesday, December 9.
Responding to the Welsh Government Budget, Aaron Hill, Director of CPT Cymru, said: “We welcome news that the Welsh Government’s Final Budget includes an additional £6 million in revenue and £10 million in capital funding. This is a positive step that responds to CPT’s calls for greater investment to keep pace with the rising cost of running services.
Buses are a vital part of Wales’s economy, carrying nearly 200,000 passengers every day and enabling people to earn, learn and spend in their local communities. They are the most popular form of public transport in Wales, accounting for three quarters of all journeys.
Investment in buses delivers exceptional returns – every pound invested brings £4.55 in benefits to the environment, public health, and local communities. Yet funding for buses in the UK remains far below levels seen across Europe, and in real terms, core support has been eroded over the last decade.
This additional investment is welcome, and we look forward to working with the Welsh Government to ensure this funding delivers maximum benefit for passengers, communities and the economy.”
Responding to the Welsh Government’s Final Budget 2026-27, director of the Welsh NHS Confederation, Darren Hughes, said: “NHS leaders in Wales broadly welcome the final budget during a difficult time for public finances. The proportion of Welsh Government spend on the NHS does not go unrecognised and the additional funding for health and social care is welcomed.
“Many local government services, including social care, education, social housing and planning and development are wider determinants of health, so the uplift for local government will also be welcome in going some way to address rising cost and demand.
“However, we know this is a fairly ‘business as usual’ budget, given the proximity to the Senedd election, meaning we have not seen the significant shifts we’ve been calling for. This includes a meaningful shift to prevention across departments and capital investment that meets the needs of services in order to bring down running costs and improve services in the face of rising demand.
“Unless we think long term and target areas such as social care, prevention and capital investment, we can’t expect demand to come down on its own and see tangible improvement for the people of Wales.”
Commenting, Welsh Conservative Shadow Cabinet Secretary for Finance, Sam Rowlands MS said: “Plaid and Labour’s budget stitch-up is a bad deal for Wales.
“A budget that contains funding for an ever-bloating bureaucracy, foreign aid, overseas offices, the Nation of Sanctuary plan, Senedd expansion and the creation of 36 more politicians is a budget that will not address the people’s priorities.
“Only the Welsh Conservatives can be trusted to cut waste so we can cut taxes and fix our vital public services.”
Local Government
Haverfordwest free parking proposal to boost high street
HAVERFORDWEST councillors have called for a shake-up of the approach to parking in Pembrokeshire’s county town, with free short-term parking to boost business.
At the January 15 meeting of Pembrokeshire County Council’s policy and pre-decision overview and scrutiny committee, Haverfordwest Castle Ward county councillor Tom Tudor requested a public submission of a ‘Strategic Parking Plan to Boost Haverfordwest Town Centre Economy’ be added to the committee agenda.
Cllr Tudor brought forward a proposal made by town councillor Scott Thorley “aiming to increase footfall while maintaining fiscal responsibility,” which includes two hours free parking in Haverfordwest town centre across all car parks to encourage short visits for shopping, dining, and services, Monday-Saturday, 9-5.
It also includes extending the parking duration at the Perrots Road Car Park to a four-hour maximum stay, with the first two hours free, with free parking from 5pm Saturday to 8am Monday to support evening and weekend activities.
He also proposes free parking all day on Sundays “to attract visitors to hospitality businesses, such as cafes, restaurants, and pubs, fostering a vibrant weekend economy”.
His strategy also includes leveraging “increased footfall from free parking to boost local business revenue, offsetting potential losses in parking fees through keeping businesses open and attracting more investment into the town,” adding: “Evidence from similar UK schemes suggests a potential five–15 per cent increase in retail spending with free parking initiatives,” with a call for social media and local press marketing of the proposed changes.
He also proposes staff working in the town centre “adopt alternative transport methods to free up parking spaces for customers,” through such things as the promotion of car-sharing, encouraging the use of public transport, and supporting cycling and walking through investments in secure bike storage and incentives for staff.
He says there would be an economic boost to the town’s businesses through his proposed changes through increased footfall; free Sunday parking also helping the hospitality industry, and encouraging staff to shift to alternative transport reducing congestion and giving environmental benefits.
Members agreed to note the submission by Cllr Tudor on behalf of Cllr Thorley.
Business
Decision on plans to turn historic schooner into mini golf bar expected soon
PLANS for a mini-golf tourist attraction on part of a Pembrokeshire seaside village family venue are expected to be approved by the national park later this month.
In an application recommended for approval at the January 28 meeting of Pembrokeshire Coast National Park’s development management committee, Lowri Silver of Kilgetty, seeks permission for a change of use of the ground floor area of Saundersfoot Harbour’s Coastal Schooner to an indoor mini golf tourist attraction.
The schooner – a prominent feature on the village’s National Events Deck – was built to showcase Saundersfoot’s maritime heritage and is part of the £10m Wales Coastal Centre project.
The building is a replica of a traditional coastal schooner vessel which operated from the harbour during the coal mining era to transport coal from Saundersfoot.
The interpretation centre closed in October 2024.
Last July, an application by Jonathan Thomas of ‘Schooner’ for a pirate-themed bar at the site was refused at the national park development management committee.
That rum bar scheme had raised concerns from the community council, saying it was “considered to be at odds with the current family venue and heritage elements”.
An officer report recommending refusal said that scheme was considered to fall outside the seaside village’s defined retail area and the impact on the amenity of the area and especially nearby residential dwellings.
At that meeting, Cllr Alec Cormack, one of the local county councillors, and member of the community council, called for a more family-friendly scheme for the site.
A supporting statement accompanying the new application says: “The maritime theme will be maintained as the attraction will maintain many of the existing interpretation information and the maritime theme. The Schooner operated as an interpretation centre and high ropes offer for a year from October 2023 to October 2024.
“It has been open through the summer of 2025 on Tuesday and weekends. However, it has proved not to be a viable option to run the Schooner as an interpretation centre alone and an additional use is sought to maintain the interpretation element of the Schooner and to offer an all-weather attraction for local people and residents alike.”
It added: “The proposal will allow for the Schooner to be maintained and be open to the public thus protecting and enhancing the community facilities to meet the needs of local people and visitors alike. The proposal would also sustain the future of the interpretation element of the Schooner which in turn will protect and enhance the harbour, which is one of the key attractions in Pembrokeshire.”
The latest proposal is “strongly supported by Saundersfoot Community Council, particularly regarding the provision of an indoor family attraction; this was a unanimous decision,” a report for committee members recommending approval says.
It adds: “The proposed works will apart from planters, be fully contained within the existing structure and provide an indoor facility for residents and visitors, which is considered to enhance the visitor economy of the area, not just through the tourist season but also outside of the peak season, with the facility being an indoor facility with scope for all year-round operation.”
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