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ACS welcomes government's commitment over access to cash and regeneration of high streets

ACS welcomes government's commitment over access to cash and regeneration of high streets
Photo by TOLGA AKMEN/AFP via Getty Images
AFP via Getty Images

ACS (the Association of Convenience Stores) has welcomed commitments made by the government in today’s Queen’s Speech to regenerate town centres and high streets and protect the millions of people in the UK who still use cash every day.

Measure proposed in Levelling Up and Regeneration Bill include compulsory rental auctions on empty premises that have been unoccupied for more than a year.


The other proposals include the ability to make pavement cafes and other outdoor dining spaces that were temporarily introduced during Covid-19 a permanent fixture and local authorities to be given more powers to use compulsory purchase orders with the intention of delivering new infrastructure and regeneration in town centres.

“We welcome the intention of the Levelling Up and Regeneration Bill to support town centres and high streets, but urge the Government to recognise the importance of the thousands of local shops operating in secondary areas, estates and villages that continue to keep their communities going and should be a core part of the levelling up agenda," ACS chief executive James Lowman said.

“We await further detail of the Levelling Up and Regeneration Bill and how the Government intends to legislate to achieve the missions set out in the White Paper on areas like crime, health and connectivity, and will continue to engage with the Department for Communities and Local Government on how local shops can play their part in levelling up the UK.”

Also in the Queen’s Speech was the announcement of a Financial Services and Markets Bill, which aims to protect consumers’ access to cash through the continued availability of cash withdrawal and deposit facilities throughout the UK.

“We are encouraged by the Government’s commitment to protect access to cash through new legislation. Cash is still an incredibly important way of paying for goods and managing money for millions of people, and convenience stores play an increasingly important role in being often the only provider of ATM services locally," Lowman continued.

Other notable Bills announced in the Queen’s Speech include a Non-Domestic Rating Bill which aims to modernise the business rates system and incentivise investment, a Brexit Freedoms Bill to repeal and reform regulations on businesses, and an Energy Security Bill to protect against global price fluctuations in energy costs.