In 2021, Hertfordshire LEP celebrated 10 years of driving economic growth and productivity within the county through innovation, job creation, improved infrastructure and increased workforce skills.
Since our formation in 2011, we have managed over £325m of UK and EU public funding to respond to the needs, challenges and opportunities within our county. We work hand in hand with partners to deliver the skills that local employers seek, and increase education, employment and apprenticeship opportunities for local people to boost the county’s prosperity.
Through our business support provision and strategic interventions, we are creating the right conditions for our SMEs to grow and for our high value sectors to flourish. We are championing the regeneration of our towns, and the development of vital transport and digital connections, to enable our places to realise their full potential.
With government’s ambition to evolve the way it supports local growth and levelling up for the long term, there is now an opportunity to strengthen the key role LEPs play in driving forward economic growth in our areas. We look forward to working with government and local businesses on the next stage of LEP evolution, and setting a new direction that will underpin Hertfordshire's economic recovery.
View our key highlights below to learn what we have achieved so far as we celebrate our decade of delivery.
Mark Bretton, Chair, Hertfordshire LEP and the LEP Network
funding secured for Hertfordshire
houses
jobs
apprenticeships
new learner starts
Enterprise Advisors working with schools
unique businesses supported by Hertfordshire Growth Hub
new/refurbished commercial space
new/improved training space
Hertfordshire LEP officially forms in April 2011 following a call from the then Chancellor of Exchequer George Osborne to create Local Enterprise Partnerships “that empower local leadership, generate local economic growth, and promote job creation in all parts of the country”. In December, Johnson Matthey’s Site Planning and Services Director John Gourd is appointed Chair.
LEPs’ first collective seminal moment comes in 2012 with the publication of 'No Stone Unturned' by former Conservative Deputy PM Michael Heseltine, setting out a vision to unleash the potential of local economies by ‘devolving funding from central government to Local Enterprise Partnerships’. Hertfordshire LEP will spend the next two years developing its own highly regarded blueprint for economic growth.
In March, we publish our first Strategic Economic Plan (SEP). Its vision is simple: that Hertfordshire should perform to its full potential. Its guiding strategy is to grow smartly as a perfect place for business, and to become one of the UK's leading economies by 2030, helping to realise the full economic potential of the assets and opportunities within the Golden Triangle.
Thanks to the strength of the SEP, Hertfordshire LEP goes on to negotiate three significant Growth Deals totalling £221.5m to support a raft of projects, and secure £60m EU funding for business support and skills projects.
Hertfordshire’s new destination management service Visit Herts officially launches in September. The service is responsible for driving visitors to the county through marketing campaigns, increased digital presence and partner liaison, which has resulted in a visitor economy now worth £2.1 billion, supporting 38,000 jobs and welcoming 25 million visitors a year.
Hertfordshire LEP's flagship business support service Hertfordshire Growth Hub officially launches. It is part of a network of 38 LEP-led Growth Hubs across England that integrate national and local business support. Again, our vision is simple: to be the best Growth Hub in the country, creating a thriving business community and a more prosperous local economy.
Mark Bretton joins the LEP Board in January, taking over as Chair from John Gourd in June. In September 2019, Mark goes on to become Chair of the LEP Network, giving Hertfordshire a platform on the national stage.
Hertfordshire LEP publishes its first Annual Report and approval is secured for its first Enviro-Tech Enterprise Zone, later named Hertfordshire Innovation Quarter. After a successful bid, The Careers and Enterprise Company programme is set up locally to help foster greater links between schools and employers.
Hatfield Train Station re-opens this year with new station buildings, a multi-storey car park and improved access for pedestrians and cyclists, part funded by Hertfordshire LEP. This marks the start of a raft of measures to improve our towns which will later include Stevenage, Watford, South Oxhey, Waltham Cross, Bishop's Stortford, Hemel Hempstead, and Hertford. View our infrastructure projects.
2017 is a hugely exciting time for Hertfordshire LEP as we translate our ambition to accelerate business-led growth into reality. North to south, east to west, there are now real, tangible signs where LEP intervention is making an impact. Construction begins on Hertfordshire Innovation Quarter, which spans 107 hectares and has the potential to attract 800 new firms and deliver 8,000 jobs.
In January, European Space Agency astronaut Tim Peake officially opens the STEM Discovery Centre, funded by Airbus and Hertfordshire LEP and run by North Herts College, with the aim of inspiring the next generation of scientists and engineers.
In October, BRE hosts our Building Solutions Conference which pulls in industry experts across the housing sector to tackle one of the most pressing problems facing Hertfordshire: how can we deliver the homes needed in the next 15 years? This would later lead to a consortium of housing providers, supported by the LEP, committing to scaling up its use of offsite manufacturing to accelerate the delivery of sustainable homes.
We secure EU funding for an expanding portfolio of business support services to help SMEs grow and innovate, enhance their competitiveness and become more eco-friendly. In July, the revised Strategic Economic Plan is published to take into account the wider trends and drivers that will influence economic life, both inside the county and more generally up to 2030.
In June, Mark Bretton attends the first meeting of the Prime Minister's Council of LEP Chairs with former PM Theresa May, who said LEPs 'must continue to play a crucial role in our plans to deliver further growth in local economies.' Talks focused on where LEPs carry maximum impact: delivering the objectives of the Modern Industrial Strategy in their local areas, and investing in the skills that people and businesses need.
In November, the Hertfordshire Opportunities Portal (HOP) launches. This will become a one-stop shop for local skills, training, employment and apprenticeship information. Students, employers and residents are now able to ‘HOP into’ all the resources they need to make informed career decisions, upskill or build a future talent pipeline.
At Hertfordshire LEP's Annual Conference, Business and Industry Minister Nadhim Zahawi announces Stevenage Bioscience Catalyst as one of six new Life Sciences Opportunity Zones in the UK. This trajectory can be traced back to Hertfordshire LEP’s growth strategy, Perfectly Placed for Business. The designation cements Hertfordshire’s reputation for growing a cell and gene therapy cluster of global significance.
After a successful funding bid and with strong local support from schools, the Hertfordshire Careers Hub is set up to bring together schools and colleges with employers, universities, training providers and career professionals, to improve prospects for young people.
Hertfordshire LEP's key focus this year is to develop a Local Industrial Strategy which brings together a strong, well-informed evidence base about our area’s economy, and outlines a long-term set of priorities that capitalises on existing opportunities and addresses weaknesses. It also lays the foundations for our Economic Recovery Plan in response to one of the most tumultuous years for our people, places and businesses.
COVID-19 brings huge economic upheaval to Hertfordshire. Many businesses and town centres face significant financial pressure, with the visitor economy one of the worst affected. For the first time in a generation, Hertfordshire is likely to have a real unemployment problem, with young people bearing the brunt. Hertfordshire LEP's Economic Recovery Plan was developed in response, and will be revised again in spring/summer 2021.
Hertfordshire LEP responds rapidly to the crisis, with enhanced Growth Hub services, targeted skills programmes, and a £3.28m COVID-19 business support package, and played an active role in the Local Resilience Forum, leading on Hertfordshire’s collective effort.
Hertfordshire LEP hosts its first ever 'Generation' Careers Fair with 650 delegates registered to attend. Generation Stevenage was held virtually to enable students aged 15-18 to continue to interact with local employers despite lockdown. As of October 2023, 13 Generation events have been held across the county online and in person, reaching over 7,300 young people and parents.
Hertfordshire LEP secures £16.8m from Government’s Getting Building Fund to kickstart local economic growth and generate new employment opportunities. Five major projects supported by the funding are set to create over 1,500 jobs, unlock over 12,100 sq. m. commercial space, and support the county’s key growth sectors. They include: the expansion of Elstree Studios and the construction of the new Theobalds Enterprise Centre in Broxbourne, a state-of-the-art cell and gene therapy training centre in Stevenage, an advanced medical imaging centre at the Royal Veterinary College, and an Open Innovation Hub at building science centre BRE.
Hertfordshire LEP and Hertfordshire County Council secure £3.26m from Government’s Community Renewal Fund to support five community projects, including: Building Back Better (SME support), Community Wealth Building Together, Driving innovation and culture-led regeneration through the film industry, Hertfordshire Opportunity Generator and STEM City.
Our Opportunity Hertfordshire 2021 Annual Conference, broadcast live from Warner Bros. Studios Leavesden, shines the spotlight on the county's booming film and TV production industry and its potential to create up to 13,000 new jobs.
A report commissioned by Hertfordshire LEP sets out how the county’s burgeoning and globally significant cell and gene therapy cluster, centred around Stevenage, can sustain its momentum and be a catalyst for UK life sciences growth. The LEP also publishes its Enterprise and Innovation Strategy to 2025, and Skills and Employment Strategy to 2024 (with Hertfordshire County Council and the Department for Work and Pensions), setting out the vital role of SMEs and skills development in Hertfordshire's post-pandemic economic recovery.
Hertfordshire LEP launched its Service Innovation Programme, harnessing the expertise of Estu and Royal College of Art to enable businesses to enhance the value of their products and services. The programme supported 70 business leaders, and just from the 16 supported in the first cohort, a total of £1.15m of private investment is estimated to be leveraged, along with the creation of 55 jobs.
The Department for International Trade shines a spotlight on Hertfordshire LEP’s "consistent" approach to attracting foreign direct investment, which sets "a fantastic example that supports job creation and economic growth that will level up the whole of the UK". 1,104 local jobs are expected to be created as a result of 17 foreign direct investment projects secured by the county in 2021/22, placing Hertfordshire in the top third of the 38 LEP areas.
Hertfordshire Growth Hub responds to the escalating cost of living crisis by providing tailored support and guidance to businesses and employees struggling to cope. Twin surveys conducted during this period by Visit Herts and the Growth Hub reveals the resilience of Hertfordshire residents and businesses, with results used to inform future service planning.
A Strategy for Clean Growth in Hertfordshire was launched by Hertfordshire LEP and Herts IQ at biz4Biz's pivotal sustainability event. The strategy aims to build a greener, more sustainable local economy by growing and attracting low carbon businesses and supporting existing businesses, communities and places as they transition to net zero.
We publish two major sector action plans to support the growth of the county's thriving film & TV sector and life sciences sector & cell and gene therapy cluster. Two corresponding industry panels are set up by the LEP to bring together local business leaders to help drive forward the interventions needed to promote economic and sector growth.
Hertfordshire Film Office was established in response to the rapid and large-scale growth of the county's film and TV sector, in order to maximise its potential and provide a coordinated gateway for productions looking to film in Hertfordshire. Our Film & TV Production: Supply Chain Innovation Programme is launched, delivered by Estu and Royal College of Art, to empower business leaders within the supply chain to successfully generate new commercial opportunities.
We team up with Greener Herts to host our first Retrofit Opportunities workshop, bringing together industry leaders, skills providers and policy influencers. The event and our subsequent activity raises awareness of the remarkable opportunity, and skills-related challenges, presented by the drive to make homes greener and more energy efficient over the next two years, towards which over £100m funding has been secured locally.
We secure £1.4m funding to boost adult skills across Hertfordshire's key growth sectors through Skills Bootcamps. These short courses enable residents aged 19+ a chance to hone sector-specific skills and enhance their employability, and allow employers to upskill staff and accelerate business growth.
We prepare to launch an Inward Investment Plan and a new county-wide inward investment service that will take a proactive and coordinated approach to securing foreign direct investment and attracting and retaining businesses in Hertfordshire.