Guernsey Press

Co-operation with French regions agreed

POLITICIANS were grappling with the consequences of Brexit and Covid at a series of political meetings in France last week.

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The signing of the co-operation agreement for a further three years. Left to right: Deputy Philip Ozouf, minister for External Relations, Jersey, Herve Morin, president of the Regional Council of Normandy, Deputy Jonathan Le Tocq, external affairs lead for Policy & Resources, and Jean Morin, president of the Departmental Council of La Manche.

Regional partners came together to discuss joint working and matters of mutual interest.

Meetings took place with the departmental council of Ille et Vilaine and regional council of Brittany, as well as an annual political summit with the regional council of Normandy and departmental council of La Manche later in the week.

Policy & Resources external affairs lead Deputy Jonathan Le Tocq said it was a pleasure to attend the meetings in person, after two years of restricted travel.

‘The summit gives us an opportunity to review the positive and varied work carried out by our jurisdictions together during the year,’ he said.

‘We can also discuss and learn from each other about some of the wider issues that are affecting all of us, including the impacts of Brexit on travel and trade and the common experiences of climate change and its impact on our coastal environments.

‘We were able to step back and look objectively at the impact that Brexit and the Covid pandemic has had on the travel links, as well as the economic and social relationships.’

Guernsey has had a co-operation agreement with the departmental council of Ille et Vilaine since 2017, which was renewed in 2020 for a further three years. Jersey is also included in the co-operation agreement, which facilitates joint working in a number of areas, including education, youth mobility, culture and arts, overseas aid, transport and trade.

The departmental council of Ille et Vilaine hosted the 2022 annual summit in Rennes in May.

A return visit to Rennes last week enabled further discussions on these issues, with a particular focus on cultural and artistic joint collaboration.

Guernsey also attended the annual political summit with the regional council of Normandy and the departmental council of La Manche, being hosted in Caen. The co-operation agreement was first signed in 2015 between Jersey, Guernsey, La Manche, and the region of Lower Normandy (which is now unified with Upper Normandy), and was re-signed at the summit this week for a further three years. Alderney and Sark are associate members of the agreement.

The summit focussed on the consequences of Brexit and its impact on travel, trade and fishing; joint working in areas including education, culture and sport; and the impact of climate change on coastal environments.

n Guernsey will host the two annual political summits in 2023, with Ille et Vilaine in the spring and Normandy and La Manche in the autumn.