THURROCK is set to receive £1.5 million to boost regeneration and invest in community spaces, as part of government plans to restore pride in local areas.
The funding for Thurrock Council, through Labour’s ‘Pride in Place’ programme, can be spent in new and creative ways on a range of community projects. This includes saving treasured pubs or libraries, creating and restoring green spaces, or cleaning up neighbourhoods.
This investment in Thurrock comes as part of record funding delivered to 330 towns across the country, along with new powers for communities to take control over how this money is spent.

Funding will only be approved if local community groups, voluntary organisations, and social clubs have had a say in the decision-making process.
This means it will be in the hands of people in Thurrock to decide how to improve the area: whether by investing in new facilities, saving at-risk community spaces, or cleaning up the streets through tackling graffiti and flytipping.
The ‘Pride in Place’ programme is supported by significant new powers, including ‘Community Right to Buy’ – which gives Thurrock residents the power to use funding acquire struggling pubs, create new parks, and regenerate community spaces.
The £1.5 million of funding will be delivered over two years, to enable immediate work on improving places and spaces valued by communities.
Jen Craft, Member of Parliament for Thurrock, said:
“This funding is a real opportunity for people in Thurrock to take control over improving our area.
“As local residents, we know what our area needs and this investment is a chance to make that happen.
“Having grown up in Thurrock, I’ve seen community spaces put at risk of closure, pubs and shops shut on our high streets, and town centres deteriorate.
“This scheme allows us to begin reversing some of that decline, to restore pride in our area and make Thurrock an even better place to call home.”
Lynn Worrall, Leader of Thurrock Council, said:
“This investment is a welcome news for Thurrock, giving local communities the chance to shape improvements in our high streets and town centres.
“The funding will be an important boost to the Council’s ongoing work to invest and support the spaces and facilities that matter most to our residents.
“I look forward to working with local organisations and community groups to use this investment to make a difference to our area”.
Steve Reed, Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government, said:
“When people step out of their front doors, they know their communities are struggling. They see shuttered pubs, fading high streets and their local areas in decline.
“Yes, communities have been stretched – but they haven’t given up. They’re working hard to make things better, and we’re backing them.
“The Government is putting power into their hands, so local people decide how best to restore pride in their neighbourhoods, not us in Westminster.
“That’s what real patriotism looks like: building up our communities and choosing renewal over division.”









