Guide
to the Regional Selective Assistance Scheme
Regional Selective
Assistance (RSA) is the Department’s main instrument of direct
financial assistance to business. Delivery of the scheme
in England is primarily through the Regional Development Agencies
with Business Links playing a signposting role and also acting
as advisers to applicants in some cases. Grants are discretionary
on projects with fixed capital expenditure over £500,000, and
which create or safeguard jobs in the Assisted Areas. Scheme criteria apply, such as the requirement that a company
must demonstrate that without a grant the project would not
go ahead.
Regional Selective Assistance
- organisations
Regional Development
Agencies
RDAs are the lead bodies at
regional level for co-ordinating inward investment, raising
people’s skills, improving the competitiveness of business,
promoting sustainable and economic development, and social and
physical regeneration. RDAs are responsible for administering
RSA in the English regions, including appraising applications
and awarding grants.
Business Links
Business Links will be able
to advise you on the application process for RSA and may also
(possibly for a charge) help you prepare your application. The
Business Link Contact Centre is 0845 600 9006 where details
of your nearest BL will be provided. You can also visit the
Business Link website at www.businesslink.org
Investing in Assisted Areas
The Assisted
Areas located in the English regions
have considerable development potential, with an available workforce,
competitive labour costs and high labour flexibility. They share
the benefits the UK as a whole holds for investors, namely market
proximity, good communications, economic stability, low taxes,
the language of business, flexible labour markets, deregulated
business environment, depth of capital markets, industrial infrastructure
and a government that welcomes investment and enterprise.
By long-term investment
in capital, employment and new skills, businesses can build
on the commercial and industrial performance of the Assisted
Areas. The Government recognises this and will consider giving
grants to encourage such investment.

What
is Regional Selective Assistance?
Regional Selective Assistance
(RSA) is a discretionary grant which provides assistance towards
projects with fixed capital expenditure over £500,000 and which
will create or safeguard employment in the Assisted
Areas.
Most businesses investing
in manufacturing are eligible to apply for a grant, as are businesses
in service industries that supply a national rather than local
market where displacement of other similar employment is likely
to occur, e.g. retailing, legal and accounting practices.
Applicants can be companies, partnerships or sole traders. Grants
are not available simply to transfer jobs from one part of the
country to another.
Assistance can be
provided to:
- establish a new business;
- expand/modernise/rationalise
an existing business;
- set up research and development
facilities;
- or
enable businesses to take
the next step from development to production.
All projects must meet
the scheme criteria,
below, and in each case the amount and terms of assistance will
be negotiated as the minimum necessary for the proposed project
to go ahead. The grant is normally payable in annual instalments
based on agreed fixed capital expenditure and job targets.
How much ?
Grants are individually
assessed against the criteria. The amount depends on the needs
of the project, the number of jobs created or safeguarded and
the impact the project will have on the economy. Grants can be
significant. The majority range between 5 per cent and 15
per cent of the fixed project costs. There is a minimum
applications threshold of £75,000 assistance. The average
cost per job is around £4,000. For exceptional quality projects,
higher grants may be considered. Grant is normally calculated
as a proportion of eligible capital investment. However, where
this expenditure is insufficient, grant may be assessed against
new jobs created.
European Commission
restrictions apply in some sectors where there is European over-capacity,
including synthetic fibre and yarn, vehicles, iron and steel,
coal, fishery and agricultural products. Restrictions may also
apply where projects are in sectors of the UK market which are
already fully served and where support would simply displace or
reduce existing jobs in similar businesses elsewhere. In such
circumstances, an application would be unlikely to succeed. This
is why information is required on the size of the market served,
your existing and expected market share, your main customers and
competitors, and their locations. However, where projects are
likely to deliver new technology and processes, concerns over
existing full capacity in the sector may be put aside, on a case
by case basis.
RSA applications are administered
by the RDAs.
Regional Development Agencies’
Commitment
The RDAs aim to process
applications for RSA quickly and efficiently, and respond in a
courteous and helpful way to requests for information or advice.
The target time for case processing is shown on page 6. Applicants
dissatisfied with any aspect of the service should write to the
Head of RSA Appraisal at the RDA dealing with the application.

RSA Criteria
All RSA applications
are assessed against the following criteria:
Location
The project must be undertaken
within one of the Assisted Areas.
If you are not sure whether or not you are in an Assisted Area,
contact your nearest RDA. Do not complete an application before
you are certain the proposed location of your project is in an
eligible area.
Need
Applicants must demonstrate that
a grant is necessary to enable the project to go ahead as planned.
This may be to reduce the risks associated with the project, or
to influence the choice of a mobile project’s location.
It might also be to obtain parent company or shareholder approval
by meeting established investment criteria; or for some other
reason. Each case is considered on its merits.
Eligible investment
The project must involve capital
expenditure of more than £500,000 on fixed assets, such as property,
plant and machinery. Expenditure can relate to expansion,
modernising or the establishment of a new company. Assets can
be acquired outright or by finance lease or hire-purchase terms. Some
property leases may also be eligible. Certain costs of a non-recurring
nature (patent rights, professional fees) may also qualify.
The working capital spent on a project does not qualify directly,
but can be taken into account when determining the need for assistance.
All projects must last at least five years. If the grant is to
be assessed against net new jobs created, eligible expenditure
is 2 years of gross wages.
Jobs
The project must create or safeguard
jobs. The higher the skills and the more you are prepared to invest
in improving your skills base, the bigger the value put on them
in grant consideration.
Projects likely to create
overcapacity, but allowing for technological changes, or which
simply displace similar jobs elsewhere in the UK, or aim to relocate
the same jobs from one part of the country to another, are not
eligible for assistance.
Viability
Your business should be viable
and the project should help the business become more competitive.
The project will normally be expected to become profitable within
three years.
Quality
The Competitiveness
White Paper (CM 4176), announced the Government’s commitment
to refocus RSA more on high-quality knowledge-based projects,
providing skilled jobs. This has shifted the emphasis in
the scheme from being mainly jobs creation and retention, more
to one of raising productivity and gaining improvements in the
skills base. This may come through new investment or as
re-investment to meet changes in the market.
A number of factors
may be assessed to help us determine the quality of projects.
Some key features are:
- the level of wages and salaries,
as compared to the average for the sector and region;
- whether the project is creating
high skilled sustainable employment;
- the content of R&D - does
the business invest in R&D for continuous product development
or innovative processes? and
- training and Development -
is there high-quality training for staff, including the
provision of skills beyond job requirements?
National and regional
benefit
All projects should contribute
positive benefits to both the regional and national economy.
Prior commitments
There must be no prior commitment
to the project otherwise there will be difficulty in establishing
a need for assistance. Project appraisal must have been completed
and a formal offer of assistance issued before the applicant enters
into a commitment to proceed with the project.
Other funding
The greater part of the funding for the project should be met
by the applicant or come from other sources in the private sector.
These may include bank borrowings, hire-purchase or lease finance,
equity and loan finance from existing or new shareholders, and
loans from other organisations or institutions. Additional public
sector assistance may be available from Enterprise Zones, Learning
and Skills Councils or your local authority. However, finance
from these sources will be cumulated with the RSA grant to ensure
the total value of aid for the project complies with European
Commision regional aid limits. Commercial loans direct from European
Investment Bank (EIB) do not need to be cummulated.
How
to apply for RSA
If you consider your
project needs financial assistance in order go to ahead in the
Assisted
Areas, you should first consult your nearest BL
or RDA about eligibility. If, after this, you want to apply, you
will need to submit a completed application
form (494
Kb) and financial appendices (571Kb)
along with the company's latest audited or management accounts
(and Group's, if applicable) together with your business plan
to the appropriate RDA.
(If you do not have
Word or Excel, the viewers can be downloaded from the links below)
- The business plan should expand
on the information contained in the application form, including
for example:
- a description of the business
and its ownership (including current employment level);
- details of the company’s principal
products and its share of the markets in which it operates;
- cash flow and forward trading
estimates for the project;
- project description, rationale
and expected benefits in terms of future production, sales,
profits, time-scale and jobs likely to be created or safeguarded;
- comment on the quality features
of the project;
- an estimate of the required
project fixed and working capital expenditure;
- a description of how finance
for the project (and ongoing non project requirements if
appropriate) will be raised;
- the names and locations of
the company’s principal customers and competitors, and any
expected changes as a result of the project succeeding (to
enable the likelihood of job displacement to be assessed);
- an explanation of why RSA
is necessary to enable the project to proceed, e.g. sharing
risk, or how RSA would influence location, scale or timing;
- an indication of the minimum
amount of assistance required, and the likely consequences
if RSA is not granted; and
- the precise stage reached
in terms of planning and/or commitment to the project.
Larger grant applications
Where assistance requested is
£2 million or more, further information will be required in addition
to the above in order to undertake a full economic appraisal of
the project. Please contact your nearest RDA to discuss
further.

Appraisal time-scale
The target time taken
for decisions on applications, from the date of receipt of a fully
completed application (including all specified financial information)
is 30 days. Larger more complex cases may take longer than this
to appraise. Where this is necessary, we will aim to take account
of the commercial needs of the applicant.
Appraisal Officers may
discuss the project with the applicant or their advisers to seek
clarification on further details, and may wish to visit the project
location. During the assessment other public bodies may
be asked to provide advice on the application. Please confirm
on the application form that you are content for the information
you provide to be shared with other public sector bodies.
Grants are normally
released in instalments upon achievement of capital expenditure
and job targets which are set out in the formal offer of grant
assistance. The targets will be agreed with applicants during
the appraisal negotiation and are generally arranged to coincide
with the expected progress of the project. All RSA grants
are taxable.
Successful applicants
will be allocated a Monitoring Officer in the RDA who will provide
advice on the procedures for submitting a claim for payment of
a grant instalment.
Fully documented claims
will be processed within 30 days of receipt. Completed and
signed claim forms must be accompanied by supporting documentation
(i.e. an independent accountant’s report, documentary evidence
of any preconditions to be met and a copy of the latest audited/management
accounts).
Contact
information
One North East
(ONE)
Hadrian House
Higham Place
Newcastle Upon Tyne
NE1 8AF
Contact: George Cowcher
Tel: 0191 233 9204
|
North West Development Agency (NWDA)
Renaissance House
PO Box 37
Centre Park
Warrington
Cheshire
WA1 1XB
Contact: Janet Ecklesby
Tel: 01925 400 216
|
East of England Development Agency (EEDA)
The Business Centre
Station Road
Histon
Cambridge
CB4 9LQ
Contact: Domenico Cirillo
Tel: 01223 484 519
|
East Midlands
Development Agency (EMDA)
Apex Court
Citylink
Nottingham
East Midlands
NG2 4LA
Contact: Lewis Stringer
Tel: 0115 988 8305
|
Advantage West Midlands (AWM)
3 Priestly Wharf
Holt Street
Aston Science Park
Birmingham
B7 4BN
Contact: Stuart Downing
Tel: 0121 380 5480
|
Yorkshire Forward
(YF)
RSA Team
Victoria House
2 Victoria Place
Leeds
LS11 5AE
Contact:
RSA Team
Tel: 0113 233 8283
|
South West of England Regional Development
Agency (SWERDA)
Mast House
Shepherds Wharf
24 Sutton Road
Plymouth
Contact: Michael Walton
Tel: 01752 635042
New Address from January
2003 onwards
North Quay House
Sutton Harbour
Plymouth
PL4 0RA
Contact will remain Michael
Walton
|
South East of
England Development Agency (SEEDA)
Cross Lanes
Guildford
GU1 1YA
Contact: Tara Lambert
Tel: 01483 500 731
|
London Development Agency (LDA)
Devon House
58-60 St. Katharines Way
London
E1W 1JX
Contact: Jane Claridge
Tel: 020 7954 4688
|
|
Further information
on RSA
Department of Trade
and Industry
Regional Assistance Directorate
Bay 390
1 Victoria Street
London SW1H 0ET
Tel: 020 7215 2565
Fax: 020 7215 2562
Business Link
Tel: 0445 600 9006
or visit www.businesslink.org
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