Angelica Hymers
Senior Associate
Nottingham
angelica.hymers@brownejacobson.com
+44 (0)115 976 6092
Angelica is a senior associate in our government and infrastructure team. She advises public and private sector bodies on subsidy control and state aid, as well as commercial contracts and public procurement.
Angelica has a strong practice in state aid/subsidy control, commercial contracts and public procurement. She regularly advises central and local government clients, educational institutions and public sector bodies on the procurement, contractual and subsidy control implications of large projects and funding applications.
Angelica works closely with clients at all stages of their projects and clients value her strategic and practical advice. She is regularly instructed by private and public sector bodies, which means that she sees both sides of the fence and can use that experience to her clients’ advantage.
Angelica regularly writes on subsidy control issues and has had articles published by the UK State Aid Lawyers Association, Local Government Lawyer and The Lawyer. She also provides training to clients on subsidy control, grant agreements and contracts and regularly presents on issues in these fields. Her seminars and webinars receive excellent client feedback.
Featured experience
Manchester City Council
Advising on the construction and ongoing development of Manchester’s flagship city-centre heat network. Our role was broad, including contractual, procurement, subsidy control, funding and governance advice.
Many local authorities
Providing subsidy control advice to multiple local authorities on their bids for levelling up and towns deal funding.
A large combined authority
Advising on the subsidy control and commercial aspects of the authority’s programme for the UK Shared Prosperity Fund.
A national non-departmental public body
Advising a body responsible for environmental matters on the implications for a nationwide subsidy scheme of the subsidy control rules under the TCA and the Subsidy Control regime under the Subsidy Control Act 2022.
You may be interested in...
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Does the subsidy control regime already need changing for the government to kickstart economic growth?
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The transparency regime under the Subsidy Control Act - how it could be improved
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Streamlined routes for subsidies
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Subsidy control: Guide to streamlined routes for universities
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Subsidy control - lessons learned in the first year
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Review of a subsidy control decision: The Durham Company Ltd v Durham County Council, 27 July 2023
On-Demand
Automotive webinar - Grant Funding and Collaboration Agreements
In this session, we examined the legal framework around grant funded collaborations and discussed the key risks to be aware of, including IP ownership and compliance with grant terms.
°ÄÃÅÁùºÏ²Ê×ÊÁÏ - Public matters newsletter
Public Matters - October 2022
Updates include UK Shared Prosperity Fund, contracts, Subsidy Control Bill, data controller liability, Government Covid-19 procurement and Highway Code revisions.
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Subsidy cases – you wait 15 months and then two come along at once!
In February 2022, judgment in the first domestic case on the TCA subsidy regime was handed down and in March 2022 the first international subsidy complaint since Brexit was made.
Opinion
The UK’s first domestic subsidy control case
We waited more than a year for it, but the wait is over – we finally have a domestic case on the new subsidy control regime.
On-Demand
Subsidy control webinar - 30 March 2022
In this on-demand session, Alex Kynoch and Angelica Hymers explore the practicalities of complying with the new Subsidy Control Bill, and the impact of illustrative guidance and policy statements recently published by the Government.
Published Article
The Subsidy Control Bill – Illustrative Guidance and Regulations – legal certainty vs flexibility
It has been a turbulent couple of years for those involved in subsidy control, and 2022 will be equally challenging. The Subsidy Control Bill (Bill) will take effect in 2022.
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New Year, New Subsidy Control Regime Part 1: The principles, restrictions and exemptions under the Subsidy Control Bill
The repeal of the State aid rules and their replacement by the regime stemming from the UK-EU Trade and Co-operation Agreement (TCA) in 2021 meant that practitioners and public bodies had to acclimatise to a new, more flexible but less certain approach.
Press Release
°ÄÃÅÁùºÏ²Ê×ÊÁÏ team advises Manchester City Council on innovative decarbonisation heat network project for the City
°ÄÃÅÁùºÏ²Ê×ÊÁÏ’s government and infrastructure team have advised Manchester City Council on the set up of the Civic Quarter Heat Network (CQHN), which aims to provide the City with an efficient and environmentally friendly heat and power network.
On-Demand
State aid and subsidy control - post Brexit
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Could the coronavirus crisis reinvigorate English devolution?
The outbreak of Coronavirus in the UK, and the subsequent lockdown has caused enormous disruption, not least to the business of local government.
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Modern Slavery Act 2015 update – proposed changes to section 54 requirements
Section 54 of the Modern Slavery Act 2015 now requires any commercial organisation which supplies goods or services in the UK and has an annual turnover of £36m or more to publish an annual slavery and human trafficking statement.