- Local Government Act 1958
The Local Government Act 1958 (6 & 7 Eliz.2 c.55) was an Act of the
Parliament of the United Kingdom affecting local government inEngland and Wales outsideLondon . Among its provisions it included the establishment of Local Government Commissions to review the areas and functions of local authorities, and introduced new procedures for carrying these into action.White papers
The Act originated in three government white papers.
The first of these, "Local government - areas and status of local authorities in England and Wales", was published on
July 31 ,1956 (Cmnd. 9831). Rather than completely reforming the local government system a partial overhaul of the existing system was proposed: Two local government commissions, one for England and one for Wales were to be established to carry out reviews under these guidelines. The commissions were to have powers to:
*Constitute or extendcounty borough s, removing the power of boroughs to promote local bills for this purpose. The population requirement for becoming a county borough would be raised. The English commission was not permitted to create county boroughs inMiddlesex , as this would lead to the disintegration of the administrative county, which the government wished to retain as part of the administration of the Greater London area.
*Establish new, larger authorities in the large conurbations.
*Reduce the number of small county districts by amalgamation.
*Alter county boundaries.
*In exceptional cases, amalgamate counties.The
County of London was to be excluded from the reviews. ["Local authority overhaul - two commissions", "The Times",August 1 ,1956 ]The Association of Municipal Authorities, which represented 432 boroughs in England and Wales gave its considered response to the paper in December. They pointed out that there were "unhappy relationships" between many county councils and boroughs in their area, with the inconsistent delegation of powers by the counties to the boroughs. The Association wished for these powers to be conferred by legislation instead of delegated. They also wanted any future reviews of county districts to be conducted by the commissions and not by county councils. They also stated their view that the population requirement for new county boroughs should be based on projected rather than present population. They also suggested that where rural parishes were included in an extended borough, the parish council should continue to exist, and that it should be possible to create parish councils within existing urban areas. The Association also recommended that additional powers be devolved from the county to the boroughs in Middlesex. ["Overhaul of local authorities - Boroughs reserving final decision", "The Times",
December 24 ,1956 ]The second white paper "Local government - functions of county councils and county district councils" was published on
May 2 ,1957 (Cmnd. 161). The document proposed giving additional powers to larger non-county boroughs and urban districts. Such towns, if they had a population of 60,000 would be entitled to assume responsibility for a number of county-level functions among which were education, welfare and health services, libraries, classified roads, bridges, licensing of cinemas and theatres if they so wished. County councils would also be permitted to delegate these powers to smaller county districts. Rural districts with less than 6,000 inhabitants would not be eligible to gain delegated powers, and those already exercising them would lose them. ["Wider powers for county district councils", "The Times",May 3 ,1957 ]The third white paper, "Local Government Finance (England and Wales)" (Cmnd. 207) was published on
July 10 ,1957 . The rating system was to be reformed with industry and freight to pay 50% instead of 25% rates. Nationalised industries were also to be brought into the rating system. It was anticipated that the measures would produce thirty million pounds per year. This would allow the government to reduce grants to local authorities. A general grant would be payable to county and county borough councils according to population and a number of other factors, the amount of which would be fixed for a number of years. Rate deficiency grants (renamed from equalisation grants) were to make up any shortfall in rate product to qualifying councils. ["Councils given freedom in grants system", "The Times",July 11 ,1957 ]Progress through parliament
The opposition Labour Party and education groups opposed the general or block grant on the basis that it would it would lead to cut-backs in educational expenditure. ["Labour amendment on block grants", "The Times",
January 28 ,1958 ] However, attempts to overturn the policy were defeated.James McColl , the Labour MP forWidnes , introduced an unsuccessful amendment for the establishment of a local income tax.Outside of parliament, the
Cinque Ports voiced their opposition to the Bill, in particular the amalgamation or reduction in status of smaller boroughs in the confederation. ["Cinque Ports ready to face raiders from Whitehall", "The Times",February 15 ,1958 ]On
May 6 ,1958 a group of fourteen Conservative MPs representing coastal resorts revolted against the Government. They sought a change in the rating formula, so that resort towns would be reckoned as having fifty percent more than their resident winter population. This was so that they could provide services to the much larger number of inhabitants in the Summer. The amendment was lost, with only the opposition member forLowestoft voting with the "rebels". ["Conservative "rebels" on councils bill", "The Times",May 8 ,1958 ]The Act
*Part I of the Act dealt with the finance of councils, in particular it introduced a general grant, payable to all councils, and a rate-deficiency grant for those councils whose area had lower than average per capita rates income. These measures replaced a number of earlier separate grants for different services, which reflected the increasing number of services being provided by local authorities. These grants were later replaced with the rate support grant by the
General Rate Act 1967 . Part I also dealt with the rating of the nationalised gas and electricity undertakings.*Part II of the Act dealt with reviews of local government areas. It established a Local Government Commission for England who were charged with reviewing the organisation of local government in five special review areas, and also had the power to make reviews elsewhere in England outside a defined metropolitan area. A similar
Local Government Commission for Wales (including Monmouthshire) was also formed, although no special review areas were designated in Wales. Eachcounty council inEngland andWales was required to make a review of the local government in its area. However, they were not empowered to make any proposals in any place included in a special review area, or in the metropolitan area. As the entireCounty of London was included in the metropolitan area, theLondon County Council was excluded from making reviews. If the county council, in the opinion of the Minister of Health, had failed to carry out a proper review, he could ask the relevant local government commission to carry out one. Local authorities were prohibited from promoting any private bill to parliament "forming any new area of local government, or for altering, or altering the status of, any area of local government" for a period of fifteen years from the commencement of the Act. Finally, the population required for the formation of a newcounty borough was increased from 75,000 to 100,000.*Part III allowed county councils to delegate certain powers in relation to health, welfare and education to
borough , rural orurban district councils.*Part IV dealt with general and supplementary provisions of the Act. One section in this part of the Act - Section 59 - allowed the council of a county or county borough to change the name of the borough or county by agreement with the Minister for Health. This section was quickly used by Southampton County Council, which changed the administrative county's name (and therefore the council's name) to
Hampshire fromApril 1 1959 . ["The London Gazette" ofFebruary 20 ,1959 , p. 1241.] The power to change the name of urban andrural district s and ofcivil parish es remained with thecounty council under theLocal Government Act 1894 .pecial review areas
The five special review areas consisted of major conurbations outside London: Tyneside, West Yorkshire, South East Lancashire, Merseyside and the West Midlands. A full review was only carried out in the West Midlands when much of the review area was incorporated into five large
county borough s. Later legislation was to reform local government areas and services in these areas. Several police forces in the review areas were combined under thePolice Act 1964 , theTransport Act 1968 created transport authorities for four of the areas and all of the review areas were eventually to form the nucleus of metropolitan counties in 1974 under theLocal Government Act 1972 .The Commission requested in 1963 that the Merseyside and Selnec special review areas be extended such that they touched in the middle, thus including
Warrington , St Helens andWigan . The then government delayed a decision on the issue: new local government MinisterTony Crosland decided in April 1965 to allow modest expansions. [Wood, Bruce. "The Process of Local Government Reform 1966-74.]Tyneside
*The
county borough s ofGateshead ,Newcastle upon Tyne ,South Shields andTynemouth
*Part ofCounty Durham , namely: themunicipal borough ofJarrow , and theurban district s ofBlaydon , Felling,Hebburn , Ryton andWhickham
*Part ofNorthumberland , namely: themunicipal borough s ofWallsend andWhitley Bay , and theurban district s ofGosforth ,Longbenton andNewburn .These areas (except part of Whitley Bay) were all eventually included in the larger metropolitan county of
Tyne and Wear (which also included theSunderland area on Wearside) in 1974.West Yorkshire
*The
county borough s ofBradford ,Dewsbury , Halifax,Huddersfield ,Leeds andWakefield
*Part of theWest Riding of Yorkshire , namely: themunicipal borough s ofBatley ,Brighouse ,Castleford ,Keighley , Morley,Ossett ,Pontefract ,Pudsey andSpenborough , and theurban district s ofAireborough ,Baildon ,Bingley ,Colne Valley ,Denby Dale ,Denholme ,Elland ,Featherstone ,Heckmondwike ,Holmfirth ,Horbury ,Horsforth ,Kirkburton ,Knottingley ,Meltham ,Mirfield , Normanton,Queensbury and Shelf ,Ripponden , Rothwell, Shipley,Sowerby Bridge and Stanley.In 1974 this area formed the core of themetropolitan county ofWest Yorkshire , which also included some outlying rural areas and towns.outh East Lancashire
*The
county borough s ofBolton ,Bury ,Manchester ,Oldham ,Rochdale ,Salford andStockport
*Part ofCheshire , namely: themunicipal borough s ofAltrincham ,Dukinfield , Hyde, Sale andStalybridge , theurban district s ofAlderley Edge , Bowdon,Bredbury and Romiley ,Cheadle and Gatley , Hale,Hazel Grove and Bramhall , Marple andWilmslow , therural district ofDisley and thecivil parish es of Carrington, Partington and Ringway in theBucklow Rural District
*Part ofLancashire , namely: themunicipal borough s ofAshton-under-Lyne , Eccles,Farnworth , Heywood, Middleton,Mossley ,Prestwich , Radcliffe,Stretford andSwinton and Pendlebury , and theurban district s ofAudenshaw ,Chadderton , Crompton, Denton,Droylsden ,Failsworth ,Horwich ,Irlam ,Kearsley , Lees, Littleborough,Little Lever ,Milnrow ,Royton , Tottington,Urmston , Wardle,Westhoughton , Whitefield, Whitworth andWorsley The review area was later extended by the South East Lancashire Review Area Order 1965 to include:
*The urban district ofLongdendale , and the parish of Poynton-with-Worth inMacclesfield Rural District in Cheshire
*The municipal borough ofGlossop , the urban districts ofNew Mills andWhaley Bridge , the rural district of Disley and the parishes of Charlesworth and Chisworth inChapel-en-le-Frith Rural District inDerbyshire
*The urban districts ofRamsbottom and Turton in Lancashire
*The urban district ofSaddleworth in Yorkshire, West Riding [S.I. 1965 No. 906]Despite the review area's name, much of it was in
Cheshire . This was reflected in the area being referred to in later reviews as "South East Lancashire and North East Cheshire" orSELNEC . Although no local government reforms were made under the 1958 Act, a SELNECpassenger transport authority was formed in 1969. Ametropolitan county ofGreater Manchester was formed in 1974 for a similar area to the SRA, although it excluded Alderley Edge, Disley and Wilmslow, and added Wigan.Merseyside
*The
county borough s ofBirkenhead ,Bootle ,Liverpool andWallasey
*Part ofCheshire , namely: themunicipal borough s ofBebington andEllesmere Port , and theurban district s ofHoylake ,Neston and Wirral
*Part ofLancashire , namely: themunicipal borough ofCrosby , theurban district s ofHuyton-with-Roby ,Kirkby andLitherland , and thecivil parish es of Aintree and Simonswood in theWest Lancashire Rural District .The area was extended by the Merseyside Special Review Area Order 1965 to include:
*the municipal borough ofWidnes , the urban districts ofFormby andPrescot , more of West Lancashire RD (the parishes of Altcar, Downholland, Ince Blundell, Lydiate, Maghull, Melling Netherton, Sefton and Thornton), and part ofWhiston Rural District (the parishes of Cronton, Hale, Halewood, Knowsley, Rainhill, Tarbock and Whiston) in Lancashire;
*The urban district ofRuncorn , part ofRuncorn Rural District (the parishes of Frodsham, Halton, Helsby, Norton and Sutton; and the parts of the parishes of Aston, Daresbury, Moore and Preston Brook within the designated area of Runcorn New Town), and part ofChester Rural District (the parishes of Elton, Hapsford, Litle Stunney, Stoke and Thonton-le-Moors) in Cheshire. [S.I. 1965 No. 905]In 1974 a
metropolitan county ofMerseyside was formed which had a different area than the 1958 Act SRA. While excluding Ellesmere Port and Neston, which remained in Cheshire, the 1974 boundaries included much more of Lancashire, includingFormby , St Helens andSouthport .West Midlands
*The
county borough s ofBirmingham ,Dudley ,Smethwick ,Walsall ,West Bromwich andWolverhampton
*Part ofStaffordshire , namely: themunicipal borough s ofBilston ,Rowley Regis ,Tipton andWednesbury , and theurban district s ofAldridge ,Amblecote ,Brierley Hill ,Brownhills ,Coseley ,Darlaston ,Sedgley ,Tettenhall ,Wednesfield andWillenhall
*Part ofWarwickshire , namely: themunicipal borough s ofSolihull andSutton Coldfield , and thecivil parish es of Castle Bromwich and Kingshurst inMeriden Rural District
*Part ofWorcestershire , namely: themunicipal borough s ofHalesowen , Oldbury andStourbridge In 1964 Solihull, with altered boundaries, became acounty borough . In 1966 an order altering local government in much of the "Black Country" part of the SRA came into effect creating five large county boroughs of Dudley, Walsall, Warley, West Bromwich and Wolverhampton, which were also to share a police force, theWest Midlands Constabulary . A West Midlandspassenger transport authority , including Birmingham, was formed in 1969. In 1974 a largermetropolitan county was formed, includingCoventry and the intervening countryside.Metropolitan area (Greater London)
The 1958 Act did not extend to the "Greater London Conurbation" (as defined by the
Registrar General ) where reform of local government was under consideration by the Royal Commission under Sir Edwin Herbert established in the previous year. The area excluded was defined in schedule 5 as:*
County of London
*Middlesex
*From Surrey
**County Borough of Croydon
**Municipal Borough of Barnes ,Municipal Borough of Beddington and Wallington ,Municipal Borough of Epsom and Ewell ,Municipal Borough of Kingston upon Thames ,Municipal Borough of Malden and Coombe ,Municipal Borough of Mitcham , Municipal Borough of Richmond,Municipal Borough of Surbiton ,Municipal Borough of Sutton and Cheam and theMunicipal Borough of Wimbledon
**Banstead Urban District ,Carshalton Urban District ,Caterham and Warlingham Urban District ,Coulsdon and Purley Urban District ,Esher Urban District ,Merton and Morden Urban District andWalton and Weybridge Urban District
*From Kent
**Municipal Borough of Beckenham ,Municipal Borough of Bexley ,Municipal Borough of Bromley ,Municipal Borough of Dartford andMunicipal Borough of Erith
**Chislehurst and Sidcup Urban District ,Crayford Urban District ,Orpington Urban District andPenge Urban District
*From Hertfordshire
**Municipal Borough of Watford
**Barnet Urban District ,Bushey Urban District ,Cheshunt Urban District ,Chorleywood Urban District ,East Barnet Urban District andRickmansworth Urban District
**Elstree Rural District and the parish ofNorthaw in theHatfield Rural District and the parishes ofAldenham andWatford Rural in theWatford Rural District
*From Essex
**County Borough of East Ham ,County Borough of West Ham
**Municipal Borough of Barking ,Municipal Borough of Chingford ,Municipal Borough of Dagenham ,Municipal Borough of Ilford ,Municipal Borough of Leyton ,Municipal Borough of Romford ,Municipal Borough of Walthamstow andMunicipal Borough of Wanstead and Woodford
**Chigwell Urban District ,Hornchurch Urban District andWaltham Holy Cross Urban District .The commission delivered its report in 1960, and a much modified version of its proposals (excluding outlying districts) was enacted as the
London Government Act 1963 .Rural boroughs
A weakness in the county reviews carried out under the earlier
Local Government Act 1929 had been that, unlike smallurban district s,municipal borough s of a similar size could not be amalgamated into a surroundingrural district . This was addressed in the 1958 Act, which gave the reviewing county council or local government commission the power to include a non-county borough in a rural district. However, some of the civic dignities of the borough corporation would be retained. The boroughs thus effected would be known as "boroughs included in rural districts", or as rural boroughs.The concept of rural boroughs had originally been announced by Henry Brooke, Minister of Housing and Local Government in the House of Commons on
July 29 ,1957 when he said he was considering that in future rural districts could include "what might be called a rural borough or country borough with the mayoralty and corporate existence continuing so that the burgesses could go on enjoying the traditions and the corporate property which their predecessors had handed down". ["Local government structure", "The Times",July 30 ,1957 ]Rural boroughs were no longer to be governed by the
Municipal Corporations Act 1882 , and the corporation was to consist entirely of elected councillors, from whose number amayor and deputy mayor were to be chosen annually. The office ofalderman was not to exist in rural boroughs. The council of a rural borough was required to continue to appoint a town clerk, and was permitted to employ such officers and servants as needed to discharge the functions of the borough. All provisions of the borough's charter not inconsistent with its new status were to remain in effect. Rural boroughs were prevented from applying for a new or amended charter, however. If the borough corporation so chose it could surrender its charter, and the borough would be converted into acivil parish governed by aparish council .Seven rural boroughs were created:
*
Bishops Castle , toClun and Bishop's Castle Rural District in 1967
*Bridgnorth , toBridgnorth Rural District in 1967
*Lostwithiel , toSt Austell Rural District in 1968
*Ludlow , toLudlow Rural District in 1967
*South Molton , toSouth Moulton Rural District in 1967
*Oswestry , toOswestry Rural District in 1967
*Wenlock , toBridgnorth Rural District in 1966Rural boroughs were abolished in 1974 under the
Local Government Act 1972 , and converted tocivil parishes .Reviews carried out under the Act
Apart from the West Midlands review mentioned above, there were few large-scale changes brought about by the 1958 Act:
*Bedfordshire , 1964 (Luton became county borough)
*Cornwall , 1968 (extensive changes to county districts and creation of 1 rural borough)
*Devon in 1967 (creation ofTorbay county borough, other changes including creation of 1 rural borough)
*County Durham , 1967 (creation ofHartlepool county borough, enlargement ofSunderland )
*Herefordshire , 1968 (two urban districts absorbed by rural districts)
*Huntingdonshire , 1961 (union of boroughs ofHuntingdon andGodmanchester
*Union of administrative counties ofHuntingdon and Peterborough andCambridgeshire and Isle of Ely in 1965
*Shropshire in 1967 and 1968 (extensive changes in county districts and creation of five rural boroughs)
*Teesside county borough created 1968No changes were made in
Wales .Major changes in
Greater London that occurred in 1965 were carried out under theLondon Government Act 1963 .End of the review process
The Local Government (Termination of Reviews) Act 1967 brought an end to the review process established by the 1958 Act.
The 1967 Act dissolved the two local government commissions, and ended the duty of county councils to review council areas. No report, proposals or notification made by the commissions or councils was to be carried into effect, if submitted after the beginning of 1963 by the Welsh commission,
February 10 1966 in the case of the English commission andAugust 31 1966 by the county councils.In the meantime, a Royal Commission on Local Government, (usually known as the
Redcliffe-Maud Commission ) had been appointed onMay 31 ,1966 to "consider the structure of Local Government in England, outside Greater London... and to make recommendations for authorities and boundaries, and for functions and their division...". ["London Gazette", Issue No.44014,June 7 ,1966 ] The work of the Royal Commission led to a fundamental reorganisation of local councils in 1974 by theLocal Government Act 1972 .ources
*Local Government Act 1958 (6 & 7 Eliz 2., c.55)
*Youngs F. A., "Guide to the Local Administrative Units of England", 2 volumes, London, 1979 and 1991References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.