- 1990s UK local government reform
The structure of
local government in the United Kingdom underwent large changes in the 1990s. The system of two-tier local government introduced in the 1970s by theLocal Government Act 1972 and theLocal Government (Scotland) Act 1973 was abolished inScotland andWales onApril 1 ,1996 , and replaced withunitary authorities . InEngland , some areas remained two-tier but many unitary authorities were created. No changes were made tolocal government in Northern Ireland .Background
Prior to the 1970s, the UK had had a mixed system of local government, with someareas being covered by a
county council and a more local district council, while large towns had only a single tier of authority (inEngland and Wales these were termedcounty borough s, and inScotland 'counties of cities'). The Acts abolished the existing county boroughs or counties of cities, and created a uniform two-tier system of government with regions or counties, and districts.In
1986 ,Margaret Thatcher 's government abolished the county councils of the sixmetropolitan counties that had been created in 1974, along with theGreater London Council , effectively creating 68 new single-tier authorities: 32London borough s and 36metropolitan boroughs .In
1990 , Thatcher's government introduced the Community Charge, popularly known as thePoll Tax , a new way of funding local councils based on a fixed per-head fee. This proved very unpopular, and led to riots. Eventually, Thatcher was ousted by her own party, and the new Conservative leader and Prime Minister,John Major , was pledged to abolish the Community Charge.Legislation for the
Council Tax was introduced and passed in the1991 /1992 session. Also at this time (opponentsWho|date=May 2008 have said that it was as a cover),Fact|date=May 2008 the government took the opportunity to review the structure of local government throughoutGreat Britain .England
The Local Government Commission for England was established under the
Local Government Act 1992 , allowing the Secretary of State to order the Commission to undertake 'structural reviews' in specified areas, to create unitary authorities in the two-tier shire counties. After much political debate, the Commission's proposals resulted in the abolition of the counties of Avon, Cleveland,Hereford and Worcester andHumberside , created in 1974, the county council ofBerkshire , and the creation of unitary authorities covering many of the larger urban districts of England.cotland
The previous system in
Scotland had been the regions and districts. These were quite unbalanced in terms of population — theStrathclyde region had nineteen districts and over two million people, whereas the Borders region had four districts and only 100,000 people.The Act established 29 new 'council areas', and retained the three
Island Council s. Variance in population was much less in the council areas, with just over half a million in the largest authority,City of Glasgow , compared to 50,000 in the smallest on the mainland,Clackmannanshire . These are however outliers, and only six are outside the range 75,000 to 250,000.In some cases the names of traditional counties were revived as administrative areas, although often with vastly different borders.
Wales
In
Wales the existing system was replaced with a new unitary system, of counties and county boroughs, the only difference between them now being the name (and the councils of Cardiff, Swansea and Newport are styled as cities).The
1974 reform in Wales had abandoned use of the names of thehistoric counties of Wales as local government areas. This was partially reversed in1996 , withAnglesey ,Carmarthenshire , Cardiganshire,Denbighshire ,Flintshire ,Monmouthshire andPembrokeshire all reappearing as local government areas, although not necessarily with their traditional borders.The names and areas of the administrative counties abolished in 1996 remained in use (with modifications) as the
preserved counties of Wales for purposes such as Lieutenancy.
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