Non-metropolitan district

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Non-metropolitan district
  • Also known as:
  • Shire district
CategoryLocal authority districts
LocationEngland
Found inNon-metropolitan county
Created byLocal Government Act 1972
Created
  • 1 April 1974
Number226 (as of 2023)
Possible types
Possible status
  • Borough

Non-metropolitan districts, or colloquially "shire districts", are a type of local government district in England. As created, they are sub-divisions of non-metropolitan counties (colloquially shire counties) in a two-tier arrangement. Non-metropolitan districts with borough status are known as boroughs, able to appoint a mayor and refer to itself as a borough council.

Typically a district will consist of a market town and its more rural hinterland. However districts are diverse with some being mostly urban such as Dartford, and others more polycentric such as Thurrock.

Structure

Non-metropolitan districts are subdivisions of English non-metropolitan counties which have a two-tier structure of local government.[1] Two-tier non-metropolitan counties have a county council and several districts, each with a borough or district council. In these cases local government functions are divided between county and district councils, to the level where they can be practised most efficiently:

  • Borough/district councils are responsible for
    crematoria
    , leisure services, parks, and tourism.
  • County councils are responsible for running the largest and most expensive local services such as
    waste disposal
    and strategic planning.
  • In the case where a non-metropolitan county consists of a single non-metropolitan district, there is a single council, a unitary authority, that is responsible for all functions.
Service Non-metropolitan county Non-metropolitan district Unitary authority
Education checkY checkY
Housing checkY checkY
Planning applications checkY checkY
Strategic planning checkY checkY
Transport planning checkY checkY
Passenger transport checkY checkY
Highways checkY checkY
Fire checkY checkY
Social services checkY checkY
Libraries checkY checkY
Leisure and recreation checkY checkY
Waste collection checkY checkY
Waste disposal checkY checkY
Environmental health checkY checkY
Revenue collection checkY checkY

Status

Many districts have borough status, which means the local council is called a borough council instead of district council and gives them the right to appoint a mayor. Borough status is granted by royal charter and, in many cases, continues a style enjoyed by a predecessor authority, which can date back centuries. Some districts such as Oxford or Exeter have city status, granted by letters patent, but this does not give the local council any extra powers other than the right to call itself a city council.

History

By 1899, England had been divided at district level into

metropolitan districts
and the non-metropolitan counties were sub-divided into non-metropolitan districts. The metropolitan districts had more powers than their non-metropolitan counterparts. Initially, there were 296 non-metropolitan districts in the two-tier structure, but reforms in the 1990s and 2009 reduced their number to 192. A further 55 non-metropolitan districts are now unitary authorities, which combine the functions of county and borough/district councils.

Scotland and Wales

In

regions and districts, this was also abolished in 1996 and replaced with a fully unitary system
.

District Councils' Network

In England most of the district councils are represented by the District Councils' Network,[2] special interest group which sits within the Local Government Association.[3] The network's purpose is to "act as an informed and representative advocate for districts to government and other national bodies, based on their unique position to deliver for local people."

List of counties and districts

This is a list of two-tier non-metropolitan counties and their districts. All unitary authorities are also non-metropolitan districts, which, with the exception of those of Berkshire, are coterminous with non-metropolitan counties.

For a full list of districts of all types including unitary authorities, metropolitan districts and

London boroughs, see Districts of England
.

Non-metropolitan county
(excluding unitary authorities)
Non-metropolitan districts
(excluding unitary authorities)
Number
Cambridgeshire CambridgeSouth CambridgeshireHuntingdonshireFenlandEast Cambridgeshire 005
Derbyshire High PeakDerbyshire DalesSouth DerbyshireErewashAmber ValleyNorth East DerbyshireChesterfieldBolsover 008
Devon ExeterEast DevonMid DevonNorth DevonTorridgeWest DevonSouth HamsTeignbridge 008
East Sussex HastingsRotherWealdenEastbourneLewes 005
Essex
Colchester – Tendring
012
Gloucestershire
Tewkesbury – CheltenhamCotswoldStroudForest of Dean
006
Hampshire GosportFarehamWinchesterHavantEast HampshireHartRushmoorBasingstoke and DeaneTest ValleyEastleighNew Forest 011
Hertfordshire Three RiversWatfordHertsmereWelwyn HatfieldBroxbourneEast HertfordshireStevenageNorth HertfordshireSt AlbansDacorum 010
Kent
Folkestone and Hythe – CanterburyDoverThanet
012
Lancashire West LancashireChorleySouth RibbleFyldePrestonWyreLancasterRibble ValleyPendleBurnleyRossendaleHyndburn 012
Leicestershire CharnwoodMeltonHarboroughOadby and WigstonBlabyHinckley and BosworthNorth West Leicestershire 007
Lincolnshire
South Holland – BostonEast LindseyWest Lindsey
007
Norfolk NorwichSouth NorfolkGreat YarmouthBroadlandNorth NorfolkKing's Lynn and West NorfolkBreckland 007
Nottinghamshire 007
Oxfordshire 005
Staffordshire 008
Suffolk
West Suffolk
005
Surrey 011
Warwickshire North WarwickshireNuneaton and BedworthRugbyStratford-on-AvonWarwick 005
West Sussex WorthingArunChichesterHorshamCrawleyMid SussexAdur 007
Worcestershire
Redditch – Wychavon
006
Total 164

List of abolished non-metropolitan districts

This is a list of former two-tier districts in England which have been abolished, by local government reorganisations such as the 2009 structural changes to local government in England. It does not include districts that still exist after becoming a unitary authority or those that transferred from one county to another, including those that changed name. Nor does it include unitary authorities that have been abolished (Bournemouth and Poole).

Non-metropolitan county (at time of abolition) Abolished two-tier non-metropolitan districts Number
Avon
Kingswood – NorthavonWansdyke
04
Bedfordshire
Mid Bedfordshire – South Bedfordshire
02
Buckinghamshire South BucksChilternWycombeAylesbury Vale 04
Cheshire ChesterCongletonCrewe and NantwichEllesmere Port and NestonMacclesfieldVale Royal 06
Cornwall CaradonCarrickKerrierNorth CornwallPenwithRestormel 06
Cumbria Barrow-in-FurnessSouth LakelandCopelandAllerdaleEdenCarlisle 06
Dorset
Christchurch
06
Durham 07
East Sussex BrightonHove 02
Hereford and Worcester HerefordLeominsterSouth Herefordshire 03
Humberside
Scunthorpe
08
Isle of Wight MedinaSouth Wight 02
Kent GillinghamRochester-upon-Medway 02
Northamptonshire 07
North Yorkshire York[a]SelbyHarrogateCravenRichmondshireHambletonRyedaleScarborough 08
Northumberland
Berwick-upon-Tweed
06
Shropshire 05
Somerset Taunton DeaneWest SomersetSouth SomersetSomerset West and TauntonSedgemoorMendip 06
Suffolk
Forest Heath – St EdmundsburySuffolk CoastalWaveney
04
Wiltshire
Salisbury – West Wiltshire
04
Total 98

See also

  • List of articles about local government in the United Kingdom
  • District Councils' Network
  • 2019 structural changes to local government in England

Notes

  1. ^ the district was abolished in 1996 and merged to form a larger York unitary district

References

  1. ^ National Statistics – Counties, Non-metropolitan Districts and Unitary Authorities Archived 9 May 2002 at the UK Government Web Archive
  2. ^ "Members | District Councils' Network". Districtcouncils.info. Retrieved 24 September 2013.
  3. ^ "Special interest groups | Local Government Association". Government of the United Kingdom. 30 August 2013. Retrieved 24 September 2013.

External links