Local government – big business Councils provide more than 700 different functions & services Employ 2.5million people in 400 different occupations Big.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
How Does Local Government Work?
Advertisements

MLA DAY October 2012.
Local Government in your Community. Principal Member (Mayor or Chairperson) Councillors (from 6 – 21 depending on size/population of Council) Some Councils.
Georgia Studies Unit 8 – Local Governments
Management Structure Proposals
Managing Your ALMO Members Survey. Survey Questions 1.Board Structure 2.Performance Management 3.Annual Delivery Plan 4. and 5.Services in the MA or SLAs.
Lesson 4: Your Local Government
Reforming Local Government: Power to Local People NORTH MONTGOMERYSHIRE LOCAL COUNCIL FORUM.
Scrutiny of Local Strategic Partnerships Effective Overview and Scrutiny.
Local Government in the United Kingdom
Councils…in the news £1.2billion being cut from council budgets in “fiscal consolidation” Plans for ‘open book’ government – transparency The “Big.
Councils…in the news £1.2billion being cut from budgets in “fiscal consolidation” – cuts in services+jobs The transparency revolution – open book government.
Council for Economic Education. City Hall is the center of government in your city or town. It is a very important place! The Mayor, City.
The government of the UK
“The Emerging Third Sector” The Growth and Function of Nonprofit Organizations Amy Garrett Political Science Senior Capstone Fall 2001.
Unit 5 – Local Governments
State and Local Government Structures
Greater London Authority Area: sq. km Population : % of total UK population London urban area is the only English region with a directly.
Government and Utah Chapter 15: Government for and by the People.
Hertfordshire County Council’s Relationship with Town and Parish Councils Background Briefing Jan Hayes-Griffin Assistant Director.
Greater Manchester Devolution 28 July Greater Manchester is “Officially the most exciting place in the UK” The Guardian, February 2015.
Lesson 4: Your Local Government. Municipalities in British Columbia There are 162 different communities called municipalities in British Columbia. There.
Local Government Chapter 13.
Welcome Health and Wellbeing Boards & Strategies Facilitated by Rachel Harris National Expert Advisor CfPS.
Tuesday 10 June 2014 Liz Blyth, Director of Culture and Neighbourhood Services LEICESTER CITY COUNCIL DEVELOPING MY POLITICAL AWARENESS: A PERSONAL REFLECTION.
What is a council? A tier of local government A large, geographically-defined, multi-functional organisation Provides local services to.
Local Government. What is a council? A tier of local government A large, geographically-defined, multi-functional organisation Provides local services.
BRITAIN How Government Works
County and City Government in Georgia March 17, 2014.
Local Authorities The role of the Councillor. A councillor's primary role is to represent the interests of local residents. They can help you if you have.
Governing and Administering Public Education
Health, Wellbeing and Social Care Scrutiny Committee.
Councillor Community Fund Isabell Procter Director of Resources Francis Fernandes Borough Secretary.
The role of Common Council Catherine McGuinness Castle Baynard Ward.
Council elections Who can stand/who can vote When? How?
Birmingham City Council - Restructure 22 October 2013.
Social Studies Chapter 3 People and Their Local Government.
County and City Government in Georgia
 Customer Excellence: Delivering seamless services Customer excellence: Delivering seamless services John Gilbert Director for Corporate Resources Essex.
How do the strong-mayor system and the weak-mayor system differ? What does Elgin have? The strong mayor system gives the mayor the power to veto measures.
The Public Sector OCR Diploma. Includes all organisations which are owned by the state and operated on behalf of the general public. Includes all organisations.
Local Government. What is a council? A tier of local government A large, geographically-defined, multi-functional organisation Provides local services.
Chapter 14 North Carolina Local Governments Important: 2 types: Municipality and County Local governments are not in the Constitution, created by General.
Warm Up #5 Over the past 20 years Mecklenburg County’s population has nearly doubled. 1.How do you think that this impacts county and city government?
14.2 County Governments How County Governments are Organized County Characteristics 1.States are comprised of counties 2.Many sizes: L.A. County: 10 million.
City Governments What makes your city tick?. What’s a city?  It must have at least 200 residents  It must be located at least 3 miles from the boundaries.
Local Government chapter 14 By: Yave & Wiley. Local  Close to home, nearby; having to do with a city, county, town, village, or other small government.
Civics 10 Chapter 9 Local Governments. Definition: Units of government found with a state. Examples: counties, cities (municipal), townships Statistics:
Local Government. What is a council? A tier of local government A large, geographically-defined, multi-functional organisation Provides local services.
Affiliated to the National Association of Local Councils (NALC) Devon Association of Local Councils, First Floor, 3 & 4 Cranmere Court, Lustleigh Close,
How a Council Works Philip Simpkins Chief Executive Bedford Borough Council.
Government and Utah Chapter 15: Government for and by the People.
What is a council? A tier of local government
Local Government.
Handout 6: Structures of public organisations
Georgia Studies Unit 4 – Local Governments
Forms of City government GOVT 2306, Module 11
The History and Structure of Local Government in
LOCAL GOVERNMENT.
Georgia Studies Unit 8 – Local Governments
By: Jihad and Qyashiny Chapter 14.
Slide Deck: Local Governments
Georgia Studies Unit 8 – Local Governments
Parish and Town Council Elections – Thursday 2 May 2019
County and City governments
Parish and Town Council Elections – Thursday 2 May 2019
Municipal Government.
County and City governments
CHIEF EXECUTIVE Corporate Director
State and Local Executive Branch
Presentation transcript:

Local government – big business Councils provide more than 700 different functions & services Employ 2.5million people in 400 different occupations Big spenders - £136billion in 2005/06 = to quarter of all public revenue If ranked by expenditure, 100 councils would rank along side 500 top companies 22,000 elected councillors – but only 650 MPs

Why is it important? Democratically-elected institutions – our political representatives at local level Spend large sums of public money Have direct impact on key frontline services Media has key role holding councils to account, scrutinising and challenging

Types of council County councils District/borough councils Unitary councils Metropolitan councils London boroughs All these are known as “principal local authorities”

What do they do? County councils: (34 in England) Education: schools; youth service; adult ed; under-fives Social services: children’s services + adult services Waste disposal Highways and transport Strategic land use planning Trading standards (consumer protection) Libraries, galleries, museums, the arts Counties operate with districts in what are called “two tier” areas

Districts/Boroughs Local planning (applications) Waste collection Housing (inc. homeless; some social housing) On-street parking Environmental health Leisure facilities: sports centres; parks; playing fields Registering births,deaths and marriages Collecting council tax (and sending out bills) Electoral registration Some may do work for counties under voluntary agreements – eg road maintenance and repairs

Criticisms of two-tier system Perceived remoteness of county councils – particularly those covering large areas Not easily understood by the public, who are confused about who does what Serve diverse communities with disparate needs (eg coastal towns and urban conurbations) Poor economies of scale – costly having two tiers of local government

Unitary councils Bring together all services (county + district) Created to simplify structures First set up in 1990s Elections every four years “Hybrid” structure in some areas: some unitaries exist within existing county boundaries (eg Kent)

Metropolitan councils 36 – covering main English cities (Leeds, Birmingham, Sheffield) Effectively operate as unitary authorities Elect third of councillors every year Have ‘joint boards’ to oversee some services, eg transport, emergency services

Parish and town councils Limited range of functions and powers For example: Bus shelters; footpaths; extra street lighting; public toilets;cemeteries; community halls By law, have right to comment on planning applications in area Can levy a precept to pay for services

Councillors – old, white, male and irrelevant? Male – 73 per cent White – 97 per cent Average age – 57 Retired – 35 per cent Private sector employed – 60 per cent

Councillors 13 per cent have children under age of per cent have a degree or higher qualification More women councillors than MPs More women councillors than senior officers Most spend an average 20 hours work a week on council business Represent average of 3,020 constituents (France 118; Holland 1,713)

But they are important… Our democratically-elected representatives Often wield more power than MPs Take decisions on important services, the local economy and our money Offer community and strategic leadership Take up residents’ concerns Have a watchdog role Paid out of the public purse (allowances)

The role of councillors Executive councillors: Legal ability to make certain decisions, collectively or individually Non-executive councillors: No decision- making powers but hold executive (cabinet to account) – a watchdog role All councillors are: Residents’ advocates Community advocates Policy advocates

Allowances All councillors receive allowances: Basic allowance (average £5,187 in 2004 but varies according to type of council) Special Responsibility Allowances (leaders, executive/cabinet members and others with additional responsibilities) – Kent CC leader gets £41,000; cabinet members £23,000 Childcare/dependent carers’ allowance Travel/subsistence allowance (if not covered by basic allowance) Allowances are set by independent remuneration panel

Council officers Paid, professional employees – not elected and politically neutral Deliver services in line with politicians’ priorities and budget Responsible to the council rather than electorate Can receive large salaries Cabinet govt. means senior officers much closer to ruling political administration

Key senior officers The Chief Executive – head of paid service – most senior official The Chief Financial Officer The Monitoring Officer Director of Children’s Services Most councils have a corporate board made up of senior officers

The Chief Executive Officer who heads the executive of the council, leads chief officers management team and advises councillors Ensures council policy is implemented and will advise councillors of legality and feasibility of their policies/plans May be the returning officer at election time Is a politically-restricted post

Mayors Ceremonial figure-head for a council No real powers Chairs meetings of the full council Represents council at civic functions Usually wears chains of office London and some cities have Lord Mayors (but do same job) Elected by fellow councillors each year