Office of the Deputy Prime Minister

Local Government Financial Statistics England No. 14 2003


Annex A
Local government geography and history

This annex contains the following:

A1 Maps of local authority areas in England - these maps show the individual shire districts, metropolitan districts, unitary authorities, London boroughs and other authorities, along with county and Government Office regional boundaries. They are split into regional groups as follows:

North East Map A1a
North West Map A1a
Yorkshire & the Humber Map A1a
East Midlands Map A1b
West Midlands Map A1b
South West Map A1c
South East Map A1d
East of England Map A1d
London Map A1e
Fire authorities Map A1f
Police authorities Map A1g

A2 Parish and town councils - an overview of the role of parish and town councils in local government finance.

A3 Changes in English local authority functions and structure

A1 Maps of local authority areas in England

Map A1a: Local authority lower tier boundaries - North

Map A1b: Local authority lower tier boundaries - Midlands

Map A1c: Local authority lower tier boundaries - South West

Map A1d: Local authority lower tier boundaries - South East

Map A1e: Local authority lower tier boundaries - Greater London

This map shows how the London boroughs are grouped into Inner and Outer London areas for the purposes of the local government finance system. The City of London is normally included with statistics for Inner London.

Map A1f: Fire authorities

Map A1g: Police authorities

A2 Parish and town councils

There are about 8,700 parish and town councils in England, and about 1,500 parish meetings, where there is no council. They vary widely in many ways. Some represent hamlets of fewer than 100 people whereas others represent larger towns, with populations of up to 70,000. Their annual budgets range from under £100 to £2 million. The role they play also varies widely. Some play a very modest and local role, but others are more active, with a role very similar to that of some of the smaller district councils.

The number of parishes has increased recently. Over one hundred new ones have been created in England since 1997. Parishes have also been given some new powers recently. These include powers to provide community transport, traffic calming and crime prevention measures under the Local Government and Rating Act 1997.

Central government does not collect information direct from parish or town councils, although information on the total amount of council tax required for parish councils (parish precepts) in each billing authority's area is collected from returns provided by billing authorities. Information on individual councils is, however, collected by auditors. This suggests that about a hundred parish or town councils have an annual income of over £500,000.

Table A2a gives figures on trends in total precepts since 1998-99, nationally, by region and by area. The total has increased significantly during this period, from £154 million to £226 million. This is due partly to the creation of new parish and town councils and partly to the increase in activity of some of those that already existed.

Table A2a: Parish precepts

Research in 1992 by Aston Business School found that parish precepts accounted for about 60% of the total expenditure by parish and town councils. If this is still the case, then total expenditure in 2003/04 is in the region of £375 million.

In addition to council tax, some parish and town councils receive income from interest receipts, sales, fees and charges, capital receipts and borrowing. In addition, some of them have received grants, such as from the National Lottery, and from the Countryside Agency towards the costs of producing parish plans and parish transport schemes. The 41 parish and town councils that are currently subject to the Best Value duties under the 1999 Local Government Act are each due to receive a grant of £30,000 per year from 2003-04 towards the costs of carrying out Best Value duties.

Parishes spend much less, and raise much less in tax, than principal local authorities. But there are many more of them, and they have more councillors overall than principal authorities. Further comparisons between parishes and principal authorities are given in Table A2b.

Table A2b: Comparing parish and town councils and principal local authorities

A3 Changes in English local authority functions and structure

This annex should be read in conjunction with the sections at the end of Annexes C and D, which summarise changes in the local government revenue and capital finance systems in recent years respectively. Changes in the volume of local authority activity (and hence in expenditure and employment) may be associated with the addition or removal of functions, as detailed below; changes in demand for obligatory functions (for example, changes in the number of school-age children); policy changes in relation to discretionary functions (for example, the provision of new leisure centres); or changes in ways of providing the same services (for example, the introduction of computers).

BEFORE THE 1970s

Before the nineteenth century, local government provided few nationwide services: the poor law and highway maintenance (administered mainly by parishes) and the local courts and prisons (administered mainly by county quarter sessions) were the main ones. Other local services were provided as a result of local initiative, based mainly on local Acts of Parliament. In the nineteenth century, there was a gradual development of systematic, nationwide provision of local government services. Some of these were the result of initiatives by central government (such as most of the public health services); others were developed by local initiatives (such as the municipal gas and electricity undertakings); yet others were the result of the work of non-governmental organisations, later taken over by local government bodies (such as primary education). As the nineteenth century progressed, the tendency to create new specialised agencies for each new services was replaced by a tendency to concentrate services, especially after the creation of county councils in 1888 and county district councils in 1894. At the same time, central government recognised increasingly the need to ensure uniform national standards and created the methods to do so, by guidance, conditional grants, inspectorate appeals systems and default powers. The introduction of more and more local services was counterbalanced by the transfer of some services to central government (for example, prisons (1872), trunk roads (1930), gas and electricity (1947) and hospitals (1948)). In 1929, the abolition of the Boards of Guardians consolidated local government services in the hands of, in large towns, county borough councils and, in London and the metropolitan counties, the London County Council and metropolitan boroughs. Outside these areas the abolition of the Boards of Guardians consolidated local government services for county councils to county district councils and (in rural districts) parish councils and meetings. This structure endured until, in Greater London, the reform of 1965 (when the Greater London Council was formed) and elsewhere the reforms of 1974.

SINCE 1970

1973 Responsibility for upper-tier criminal courts (assizes and quarter sessions) transferred to central government.

1 April 1974 Local Government reorganisation outside London: new structure of 6 metropolitan counties and 39 shire counties, divided into 36 metropolitan and 296 non-metropolitan districts, introduced. Responsibility for water and sewerage transferred to water authorities. Ambulance and some health services transferred to health authorities.

1 April 1985 London Regional Transport transferred from the local authority sector.

1 April 1986 Abolition of Greater London Council and metropolitan county councils. In London, functions transferred to City of London, London Boroughs, Inner London Education Authority (ILEA), the London Fire and Civil Defence Authority, the London Waste Regulation Authority, waste disposal authorities and other bodies such as the London Planning Advisory Committee. In metropolitan areas, functions passed to metropolitan districts, waste disposal authorities (in Merseyside and Greater Manchester) and joint authorities for police, fire and civil defence, and transport. Residuary bodies were set up to wind up the affairs of the abolished councils.

26 October Responsibility for municipal bus services transferred to public
1986 transport companies.

1986 Introduction of devolved budgets for schools, resulting in the creation of schools as semi-independent institutions.

1 April 1987 Responsibility for municipal airports (except Manchester) transferred to public airport companies.

1 April 1989 Funding of polytechnics and higher education colleges transferred to the Polytechnics and Colleges Funding Council (PCFC).

1 Sept 1989 The first Grant Maintained schools came into existence following the 1988 Education Reform Act. These schools were independent of local authority control. They were funded by central government through the Funding Agency for Schools. Part of local authority expenditure on education consisted of payments back to the government for the funding of these schools.

1 April 1990 Inner London Education Authority (ILEA) abolished. Responsibility for education in Inner London transferred to London boroughs.

1 July 1992 Local Government Commission set up to review the structure of local government in England.

1 April 1993 Local authorities became responsible for implementing new legislation on Community Care. Funding of colleges of further education and sixth form colleges transferred from local authorities to the Further Education Funding Council (FEFC).

1 April 1995 The Isle of Wight unitary authority replaced the county council and two district councils. New police authorities were set up in the shire areas taking all policing responsibilities away from county councils.

1 April 1996 Unitary authorities were created in Avon, Cleveland, Humberside and North Yorkshire, replacing both Shire districts and the Avon, Cleveland and the Humberside county councils. New combined fire authorities were created in each of these four authorities. Waste regulation became the responsibility of the Environment Agency, resulting in the abolition of the London Waste Regulation Authority.

1 April 1997 Unitary authorities were created in Bedfordshire, Buckingham, Derbyshire, Dorset, Durham, East Sussex, Hampshire, Leicestershire, Staffordshire and Wiltshire, replacing some of the Shire districts in these areas. New combined fire authorities were also created in these areas.

1 April 1998 Unitary authorities were created in Berkshire, Cambridgeshire, Cheshire, Devon, Essex, Hertford and Worcester, Kent, Lancashire, Nottinghamshire and Shropshire, replacing some Shire districts and Berkshire County Council. New combined fire authorities were also created in each of these areas.

1 April 1999 Funding of Grant Maintained schools transferred to local authorities.

3 July 2000 A new Greater London Authority (GLA) was created which consists of a directly elected Mayor, a separately elected Assembly and about 400 support staff, and four functional bodies. The four functional bodies are:

(1) the Metropolitan Police Authority (MPA) - which oversees policing in London (excluding the City) [this is an entirely new local authority, the receiver for the Met Police having been abolished]

(2) The London Fire and Emergency Planning Authority (LFEPA) - which is essentially a reconstitution of the old London Fire and Civil Defence Authority (LFCDA)

(3) Transport for London (TfL) - which has strategic responsibility for transport in London; TfL also has responsibility for London buses and it is also highway and traffic authority for certain major roads in London.

(4) The London Development Agency (LDA) - which promotes economic development and regeneration in London.

1 April 2002 Funding of sixth form education transferred from local authorities to the Learning and Skills Council (LSC).

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Published 12 November 2003
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