
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. Some shire counties, for example Cornwall, now have no sub-divisions so are a single non-metropolitan district.
Non-metropolitan district | |
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Category | Local authority districts |
Location | England |
Found in | Non-metropolitan county |
Created by | Local Government Act 1972 |
Created |
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Number | 226 (as of 2023) |
Possible types |
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Possible status |
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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. 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 local planning and building control, council housing, environmental health, markets and fairs, refuse collection and recycling, cemeteries and crematoria, leisure services, parks, and tourism.
- County councils are responsible for running the largest and most expensive local services such as education, social services, libraries, main roads, public transport, fire services, Trading Standards, 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 |
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Education | ![]() | ![]() | |
Housing | ![]() | ![]() | |
Planning applications | ![]() | ![]() | |
Strategic planning | ![]() | ![]() | |
Transport planning | ![]() | ![]() | |
Passenger transport | ![]() | ![]() | |
Highways | ![]() | ![]() | |
Fire | ![]() | ![]() | |
Social services | ![]() | ![]() | |
Libraries | ![]() | ![]() | |
Leisure and recreation | ![]() | ![]() | |
Waste collection | ![]() | ![]() | |
Waste disposal | ![]() | ![]() | |
Environmental health | ![]() | ![]() | |
Revenue collection | ![]() | ![]() |
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 rural districts, urban districts, municipal boroughs, county boroughs and metropolitan boroughs. This system was abolished by the London Government Act 1963 and the Local Government Act 1972. Non-metropolitan districts were created by this act in 1974 when England outside Greater London was divided into metropolitan counties and non-metropolitan counties. Metropolitan counties were sub-divided 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 Wales, an almost identical two-tier system of local government existed between 1974 and 1996 (see Districts of Wales). In 1996, this was abolished and replaced with an entirely unitary system of local government, with one level of local government responsible for all local services. Since the areas for Wales and England had been enacted separately and there were no Welsh metropolitan areas, the term 'non-metropolitan district' does not apply to Wales. A similar system existed in Scotland, which in 1975 was divided into 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, special interest group which sits within the Local Government Association. 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 |
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Cambridgeshire | Cambridge – South Cambridgeshire – Huntingdonshire – Fenland – East Cambridgeshire | 5 |
Derbyshire | High Peak – Derbyshire Dales – South Derbyshire – Erewash – Amber Valley – North East Derbyshire – Chesterfield – Bolsover | 8 |
Devon | Exeter – East Devon – Mid Devon – North Devon – Torridge – West Devon – South Hams – Teignbridge | 8 |
East Sussex | Hastings – Rother – Wealden – Eastbourne – Lewes | 5 |
Essex | Harlow – Epping Forest – Brentwood – Basildon – Castle Point – Rochford – Maldon – Chelmsford – Uttlesford – Braintree – Colchester – Tendring | 12 |
Gloucestershire | Gloucester – Tewkesbury – Cheltenham – Cotswold – Stroud – Forest of Dean | 6 |
Hampshire | Gosport – Fareham – Winchester – Havant – East Hampshire – Hart – Rushmoor – Basingstoke and Deane – Test Valley – Eastleigh – New Forest | 11 |
Hertfordshire | Three Rivers – Watford – Hertsmere – Welwyn Hatfield – Broxbourne – East Hertfordshire – Stevenage – North Hertfordshire – St Albans – Dacorum | 10 |
Kent | Dartford – Gravesham – Sevenoaks – Tonbridge and Malling – Tunbridge Wells – Maidstone – Swale – Ashford – Folkestone and Hythe – Canterbury – Dover – Thanet | 12 |
Lancashire | West Lancashire – Chorley – South Ribble – Fylde – Preston – Wyre – Lancaster – Ribble Valley – Pendle – Burnley – Rossendale – Hyndburn | 12 |
Leicestershire | Charnwood – Melton – Harborough – Oadby and Wigston – Blaby – Hinckley and Bosworth – North West Leicestershire | 7 |
Lincolnshire | Lincoln – North Kesteven – South Kesteven – South Holland – Boston – East Lindsey – West Lindsey | 7 |
Norfolk | Norwich – South Norfolk – Great Yarmouth – Broadland – North Norfolk – King's Lynn and West Norfolk – Breckland | 7 |
Nottinghamshire | Rushcliffe – Broxtowe – Ashfield – Gedling – Newark and Sherwood – Mansfield – Bassetlaw | 7 |
Oxfordshire | Oxford – Cherwell – South Oxfordshire – Vale of White Horse – West Oxfordshire | 5 |
Staffordshire | Tamworth – Lichfield – Cannock Chase – South Staffordshire – Stafford – Newcastle-under-Lyme – Staffordshire Moorlands – East Staffordshire | 8 |
Suffolk | Ipswich – Babergh – East Suffolk – Mid Suffolk – West Suffolk | 5 |
Surrey | Spelthorne – Runnymede – Surrey Heath – Woking – Elmbridge – Guildford – Waverley – Mole Valley – Epsom and Ewell – Reigate and Banstead – Tandridge | 11 |
Warwickshire | North Warwickshire – Nuneaton and Bedworth – Rugby – Stratford-on-Avon – Warwick | 5 |
West Sussex | Worthing – Arun – Chichester – Horsham – Crawley – Mid Sussex – Adur | 7 |
Worcestershire | Worcester – Malvern Hills – Wyre Forest – Bromsgrove – Redditch – Wychavon | 6 |
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 |
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Avon | Bath – Kingswood – Northavon – Wansdyke | 4 |
Bedfordshire | Mid Bedfordshire – South Bedfordshire | 2 |
Buckinghamshire | South Bucks – Chiltern – Wycombe – Aylesbury Vale | 4 |
Cheshire | Chester – Congleton – Crewe and Nantwich – Ellesmere Port and Neston – Macclesfield – Vale Royal | 6 |
Cornwall | Caradon – Carrick – Kerrier – North Cornwall – Penwith – Restormel | 6 |
Cumbria | Barrow-in-Furness – South Lakeland – Copeland – Allerdale – Eden – Carlisle | 6 |
Dorset | Weymouth and Portland – West Dorset – North Dorset – Purbeck – East Dorset – Christchurch | 6 |
Durham | Durham – Easington – Sedgefield – Chester-le-Street – Derwentside – Wear Valley – Teesdale | 7 |
East Sussex | Brighton – Hove | 2 |
Hereford and Worcester | Hereford – Leominster – Malvern Hills – South Herefordshire | 3 |
Humberside | East Yorkshire Borough of Beverley – Boothferry – Cleethorpes – East Yorkshire – Glanford – Great Grimsby – Holderness – Scunthorpe | 8 |
Isle of Wight | Medina – South Wight | 2 |
Kent | Gillingham – Rochester-upon-Medway | 2 |
Northamptonshire | South Northamptonshire – Northampton – Daventry – Wellingborough – Kettering – Corby – East Northamptonshire | 7 |
North Yorkshire | York – Selby – Harrogate – Craven – Richmondshire – Hambleton – Ryedale – Scarborough | 8 |
Northumberland | Blyth Valley – Wansbeck – Castle Morpeth – Tynedale – Alnwick – Berwick-upon-Tweed | 6 |
Shropshire | Bridgnorth – North Shropshire – Oswestry – Shrewsbury and Atcham – South Shropshire | 5 |
Somerset | Taunton Deane – West Somerset – South Somerset – Somerset West and Taunton – Sedgemoor – Mendip | 6 |
Suffolk | Forest Heath – St Edmundsbury – Suffolk Coastal – Waveney | 4 |
Wiltshire | Kennet – North Wiltshire – Salisbury – West Wiltshire | 4 |
Total | 98 |
See also
- List of local governments in the United Kingdom
- District Councils' Network
- 2019–2023 structural changes to local government in England
Notes
- the district was abolished in 1996 and merged to form a larger York unitary district
References
- "A Beginners Guide to UK Geography (2023)". Open Geography Portal. Office for National Statistics. 24 August 2023. Retrieved 9 December 2023.
The 188 non-metropolitan districts (also known as local authority districts (LAD)) form the lower tier of the two-tier local government structure found in many parts of England. They are subdivisions of the non-metropolitan (shire) counties.
- National Statistics – Counties, Non-metropolitan Districts and Unitary Authorities Archived 9 May 2002 at the UK Government Web Archive
- "Members | District Councils' Network". Districtcouncils.info. Retrieved 24 September 2013.
- "Special interest groups | Local Government Association". Government of the United Kingdom. 30 August 2013. Retrieved 24 September 2013.
External links
- Map of the UK counties and unitary administrations
- Map of all UK local authorities
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 Some shire counties for example Cornwall now have no sub divisions so are a single non metropolitan district Non metropolitan districtAlso known as Shire districtCategoryLocal authority districtsLocationEnglandFound inNon metropolitan countyCreated byLocal Government Act 1972Created1 April 1974Number226 as of 2023 Possible types Two tier 164 Unitary authority 62 Possible statusCityRoyal boroughBorough 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 StructureNon metropolitan districts are subdivisions of English non metropolitan counties which have a two tier structure of local government 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 local planning and building control council housing environmental health markets and fairs refuse collection and recycling cemeteries and crematoria leisure services parks and tourism County councils are responsible for running the largest and most expensive local services such as education social services libraries main roads public transport fire services Trading Standards 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 authorityEducation Y YHousing Y YPlanning applications Y YStrategic planning Y YTransport planning Y YPassenger transport Y YHighways Y YFire Y YSocial services Y YLibraries Y YLeisure and recreation Y YWaste collection Y YWaste disposal Y YEnvironmental health Y YRevenue collection Y YStatusMany 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 HistoryBy 1899 England had been divided at district level into rural districts urban districts municipal boroughs county boroughs and metropolitan boroughs This system was abolished by the London Government Act 1963 and the Local Government Act 1972 Non metropolitan districts were created by this act in 1974 when England outside Greater London was divided into metropolitan counties and non metropolitan counties Metropolitan counties were sub divided 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 Wales an almost identical two tier system of local government existed between 1974 and 1996 see Districts of Wales In 1996 this was abolished and replaced with an entirely unitary system of local government with one level of local government responsible for all local services Since the areas for Wales and England had been enacted separately and there were no Welsh metropolitan areas the term non metropolitan district does not apply to Wales A similar system existed in Scotland which in 1975 was divided into regions and districts this was also abolished in 1996 and replaced with a fully unitary system District Councils NetworkIn England most of the district councils are represented by the District Councils Network special interest group which sits within the Local Government Association 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 districtsThis 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 NumberCambridgeshire Cambridge South Cambridgeshire Huntingdonshire Fenland East Cambridgeshire 00 5Derbyshire High Peak Derbyshire Dales South Derbyshire Erewash Amber Valley North East Derbyshire Chesterfield Bolsover 00 8Devon Exeter East Devon Mid Devon North Devon Torridge West Devon South Hams Teignbridge 00 8East Sussex Hastings Rother Wealden Eastbourne Lewes 00 5Essex Harlow Epping Forest Brentwood Basildon Castle Point Rochford Maldon Chelmsford Uttlesford Braintree Colchester Tendring 0 12Gloucestershire Gloucester Tewkesbury Cheltenham Cotswold Stroud Forest of Dean 00 6Hampshire Gosport Fareham Winchester Havant East Hampshire Hart Rushmoor Basingstoke and Deane Test Valley Eastleigh New Forest 0 11Hertfordshire Three Rivers Watford Hertsmere Welwyn Hatfield Broxbourne East Hertfordshire Stevenage North Hertfordshire St Albans Dacorum 0 10Kent Dartford Gravesham Sevenoaks Tonbridge and Malling Tunbridge Wells Maidstone Swale Ashford Folkestone and Hythe Canterbury Dover Thanet 0 12Lancashire West Lancashire Chorley South Ribble Fylde Preston Wyre Lancaster Ribble Valley Pendle Burnley Rossendale Hyndburn 0 12Leicestershire Charnwood Melton Harborough Oadby and Wigston Blaby Hinckley and Bosworth North West Leicestershire 00 7Lincolnshire Lincoln North Kesteven South Kesteven South Holland Boston East Lindsey West Lindsey 00 7Norfolk Norwich South Norfolk Great Yarmouth Broadland North Norfolk King s Lynn and West Norfolk Breckland 00 7Nottinghamshire Rushcliffe Broxtowe Ashfield Gedling Newark and Sherwood Mansfield Bassetlaw 00 7Oxfordshire Oxford Cherwell South Oxfordshire Vale of White Horse West Oxfordshire 00 5Staffordshire Tamworth Lichfield Cannock Chase South Staffordshire Stafford Newcastle under Lyme Staffordshire Moorlands East Staffordshire 00 8Suffolk Ipswich Babergh East Suffolk Mid Suffolk West Suffolk 00 5Surrey Spelthorne Runnymede Surrey Heath Woking Elmbridge Guildford Waverley Mole Valley Epsom and Ewell Reigate and Banstead Tandridge 0 11Warwickshire North Warwickshire Nuneaton and Bedworth Rugby Stratford on Avon Warwick 00 5West Sussex Worthing Arun Chichester Horsham Crawley Mid Sussex Adur 00 7Worcestershire Worcester Malvern Hills Wyre Forest Bromsgrove Redditch Wychavon 00 6Total 164List of abolished non metropolitan districtsThis 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 NumberAvon Bath Kingswood Northavon Wansdyke 0 4Bedfordshire Mid Bedfordshire South Bedfordshire 0 2Buckinghamshire South Bucks Chiltern Wycombe Aylesbury Vale 0 4Cheshire Chester Congleton Crewe and Nantwich Ellesmere Port and Neston Macclesfield Vale Royal 0 6Cornwall Caradon Carrick Kerrier North Cornwall Penwith Restormel 0 6Cumbria Barrow in Furness South Lakeland Copeland Allerdale Eden Carlisle 0 6Dorset Weymouth and Portland West Dorset North Dorset Purbeck East Dorset Christchurch 0 6Durham Durham Easington Sedgefield Chester le Street Derwentside Wear Valley Teesdale 0 7East Sussex Brighton Hove 0 2Hereford and Worcester Hereford Leominster Malvern Hills South Herefordshire 0 3Humberside East Yorkshire Borough of Beverley Boothferry Cleethorpes East Yorkshire Glanford Great Grimsby Holderness Scunthorpe 0 8Isle of Wight Medina South Wight 0 2Kent Gillingham Rochester upon Medway 0 2Northamptonshire South Northamptonshire Northampton Daventry Wellingborough Kettering Corby East Northamptonshire 0 7North Yorkshire York Selby Harrogate Craven Richmondshire Hambleton Ryedale Scarborough 0 8Northumberland Blyth Valley Wansbeck Castle Morpeth Tynedale Alnwick Berwick upon Tweed 0 6Shropshire Bridgnorth North Shropshire Oswestry Shrewsbury and Atcham South Shropshire 0 5Somerset Taunton Deane West Somerset South Somerset Somerset West and Taunton Sedgemoor Mendip 0 6Suffolk Forest Heath St Edmundsbury Suffolk Coastal Waveney 0 4Wiltshire Kennet North Wiltshire Salisbury West Wiltshire 0 4Total 98See alsoEngland portalList of local governments in the United Kingdom District Councils Network 2019 2023 structural changes to local government in EnglandNotesthe district was abolished in 1996 and merged to form a larger York unitary districtReferences A Beginners Guide to UK Geography 2023 Open Geography Portal Office for National Statistics 24 August 2023 Retrieved 9 December 2023 The 188 non metropolitan districts also known as local authority districts LAD form the lower tier of the two tier local government structure found in many parts of England They are subdivisions of the non metropolitan shire counties National Statistics Counties Non metropolitan Districts and Unitary Authorities Archived 9 May 2002 at the UK Government Web Archive Members District Councils Network Districtcouncils info Retrieved 24 September 2013 Special interest groups Local Government Association Government of the United Kingdom 30 August 2013 Retrieved 24 September 2013 External linksMap of the UK counties and unitary administrations Map of all UK local authorities