Warrington Borough Council

Local authority of Warrington, Cheshire, England From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Warrington Borough Council

Warrington Borough Council is the local authority of the Borough of Warrington, a local government district in the ceremonial county of Cheshire, England. Warrington has had a borough council since 1847, which has been reformed on several occasions. Since 1998 the council has been a unitary authority, being a district council which also performs the functions of a county council.

Quick Facts Type, Leadership ...
Warrington Borough Council
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Type
Type
Leadership
Wendy Johnson,
Liberal Democrats
since 1 July 2024[1]
Hans Mundry,
Labour
since 4 Dec 2023
Steven Broomhead
since June 2012[2]
Structure
Seats58 councillors[3]
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Political groups
Administration (41)
  Labour (41)
Other Parties (17)
  Liberal Democrats (12)
  Independent (4)
  Conservative (1)
Elections
Plurality-at-large
Last election
2 May 2024
Next election
4 May 2028
Meeting place
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Town Hall, Sankey Street, Warrington, WA1 1UH
Website
www.warrington.gov.uk
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The council has been under Labour majority control since 2011. It meets at Warrington Town Hall and has its main offices at 1 Time Square.

History

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Perspective

The town of Warrington was made a municipal borough in 1847, governed by a body formally called the "mayor, aldermen and burgesses of the borough of Warrington", generally known as the corporation, town council or borough council.[4] This first incarnation of the borough council replaced an earlier body of improvement commissioners which had governed the town since 1813.[5] From its creation in 1847 the borough straddled Lancashire and Cheshire, with the county boundary being the River Mersey; the town centre and most of the built-up area was on the north bank of the river in Lancashire, but the borough also included the built-up parts of Latchford on the south bank of the river in Cheshire.[4]

In 1889 boroughs which straddled county boundaries were placed entirely in the county which had the majority of the population, and so the part of the borough south of the Mersey was transferred from Cheshire to Lancashire.[6] The borough boundaries were subsequently enlarged on several occasions, notably in 1890, 1933 and 1954.[7][8]

In 1900 Warrington was made a county borough, making it independent from Lancashire County Council, whilst remaining part of Lancashire for ceremonial purposes.[9]

The borough was substantially enlarged in 1974, taking in a number of surrounding parishes from both Lancashire and Cheshire, including Lymm, which had been a separate urban district. The enlarged borough was transferred from Lancashire to Cheshire and was redesignated as a non-metropolitan district, with Cheshire County Council providing county-level services.[10]

The borough council regained control of county-level functions 24 years later in 1998. The way this change was implemented was by creating a new non-metropolitan county called Warrington covering the borough, but with no separate county council. Instead, the existing borough council took on county council functions, making it a unitary authority.[11] It remains part of Cheshire for ceremonial purposes.[12]

Governance

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As a unitary authority, Warrington Borough Council has the functions of a county council and district council combined. In its capacity as a district council it is a billing authority collecting Council Tax and business rates, it processes local planning applications, it is responsible for housing, waste collection and environmental health. In its capacity as a county council it is a local education authority, responsible for social services, libraries and waste disposal.[13] Parts of the borough are also covered by civil parishes, which form a second tier of local government for their areas.[14]

Political control

The council has been under Labour majority control since 2011.

Political control of the council since the 1974 reforms has been as follows:[15]

Non-metropolitan district

More information Party in control, Years ...
Party in controlYears
Conservative1974–1979
No overall control1979–1983
Labour1983–1998
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Unitary authority

More information Party in control, Years ...
Party in controlYears
Labour1998–2006
No overall control2006–2011
Labour2011–present
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Leadership

The role of Mayor of Warrington is largely ceremonial. Political leadership is instead provided by the leader of the council. The leaders since 1985 have been:[16]

More information Councillor, Party ...
CouncillorPartyFromTo
Mike HallLabour19851992
John GartsideLabour199223 May 2002
Mike Hughes[17]Labour23 May 200223 Feb 2004
John JoyceLabour23 Feb 200422 May 2006
Ian MarksLiberal Democrats22 May 200623 May 2011
Terry O'Neill[18]Labour23 May 201117 Dec 2018
Russ BowdenLabour17 Dec 20184 Dec 2023
Hans MundryLabour4 Dec 2023
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The Mayors since 1998 have been:[19]

More information Councillor, Party ...
CouncillorPartyFromTo
Albert ClemowLabour19981999
Tom SwiftLabour19992000
Sheila WoodyattConservative20002001
Jeff RichardsLabour20012002
George WarburtonLabour20022003
Pauline NelsonLabour20032004
Edward LaffertyLiberal Democrats20042005
Hans MundryLabour20052006
Linda DirirLabour20062007
Celia JordanLiberal Democrats20072008
Graham WelborneLiberal Democrats20082009
Brian AxcellLiberal Democrats20092010
John JoyceLabour20102011
Michael BigginLiberal Democrats20112012
Steve WrightLabour20122013
Peter CareyLabour20132014
Ted FinneganLiberal Democrats20142015
Geoff SettleLabour20152016
Faisal RashidLabour20162017
Les MorganLabour20172018
Karen MundryLabour20182019
Wendy JohnsonLiberal Democrats20192020
Maureen CreaghanLabour20212022
Jean FlahertyLabour20222023
Steve WrightLabour20232024
Wendy JohnsonLiberal Democrats20242025
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The Mayor's role is to perform civic duties across the Borough, such as attending large events in different communities and taking the lead on certain recognised days, such as Remembrance Sunday. The Mayor has no power over policies, as that is the job of the Leader. The Mayor also chairs Full Council meetings. Though elected as a Councillor representing a particular Party, the Mayor remains impartial when chairing but also has a vote of their own (often voting with their Party line).

Composition

Following the 2024 election, plus a defection from the Labour administration in October 2024[20] the composition of the council was:

More information Party, Councillors ...
Party Councillors
Labour41
Liberal Democrats12
Independent4
Conservative1
Total58
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The next elections are due in May 2028.

Elections

Since the last boundary changes in 2016 the council has comprised 58 councillors representing 22 wards, with each ward electing two or three councillors. Elections are held every four years.[21]

Premises

The council generally meets at Warrington Town Hall on Sankey Street. The building was originally built in 1750 as a large house, and was formerly called Bank Hall. It was bought by the borough council in 1870 and converted into a town hall, with its grounds becoming a public park.[22]

The council's main offices are at 1 Time Square which was completed in 2020, replacing earlier offices at New Town House on Scotland Road which have since been demolished.[23][24]

Investments

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Elected members have approved a number of significant commercial investments by the local authority. In September 2016, Warrington Borough Council became one of the first local councils in the UK to buy clean-tech bonds in Swindon Solar Park through its owner, specialist investment management firm Rockfire Capital.[25]

In September 2019, the council acquired a 50% shareholding in Clydebank-based energy retailer Together Energy for £18m.[26][27] In September 2020, Bristol Energy's brand and residential accounts – 155,000 meter points – were sold by Bristol City Council to Together Energy for £14 million.[28] In August 2021, Warrington Council's total financial exposure to Together Energy was reported to be £41.2m.[29] In October 2021, Ofgem issued a provisional order to several suppliers, including Together Energy, who had not made Renewables Obligation payments; Together Energy's obligation was over £12m.[30] Following sharp increases in wholesale gas and electricity prices which began in autumn 2021,[31] Together Energy Retail Ltd announced on 18 January 2022 that it was ceasing to trade.[32][31]

Other loans and investments include almost £30 million paid in stages between 2017 and 2019 for a 33% stake in Redwood Bank, a "challenger bank" which has a Warrington office.[33] In 2021 a £202m loan facility, secured against commercial property, was provided to Matt Moulding, founder of Cheshire-based e-commerce business The Hut Group.[34][35]

In September 2021, the council confirmed that its borrowing had reached £1.7 billion, but that the current value of its investment assets were £2.173 billion.[36]

In May 2024, just after the local election, it was announced by the Government that they had commissioned a "Best Value" inspection into the council's finances.[37] In June 2024 Moody's Ratings withdrew its credit rating from the council after it failed to provide accounts signed-off by an auditor.[38] In January 2025, S&P Global Ratings gave the council a BBB+ credit rating with a stable outlook.[39]

References

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