Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Rutland County Council

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Leader
  
Tony Mathias

Seats
  
26

Independent
  
7 / 26

Seat
  
26

Chairman
  
Kenneth Bool

Conservative
  
16 / 26

Phone
  
+44 1572 722577

Rutland County Council

Type
  
Non-metropolitan district council

Address
  
Catmos St, Oakham LE15 6HP, UK

Hours
  
Closed today SaturdayClosedSundayClosedMonday8:30AM–5PMTuesday8:30AM–5PMWednesday8:30AM–5PMThursday8:30AM–5PMFriday8:30AM–4:30PMSuggest an edit

Audit and risk committee meeting rutland county council 2016


Rutland County Council is a unitary authority responsible for local government in the historic county of Rutland in the East Midlands of England. The current council was created in April 1997. The population of the Council at the 2011 census was 37,369.

Contents

As a unitary authority, the council is responsible for almost all local services in Rutland, with the exception of the Leicestershire Fire and Rescue Service and Leicestershire Police, which are run by joint boards with Leicestershire County Council and Leicester City Council.

Inside out rutland county council


History

The unitary is seen as a re-creation of the Rutland County Council that was established in 1889 by the Local Government Act 1888 and ended in 1974 by the Local Government Act 1972, when Rutland was reconstituted as a district of Leicestershire. The Local Government Commission for England in 1994 recommended that Rutland District (and Leicester City) should become unitaries and leave the two-tier Leicestershire. Rutland unitary authority came into existence on 1 April 1997.

Composition

The Council consists of 26 councillors, representing sixteen electoral wards of the county. It has all-out elections on a four-year cycle and follows a district pattern, with elections held in May 2007, May 2011 and May 2015.

The ceremonial head of the Council is the Chairman, and the executive follows the leader and cabinet model.

The current council is led by the Conservatives, with an opposition of Independents, and Liberal Democrats.

Wards

The county is divided into electoral wards, returning one, two or three councillors. The current wards were first adopted for the 2003 local elections.

References

Rutland County Council Wikipedia