Local Government Act 1988 Explained

Short Title:Local Government Act 1988
Type:Act of Parliament
Parliament:Parliament of the United Kingdom
Year:1988
Citation:1998 c. 9
Territorial Extent:Great Britain
Royal Assent:24 March 1988
Commencement:24 March 1988
Replaces:Dog Licenses Act 1959
Status:current
Use New Uk-Leg:yes

The United Kingdom Local Government Act 1988 is an Act of the United Kingdom Parliament. It was famous for its controversial section 28. This section prohibited local authorities from promoting, in a specified category of schools, "the teaching of the acceptability of homosexuality as a pretended family relationship". The Act did have other effects also, and was rather a mixed bag of changes. Part I introduced compulsory tendering of contracts for certain types of activities. Part II dealt with aspects of public sector contracting. Part III allowed housing authorities to provide financial assistance to people living in private property. Section 38, part of the "miscellaneous and general" coverage of Part IV, abolished dog licences.[1]

Section 17

Section 17(1) stipulates that public bodies covered by the Act are not permitted to take "non-commercial considerations" into account when carrying out their functions relating to awarding contracts. The Act lists non-commercial matters relating to public supply or works contracts, including terms and conditions of employment offered by contractors to their workers, the involvement of contractors with irrelevant fields of Government policy, and the conduct of contractors or workers in industrial disputes.[2]

In 2000, the Employment Sub-committee of the House of Commons Education and Employment Select Committee suggested that this requirement needed to be amended so that local councils could address local employment gaps by including local labour clauses in appropriate contracts.[3]

See also

External links

UK legislation

Regulations

Notes and References

  1. UK Legislation, Local Government Act 1988: Contents, accessed on 3 July 2024
  2. UK Legislation, Local Government Act 1988: Section 17, accessed on 3 July 2024
  3. House of Commons, Select Committee on Education and Employment (2000), Fourth Report: Employability and Jobs: Is there a Jobs Gap, paragraphs 65-66