South Lanarkshire Council Explained

South Lanarkshire Council
Legislature:Unitary Authority Council
Coa Pic:Coat of arms of South Lanarkshire.svg
Coa Caption:Coat of arms
Logo Pic:South Lanarkshire Council logo.svg
Foundation:1 April 1996
House Type:Unitary authority
Leader1 Type:Provost
Leader1:Margaret Cooper
Party1:
Independent Group
Election1:18 May 2022
Leader2 Type:Leader
Leader2:Joe Fagan
Party2:
Labour
Election2:18 May 2022
Leader3 Type:Chief Executive
Leader3:Paul Manning
Election3:2023[1]
Members:64
Structure1:South Lanarkshire Council 2023.svg
Structure1 Res:280
Structure1 Alt:Makeup of the South Lanarkshire Council, including 2023 changes
Political Groups1:
Administration (30)
  • Labour (25)
    Opposition (34)
  • SNP (25)
  • Conservative (7)
  • Green (1)
  • Voting System1:Single transferable vote
    Last Election1:5 May 2022
    Next Election1:6 May 2027
    Meeting Place:Council Offices, Almada Street, Hamilton, ML30AA
    Session Room:SouthLanarkshireCouncilHQ.JPG

    South Lanarkshire Council (Gaelic; Scottish Gaelic: Comhairle Siorrachd Lannraig a Deas) is the unitary authority serving the South Lanarkshire council area in Scotland. The council has its headquarters in Hamilton, has 16,000 employees, and an annual budget of almost £1bn. The large and varied geographical territory takes in rural and upland areas, market towns such as Lanark, Strathaven and Carluke, the urban burghs of Rutherglen, Cambuslang, and East Kilbride which was Scotland's first new town. The area was formed in 1996 from the areas of Clydesdale,[2] Hamilton and East Kilbride districts, and some outer areas of Glasgow district (Rutherglen/Fernhill, Cambuslang/Halfway and part of King's Park/Toryglen); all were previously within the Strathclyde region from 1975 but in historic Lanarkshire prior to that.[3] [4] [5] [6] [7]

    Political control

    The first election to South Lanarkshire Council was held in 1995, initially operating as a shadow authority alongside the outgoing authorities until the new system came into force on 1 April 1996. Political control of the council since 1996 has been as follows:[8]

    Party in controlYears
    1996–2007
    2007–2013
    2013–2017
    2017–

    Leadership

    South Lanarkshire operates a cabinet style system, with key decisions being taken by the executive committee, under the leadership of the Council Leader,[9] and approved by the council, chaired by the provost.

    The first leader of South Lanarkshire Council, selected from among the sitting councillors, was Tom McCabe who previously held the same office at Hamilton District.[10] When McCabe was elected as an MSP in 1999, the role went to his deputy Eddie McAvoy - brother of one of the region's MPs Tommy McAvoy - who held the post for the next 18 years until his retirement ahead of the 2017 election.[11] [12] The new leader from 2017 was John Ross.[13]

    The ambassadorial role of provost is also filled by one of the serving councillors.[14] Office holders include:

    The leaders of the council since 1996 have been:[23]

    Councillor Party From To
    1 Apr 1996 6 May 1999
    Eddie McAvoy May 1999 4 May 2017
    John Ross 18 May 2017 May 2022
    Joe Fagan 18 May 2022

    Current composition

    The results of the last local elections on 5 May 2022 were:[24]

    PartyCouncillors
    Scottish National Party27
    Labour24
    Conservative7
    Liberal Democrats3
    Independent Group2
    Green1

    Following the defection of East Kilbride, Strathaven and Lesmahagow MP Lisa Cameron from the SNP to the Conservatives in October 2023, her husband – Cllr Mark Horsham – stood back from his role as business manager within the SNP group[25] before resigning from the party to sit as an Independent 10 days later. He did not join the 'Independent Group' with the other independent councillors.[26]

    In May 2023, East Kilbride West councillor Ali Salamati resigned his seat for work reasons triggering a by-election[27] which Labour won.[28] Therefore, as of 11th July 2023, the composition of the Council is:

    PartyCouncillors
    Scottish National Party25
    Labour25
    Conservative7
    Liberal Democrats3
    Independent Group2
    Green1
    Independent1

    Elections

    Since 2007 elections have been held every five years under the single transferable vote system, introduced by the Local Governance (Scotland) Act 2004. Election results since 1995 have been as follows:[8]

    YearSeatsSNPLabourConservativeLiberal DemocratsGreenIndependent / OtherNotes
    73 8 61 2 2 0 0 Labour majority
    67 10 54 2 1 0 0 New ward boundaries.[29] Labour majority
    67 10 50 2 2 0 3 Labour majority
    67 24 30 8 2 0 3 New ward boundaries.[30]
    67 28 33 3 1 0 2
    64 27 22 14 1 0 0 New ward boundaries.[31]
    64 27 24 7 3 1 2 Labour / Lib Dem minority coalition

    Premises

    The Council Headquarters building, on Almada Street, Hamilton, was built as the Lanark County Buildings in 1963, and designed by county architect David Gordon Bannerman.[32] [33] [34] [35] [36] The 17 storey, tower is the tallest building in the council area, is Category A-listed, and is a highly visible landmark across this part of the Clyde Valley. The modernist design was influenced by the United Nations building in New York City. At the front of the building is the circular council chamber, and a plaza with water features. Between 1975 and 1996 the building had been used as a sub-regional office of Strathclyde Regional Council, with Hamilton District Council using Hamilton Townhouse in that time. On the creation of South Lanarkshire Council in 1996 the new council chose to base itself at the Almada Street building.

    Wards

    In the council's initial 12 years, individual wards (73 in 1995, adjusted down to 67 in 1999 and 2003) each electing one councillor using the First past the post method.[37] [38]

    Since the 2007 South Lanarkshire Council election, there are 20 council wards in South Lanarkshire,[39] each serving a population ranging from 13,000 to 20,000[40] and each ward represented on the council by 3 or 4 councillors elected using single transferable vote; in 2007 and 2012 this produced a total of 67 available seats, which was adjusted down to 64 in 2017 along with boundary adjustments, although the same number of wards overall.

    NumberWard NameLocationSeats(2017)Population(2018)
    1Clydesdale West419,124
    2Clydesdale North314,777
    3Clydesdale East313,065
    4Clydesdale South314,647
    5Avondale and Stonehouse317,089
    6East Kilbride South316,688
    7East Kilbride Central South316,177
    8East Kilbride Central North316,799
    9East Kilbride West313,695
    10East Kilbride East314,308
    11Rutherglen South315,448
    12Rutherglen Central and North314,489
    13Cambuslang West314,177
    14Cambuslang East316,915
    15Blantyre316,127
    16Bothwell and Uddingston313,187
    17Hamilton North and East315,036
    18Hamilton West and Earnock418,618
    19Hamilton South421,793
    20Larkhall418,444
    Total64320,530

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: Chief Executive . South Lanarkshire Council . 7 January 2023.
    2. https://www.lanark.co.uk/historical-lanark/timeline/1975/local-government-re-organisation Historical Timeline: 1975
    3. Web site: 22 October 1973 . New Local Government areas . 4 November 2018 . Hansard.
    4. Web site: Irene . Maver . Modern Times: 1950s to The Present Day > Neighbourhoods . 4 November 2018 . The Glasgow Story.
    5. Web site: Scotland's Landscape: City of Glasgow . 4 November 2018 . BBC.
    6. Web site: Rutherglen residents not interested in Glasgow return. Douglas. Dickie. 9 April 2017. Daily Record.
    7. News: McLean . Marc . 5 September 2018 . From a pawnbrokers to Parliament - Tommy McAvoy looks back on his career . 1 January 2022 . Daily Record . en.
    8. Web site: Compositions calculator . The Elections Centre . 5 January 2023.
    9. https://www.southlanarkshire.gov.uk/info/200236/politicians/388/council_leader Council leader
    10. Web site: Tributes to former Hamilton MSP Tom McCabe, who passed away this week aged 60. Alastair. McNeill. 23 April 2015. Daily Record.
    11. Web site: South Lanarkshire Council leader Eddie McAvoy to stand down at next election. Douglas. Dickie. 30 June 2016. Daily Record.
    12. Web site: Former council leader praised for his "legacy" for South Lanarkshire children. Rutherglen. Reformer. 22 January 2020. Daily Record.
    13. News: Row over Council Leader's 'F*** the Union' tweet rumbles on. Bark. Stephen. 14 November 2019. East Kilbride News.
    14. https://www.southlanarkshire.gov.uk/info/200236/politicians/586/provost Provost
    15. Web site: Chatelherault Country Park opened to the public 30 years ago today. Robert. Mitchell. 30 September 2017. Daily Record.
    16. https://www.pressreader.com/uk/east-kilbride-news/20190522/281840055132028 20 Years Ago
    17. Web site: Ex-provost Mushtaq Ahmad appointed Lord Lieutenant of Lanarkshire. 24 November 2010. Daily Record.
    18. Web site: CBC Gents Russell Clearie. www.cambuslangbc.co.uk.
    19. Web site: A day in the life of Russell Clearie. 17 June 2008. Daily Record.
    20. Web site: Carluke councillor Eileen Logan becomes new Provost of South Lanarkshire | GlasgowWorld.
    21. Web site: Historical Society project to be hosted at village's library. Alastair. McNeill. 26 November 2016. Daily Record.
    22. Web site: Things get Biggar and better for SNP as it appoints provost | GlasgowWorld.
    23. Web site: Council minutes . South Ayrshire Council . 7 January 2023.
    24. Web site: Political composition of the council . South Lanarkshire Council . 8 January 2023.
    25. News: Lisa Cameron's husband 'steps back' as SNP councillor . The National . Abbi . Garton-Crosbie . 12 October 2023 . 28 February 2023.
    26. News: Lisa Cameron's husband quits SNP just weeks after MP's defection to Tories . Daily Record . Paul . Hutcheon . Andrew . Quinn . 23 October 2023 . 28 February 2023.
    27. News: South Lanarkshire councillor resigns . Daily Record . Shannon . Milmine . 3 May 2023 . 3 May 2023.
    28. News: Labour win in East Kilbride West by-election as new councillor is elected . Daily Record . Andrea . Lambrou . 7 July 2023 . 11 July 2023.
    29. si. The South Lanarkshire (Electoral Arrangements) Order 1998. 1998. 3252. 8 January 2023.
    30. ssi. The South Lanarkshire (Electoral Arrangements) Order 2006. 2006. 377. 8 January 2023.
    31. ssi. The South Lanarkshire (Electoral Arrangements) Order 2016. 2016. 287. 8 January 2023.
    32. News: County architect retires . 15 January 2023 . Wishaw Press . 7 September 1973 . 14.
    33. https://web.archive.org/web/20200327062554/https://www.emporis.com/buildings/1176889/south-lanarkshire-council-headquarters-hamilton-united-kingdom South Lanarkshire Council Headquarters
    34. https://canmore.org.uk/site/173419/hamilton-almada-street-lanark-county-buildings Hamilton, Almada Street, Lanark County Buildings
    35. http://www.skyscrapernews.com/buildings.php?id=483 South Lanarkshire Council HQ
    36. Web site: Queen Mother opens Hamilton's county buildings in 1964. Robert. Mitchell. 21 April 2014. Daily Record.
    37. http://www.lgbc-scotland.gov.uk/Electoral/2nd_Reviews/South_Lanarkshire/2nd_Review_South_Lanarkshire_Overview.pdf Formation electoral arrangements in 1995: South Lanarkshire council area
    38. http://www.lgbc-scotland.gov.uk/Electoral/3rd_Reviews/South_Lanarkshire/3rd_Review_South_Lanarkshire_Overview.pdf Electoral Arrangements for Local Government Areas in Scotland: South Lanarkshire Council Area
    39. Web site: 4 May 2017 . Local multi-member ward boundary maps . 23 July 2018 . South Lanarkshire Council.
    40. Web site: 30 June 2016 . South Lanarkshire . 23 July 2018 . City Population.