Southend-on-Sea City Council explained

Southend-on-Sea City Council
Logo Pic:Southend-on-Sea City Council logo.svg
Logo Res:250px
House Type:Unitary authority
Leader1 Type:Mayor
Leader1:Ron Woodley
Party1:
Independent
Election1:9 May 2024
Leader2 Type:Leader
Leader2:Daniel Cowan
Party2:
Labour
Election2:20 May 2024
Leader3 Type:Chief Executive
Leader3:Colin Ansell
Election3:5 February 2024
Seats:51 councillors
Structure1:File:United_Kingdom_Southend-on-Sea_City_Council_2024_ammended.svg
Structure1 Res:250px
Structure1 Alt:Southend Council 2024
Political Groups1:
Administration (29)
  • Labour (20)
  • Independent (5)
    Other parties (22)
  • Conservative (18)
  • Independent (2)
  • Green (2)
  • Voting System1:First-past-the-post
    Last Election1:2 May 2024
    Next Election1:7 May 2026
    Session Room:Southend - Civic Centre.jpg
    Meeting Place:Civic Centre, Victoria Avenue, Southend-on-Sea, SS26ER

    Southend-on-Sea City Council is the local authority of the city of Southend-on-Sea, in the ceremonial county of Essex, England. Southend has had an elected local authority since 1866, which has been reformed several times. Since 1998 the council has been a unitary authority, being a district council which also performs the functions of a county council; it is independent from Essex County Council

    The council has been under no overall control since 2019. Since 2024 it has been led by a coalition of Labour, the Liberal Democrats and some of the independent councillors. It is based at Southend Civic Centre.

    History

    Southend's first elected council was a local board, which held its first meeting on 29 August 1866.[1] Prior to that the town was administered by the vestry for the wider parish of Prittlewell. The local board district was enlarged in 1877 to cover the whole parish of Prittlewell.[2]

    In 1892 the town was made a municipal borough, governed by a body formally called the 'mayor, aldermen and burgesses of the borough of Southend-on-Sea', generally known as the corporation, town council or borough council. The borough boundaries were enlarged on several occasions, notably absorbing Southchurch in 1897, Leigh-on-Sea in 1913, and Shoeburyness and North Shoebury in 1933. By 1914 the borough was considered large enough to provide its own county-level functions, and so it was made a county borough, independent from Essex County Council.[3]

    The powers of the council were substantially reformed in 1974 under the Local Government Act 1972. Southend's boundaries remained the same, but it was redesignated as a non-metropolitan district, with Essex County Council once more providing county-level services. Southend retained its borough status, allowing the chair of the council to take the title of mayor, continuing Southend's series of mayors dating back to 1892.[4]

    Southend regained its independence from Essex County Council on 1 April 1998 when it was made a unitary authority. The way this change was implemented was to create a new non-metropolitan county called Southend-on-Sea covering the same area as the district, but with no separate county council. Instead, the existing borough council assumed the functions that legislation assigns to county councils, making it a unitary authority. This therefore had the effect of restoring the borough council to the powers it had held when Southend was a county borough prior to 1974.[5] Southend-on-Sea remains part of the ceremonial county of Essex for the purposes of lieutenancy.[6]

    On 26 January 2022 letters patent were issued granting city status to the borough, allowing the council to change its name to Southend-on-Sea City Council.[7]

    Governance

    Southend-on-Sea City Council provides both district-level and county-level functions. There is one civil parish within the city at Leigh-on-Sea, which forms an additional tier of local government for that area; the rest of the city is unparished.[8]

    Political control

    The council has been under no overall control since 2019. Following the 2024 election a coalition of Labour, the Liberal Democrats and some of the independent councillors was formed to run the council, led by Labour councillor Daniel Cowan.[9] [10]

    Political control of the council since the 1974 reforms has been as follows:[11] [12]

    Lower-tier non-metropolitan district

    Party in controlYears
    1974–1976
    1976–1987
    1987–1990
    1990–1994
    1994–1998

    Unitary authority

    Party in controlYears
    1998–2000
    2000–2012
    2012–2013
    2013–2014
    2014–2017
    2017–2019
    2019–present

    Leadership

    The role of mayor is largely ceremonial in Southend-on-Sea, usually being held by a different councillor each year. Political leadership is instead provided by the leader of the council. The leaders since 2003 have been:[13]

    Councillor Party From To
    Howard Briggs 20 Feb 2003 12 May 2005
    Anna Waite 12 May 2005 7 May 2006
    Murray Foster 18 May 2006 6 May 2007
    Nigel Holdcroft 17 May 2007 25 May 2014
    Ron Woodley 5 Jun 2014 19 May 2016
    John Lamb 19 May 2016 9 May 2019
    Tony Cox 9 May 2019 3 Jun 2019
    Ian Gilbert 3 Jun 2019 May 2022
    Stephen George 19 May 2022 18 May 2023
    Tony Cox 18 May 2023 20 May 2024
    Daniel Cowan 20 May 2024

    Composition

    Following the 2024 election and a subsequent by-election in July 2024, composition of the council was:[14] [15]

    Party Councillors
    20
    18
    7
    4
    2
    Total 51

    Five of the independent councillors sit together as the "Independent Group", which forms the council's administration with Labour and the Liberal Democrats. The other two independents are not aligned to any group.[16] The next election is due in 2026.[17]

    Elections

    Since the last boundary changes in 2001, the council has comprised 51 councillors representing 17 wards, with each ward electing three councillors. Elections are held three years out of every four, with a third of the council (one councillor for each ward) elected each time for a four-year term of office.[18]

    Premises

    The council is based at Southend Civic Centre on Victoria Avenue.[19] The building was designed by borough architect, Patrick Burridge, and officially opened by Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother on 31 October 1967.[20]

    Performance

    In 2007, Southend Borough Council was criticised as one of the worst financially managed local authorities in England by the Audit Commission report for 2006/7, one of three to gain only one of four stars, the others being Liverpool and the Isles of Scilly.[21]

    In March 2012, Southend Borough Council was awarded the title of 'Council of the Year 2012' by the Local Government Chronicle.[22]

    Arms

    Escutcheon:Azure on a pile Argent between on the dexter an anchor erect on the sinister a grid-iron and in base a trefoil slipped Or a flower vase issuing therefrom a spray of lilies Proper.
    Crest:Issuant out of a mural crown Gules the mast of a ship proper flying therefrom a flag Argent charged with a cross throughout Gules.
    Supporters:On the dexter side a mediaeval fisherman holding a net with his exterior hand all Proper and on the sinister side a Cluniac monk Proper holding in the dexter hand a book Gules and in the exterior hand a staff also Proper.
    Motto:Per Mare Per Ecclesiam (Through The Sea Through The Church)
    Notes:Originally granted to Southend-on-Sea County Borough Council on 1 & 2 January 1915. Transferred to Southend-on-Sea Borough Council on 21 May 1974.[23]

    Notes and References

    1. News: Southend . 26 May 2023 . Chelmsford Chronicle . 31 August 1866 . 5.
    2. Book: Yearsley . Ian . Southend in 50 buildings . 2016 . Amberley Publishing . Stroud . 9781445651897 . 26 May 2023.
    3. Web site: Southend on Sea Municipal Borough / County Borough . A Vision of Britain through Time . GB Historical GIS / University of Portsmouth . 26 May 2023.
    4. Web site: District Councils and Boroughs . . 4 December 2021 . 28 March 1974.
    5. si. The Essex (Boroughs of Colchester, Southend-on-Sea and Thurrock and District of Tendring) (Structural, Boundary and Electoral Changes) Order 1996. 1996. 1875. 26 May 2023.
    6. act. Lieutenancies Act 1997. 1997. 23. 1. 29 May 2024.
    7. News: Southend: Prince Charles presents city status document to Essex resort . 26 May 2023 . BBC News . 1 March 2022.
    8. Web site: Election Maps . Ordnance Survey . 20 July 2024.
    9. Web site: Joint administration agreement between the Labour, Independent and Liberal Democrat groups of Southend-on-City City Council . Southend-on-Sea City Council . 20 July 2024.
    10. News: Knight . Matt . Labour take control to lead coalition in Southend . 20 July 2024 . BBC News . 21 May 2024.
    11. Web site: Compositions calculator . The Elections Centre . 22 September 2022.
    12. News: Southend-On-Sea . 31 March 2010 . . 19 April 2008.
    13. Web site: Council minutes . Southend-on-Sea Borough Council . 10 June 2022.
    14. Web site: Election results 2023 – Election results – Southend-on-Sea City Counc… . 2023-05-05 . https://archive.today/20230505162930/https://www.southend.gov.uk/elections-registering-vote/election-results-1 . 2023-05-05 .
    15. News: Sexton . Christine . Southend Labour councillor now sitting as non-aligned . 26 May 2023 . Southend Echo . 17 May 2023.
    16. Web site: Your councillors by party . 23 May 2024 . Southend-on-Sea City Council.
    17. Web site: Southend-on-Sea . Local Councils . Thorncliffe . 20 July 2024.
    18. si. The Borough of Southend-on-Sea (Electoral Changes) Order 2000. 2000. 1487. 20 July 2024.
    19. Web site: Contact us. Southend-on-Sea City Council. 12 August 2022.
    20. Web site: Southend Civic Centre. Modern Mooch. 8 February 2021.
    21. Web site: Echo News - Official: Council is wasting our cash . Laura Smith . 30 January 2008 . 21 July 2008.
    22. Web site: Southend Council wins council of the year at Local Government Chronicle awards . Uncited . 14 March 2012 . 8 April 2013.
    23. Web site: East of England Region . Civic Heraldry of England . 9 March 2021.