Select Vestries Bill Explained

A bill for the better regulating of Select Vestries, usually referred to as the Select Vestries Bill, is customarily the first bill introduced and debated in the United Kingdom's House of Lords at the start of each session of Parliament. The equivalent bill used by the House of Commons is the Outlawries Bill.

The bill is read after the King's Speech, after the Commons have returned to their chamber, but before any debate on the contents of the Speech. The bill is given a pro forma first reading upon the motion of the Leader of the House of Lords, to demonstrate that the House can debate on whatever it chooses and set its own business independently of the Crown.

Origin of the bill

The vestry committees evolved in ecclesiastical parishes out of the feudal system and the removal of the influence of the Church after the Reformation. They had a dual nature and acquired civil duties such as administering the Poor Law. These bodies met in the vestry of the local parish church and were responsible for imposing a form of local taxes known as the church rate. They were in effect the government of rural England and Wales until the reforms of the late 1800s creating county and district councils.

Whilst the open vestry was a general meeting of all inhabitant rate-paying householders in a parish,[1] in the 17th century the huge growth of population in some parishes, mostly urban, made it increasingly difficult to convene and conduct meetings. Consequently, select vestries were created in some of these. They were administrative committees of selected parishioners whose members generally had a property qualification and who were recruited largely by co-option. This took responsibility from the community at large and improved efficiency, but over time tended to lead to governance by a self-perpetuating elite.[2] This committee was also known as the "close vestry".

By the late 17th century, the existence of a number of autocratic and corrupt select vestries had become a national scandal, and several bills were introduced to Parliament in the 1690s, but none became acts. There was continual agitation for reform, and in 1698 to keep the debate alive the House of Lords insisted that a bill to reform the select vestries, the Select Vestries Bill, would always be the first item of business of the Lords in a new parliament until a reform bill was passed. The first reading of the bill was made annually, but every year the bill never got any further. This continues to this day as an archaic custom in the Lords to assert the independence from the Crown, even though the select vestries have long been abolished.[3]

Select Vestries Acts

Short Title:Select Vestries Act 1663
Type:Act
Parliament:Parliament of England
Long Title:An Act for regulating Select Vestryes.
Year:1663
Citation:15 Cha. 2. c. 5
Royal Assent:27 July 1663
Commencement:18 February 1663
Repeal Date:28 July 1863
Repealing Legislation:Statute Law Revision Act 1863
Status:repealed
Original Text:https://www.british-history.ac.uk/statutes-realm/vol5/pp446-447
Collapsed:yes
Short Title:Vestries Act 1818
Type:Act
Parliament:Parliament of the United Kingdom
Long Title:An Act for the Regulation of Parish Vestries.
Year:1818
Citation:58 Geo. 3. c. 69
Collapsed:yes
Short Title:Poor Relief Act 1819
Type:Act
Parliament:Parliament of the United Kingdom
Long Title:An Act to Amend the Law for the Relief of the Poor.
Year:1819
Citation:59 Geo. 3. c. 12
Collapsed:yes

The term Select Vestries Acts collectively refers to two Acts of Parliament passed in 1818 and 1819 respectively, the Act for the Regulation of Parish Vestries (Vestries Act 1818, 58 Geo. 3. c. 69), and the Act to Amend the Law for the Relief of the Poor (Poor Relief Act 1819, 59 Geo. 3. c. 12). These acts were promoted by William Sturges Bourne, MP and Chairman of a Committee to reform the Poor Laws, and are therefore also known as the Sturges Bourne Acts.

References

  1. .
  2. Arnold-Baker, Charles (1989). Local Council Administration in English Parishes and Welsh Communities. Longcross. .
  3. KP Poole & Bryan Keith-Lucas. Parish Government 1894–1994. National Association of Local Councils.