Borough of Ashford explained

The Borough of Ashford is a local government district with borough status in Kent, England. It is named after its largest town, Ashford, where the council is based. The borough also includes the town of Tenterden and an extensive surrounding rural area including numerous villages; with an area of 580km2, it is the largest district in Kent. Parts of the borough lie within the designated Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty of High Weald and the Kent Downs.

The neighbouring districts are (clockwise from west) Tunbridge Wells, Maidstone, Swale, Canterbury, Folkestone and Hythe, and Rother. The latter is in East Sussex, the rest are in Kent.

History

The parish of Ashford was made a local government district in 1863, run by an elected local board. Such districts were converted into urban districts under the Local Government Act 1894.[1]

The modern district was created on 1 April 1974 under the Local Government Act 1972, covering the area of five former districts, which were all abolished at the same time:[2]

The new district was named Ashford after its largest town.[3] The district was awarded borough status from its creation, allowing the chair of the council to take the title of mayor.[4]

Governance

Ashford Borough Council
Logo Pic:Ashford Borough Council.svg
Logo Res:250px
House Type:Non-metropolitan district
Foundation:1 April 1974
Leader1 Type:Mayor
Leader1:Lyn Suddards
Party1:
Labour
Election1:16 May 2024[5]
Leader2 Type:Leader
Leader2:Noel Ovenden
Party2:
Ashford Independents
Election2:30 May 2023[6]
Leader3 Type:Chief Executive
Leader3:Tracey Kerly
Election3:2016
Seats:47 councillors
Structure1 Res:180px
Political Groups1:
Administration (18)
  • Green (8)
    Other parties (29)
  • Conservative (17)
  • Labour (11)
  • Independent (1)
  • Voting System1:First past the post
    Next Election1:6 May 2027
    Session Room:Ashford Civic Centre - geograph.org.uk - 2965665.jpg
    Session Res:260
    Session Alt:Ashford Borough Council composition
    Meeting Place:Civic Centre, Tannery Lane, Ashford, TN231PL

    Ashford Borough Council provides district-level services. County-level services are provided by Kent County Council.[7] Much of the district is covered by civil parishes, which form a third tier of local government for their areas.[8]

    Political control

    The council has been under no overall control since 2022.[9] Following the 2023 election a coalition of the Ashford Independents and the Green Party took minority control of the council, led by Ashford Independent councillor Noel Ovenden.[10]

    The first elections to the council were held in 1973, initially operating as a shadow authority alongside the outgoing authorities until the new arrangements came into effect on 1 April 1974. Political control of the council since 1974 has been as follows:[11] [12]

    Party in control Years
    1974–1976
    1976–1979
    1979–1983
    1983–1995
    1995–2003
    2003–2022
    2022–present

    Leadership

    The role of mayor is largely ceremonial in Ashford. Political leadership is instead provided by the leader of the council. The leaders since 1999 have been:[13]

    Councillor Party From To
    Paul Clokie 1999 13 May 2010
    Paul Bartlett 13 May 2010 9 Nov 2010
    Peter Wood 9 Nov 2010 1 Mar 2013
    Gerry Clarkson 18 Apr 2013 7 May 2023
    Noel Ovenden 30 May 2023

    Compositions

    Following the 2023 election and subsequent changes of allegiance up to July 2024, the composition of the council was:[14] [15] [16]

    PartyCouncillors
    17
    11
    10
    8
    1
    Total47
    The next election is due in 2027.

    Elections

    Since the last full review of boundaries in 2019 the council has comprised 47 councillors representing 39 wards, with each ward electing one or two councillors. Elections are held every four years.[17]

    Premises

    The council is based at the Civic Centre on Tannery Lane in Ashford, which was purpose-built for the council and opened in 1983.[18] [19] The council has announced plans to move during 2024 to International House, a 1972 office building opposite Ashford International railway station, which the council bought in 2014.[20] [21]

    Population

    Expansion and growth

    In 1961, the population of the districts which make up the present borough was as follows:[22]

    District Population
    Ashford Urban District 27,996
    East Ashford Rural District 10,610
    Tenterden Municipal Borough 10,734
    Tenterden Rural District 4,948
    West Ashford Rural District 7,626
    Total 61,914

    Forty years later the population had almost doubled: the 2001 census recorded a population of 102,661.[23]

    From the 1960s onwards Ashford has experienced phases of rapid urban growth, creating new suburbs such as Stanhope and, more recently, Singleton. Today's urban growth is partially shaped by the de facto corridors[24] created by the M20 motorway, the High Speed 1 line and several other rail lines which converge on the town's railway station.

    The 2011 census reported Ashford as having:

    Economy and Infrastructure

    The area's economy, once strongly dominated by agriculture and associated activities such as brewing and food production as well as some quarrying of ragstone and brick manufacture, evolved into a centre for rail engineering in the 19th century, and is now primarily light industrial and commercial, with the notable exception of Hitachi's rail depot. The borough's local plan ("Local Plan to 2030") continues to plan for new housing in and around the town, such as the development at Finberry.

    From the historic town centre, roads radiate out in the following directions: NW to Charing and Maidstone and SE to Hythe and Folkestone (A20/M20 in each direction); south to Hamstreet, Lydd and Romney Marsh and then westwards to Hastings (A2070); SW to Tenterden and NE to Wye and Canterbury (A28) and finally north to Ashford's historic port at Faversham (A251).

    Media

    Television

    The area is served by the regional news programmes:

    Radio

    Radio stations that broadcast to the area are:

    Historic buildings and landscape character

    There are more than 400 listed buildings in the district. This includes 33 churches listed in the highest grading in the national listing system (Grade I) as well as many oast houses and pubs dating from the 17th and 18th centuries, along with some even earlier buildings such as the Black Horse at Pluckley built in the 1470s as a dry-moated farmhouse by the Dering family (see also: Little Chart).

    Well-known examples of Grade I listed buildings include: the Archbishop's palace at Charing, Chilham Castle and Godinton House, as well as more domestic examples such as the row of 17th century Flemish weavers' cottages which stretches the full length of the south side of Biddenden High Street.

    See also the listings: Grade I listed buildings in Ashford (borough) .

    Beyond the town of Ashford, most of the borough's land area is rural, with fields, woodland and fruit orchards. Much of the woodland is coppiced.[25] Changes in rural land use over the past century mirror those in the rest of the present County.[26] The north-east of the borough, including the villages of Wye and Chilham, is within the Kent Downs AONB, whilst the south-west, including Rolvenden and the Isle of Oxney, is part of the High Weald AONB. In addition to these national landscape areas, the borough has many smaller Local Nature Reserves such as Hothfield Common.

    Towns and parishes

    As of April 2023 there were 44 civil parishes within the borough. The parish council for Tenterden has declared that parish to be a town, allowing it to take the style "town council". Much of the built-up area of Ashford itself is unparished, although some suburbs fall within parishes.[8] [27]

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. Book: Kelly's Directory of Kent . 1913 . 33 . 12 May 2024.
    2. si. The English Non-metropolitan Districts (Definition) Order 1972. 1972. 2039. 12 May 2024.
    3. si. The English Non-metropolitan Districts (Names) Order 1973. 1973. 551. 3 March 2023.
    4. Web site: District Councils and Boroughs. 28 March 1974. Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 12 May 2024.
    5. Web site: Council minutes, 16 May 2024 . Ashford Borough Council . 7 July 2024.
    6. Web site: Council minutes, 30 May 2023 . Ashford Borough Council . 25 September 2023.
    7. act. Local Government Act 1972. 1972. 70. 31 May 2023.
    8. Web site: Election Maps . Ordnance Survey . 25 July 2023.
    9. News: Jee . Alex . Conservatives lose control of Ashford Borough Council after Tenterden representative Callum Knowles becomes independent . 12 May 2024 . Kent Online . 27 May 2022.
    10. News: Esson . Daniel . Ashford Independents and Greens take control of Ashford Borough Council after leadership vote shock for Conservatives . 25 September 2023 . Kent Online . 31 May 2023.
    11. Web site: Compositions calculator . The Elections Centre . 9 September 2022.
    12. News: England council elections. BBC News Online. 22 May 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20110519015140/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/special/election2011/council/html/29ub.stm. 19 May 2011 . live.
    13. Web site: Council minutes . Ashford Borough Council . 26 July 2022.
    14. Web site: Local elections 2023: live council results for England. The Guardian.
    15. News: Boothroyd . David . In a Tisbury . 12 May 2024 . Local Councils . 9 June 2023.
    16. Web site: Ashford . Local Councils . Thorncliffe . 7 July 2024.
    17. si. The Ashford (Electoral Changes) Order 2017. 2017. 1066. 12 May 2024.
    18. Web site: Council Chamber . Ashford Borough Council . 12 May 2024.
    19. News: Dawn of a new era in borough's history . 12 May 2024 . Kentish Express . 25 June 2015.
    20. Web site: Council's move to International House . Ashford Borough Council . 12 May 2024.
    21. News: Castle . Liane . Ashford Borough Council considering moving HQ out of Civic Centre and into International House as consultation launched . 12 May 2024 . Kent Online . 13 August 2023.
    22. Web site: 1961 and 1971 Censuses of England and Wales . A Vision of Britain through Time . GB Historical GIS / University of Portsmouth . 12 May 2024.
    23. Web site: New Local Plan to 2030 - Ashford Borough Council. ashford.gov.uk. 2016-01-24. Carly. Pettit. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20160131051218/http://www.ashford.gov.uk/local-plan-to-2030. 31 January 2016.
    24. Web site: Ashford, Kent. Map of Ashford. 2016-01-23.
    25. Web site: Coppicing in the Kent Downs AONB. January 2016. kentdowns.org.uk. https://web.archive.org/web/20160129072423/http://www.kentdowns.org.uk/uploads/documents/EN_Landscape_and_Nature_for_all_coppice_rfs.pdf. 29 January 2016. dead.
    26. Book: Yates, Nigel. Kent in the Twentieth Century. Boydell & Brewe. 2001. 9780851155876. 71 ff.
    27. Web site: Parish Councils . Ashford Borough Council . 13 May 2024.