Hartlepool Borough | |
---|---|
Borough of Hartlepool | |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Constituent country | England |
Region | North East England |
Combined authority | Tees Valley |
Ceremonial county | County Durham |
Government | |
• Tees Valley Mayor: | Ben Houchen |
• MPs: | Jill Mortimer (C) |
Area | |
• Total | 36.19 sq mi (93.72 km2) |
• Rank | 204th |
Population (2021) | |
• Total | 92,571 |
• Rank | Ranked 258th |
• Density | 2,600/sq mi (990/km2) |
Ethnicity ( 2021) | |
• Ethnic groups | |
Religion (2021) | |
• Religion | List
|
Time zone | UTC+0 ( Greenwich Mean Time) |
• Summer ( DST) | UTC+1 ( British Summer Time) |
ONS code | 00EB (ONS) E06000001 (GSS) |
Website |
www |
The Borough of Hartlepool is a local government district with borough status in County Durham, England. Since 1996 Hartlepool Borough Council has been a unitary authority, which gives it both district-level and county-level functions; it is independent of Durham County Council. It is named after its largest settlement, Hartlepool, where the council is based. The borough also includes a rural area to the west of the town. The population of the borough at the 2021 census was 92,571, of which over 95% (87,995) lived in the built-up area of Hartlepool itself.
Since 2016 the council has been a member of the Tees Valley Combined Authority, which has been led by the directly elected Tees Valley Mayor since 2017. The Hartlepool constituency has been coterminous with the borough since 1983.
The neighbouring districts are the County Durham district and Stockton-on-Tees; the borough also adjoins Redcar and Cleveland across the mouth of the River Tees.
The town of Hartlepool was an ancient borough, having been granted a charter by King John in 1200. [2] [3] It was reformed to become a municipal borough in 1850. This borough covered the relatively small area now known as the Headland, where the original town was located. [4]
The new town of West Hartlepool was laid out from the 1840s on land outside Hartlepool's historic borough boundaries, in the neighbouring parish of Stranton. A body of improvement commissioners was established to administer the new town in 1854. [5] The commissioners' district was enlarged in 1883 to include Seaton Carew. [6] The commissioners were superseded in 1887, when West Hartlepool was incorporated as a separate borough. [7] In 1902 West Hartlepool was elevated to become a county borough, making it independent from Durham County Council. [8]
After several unification efforts starting in 1902, the two boroughs of Hartlepool and West Hartlepool merged into a single county borough in 1967, also absorbing at the same time the neighbouring parish of Seaton (being the residual rural part of the old parish of Seaton Carew) to provide coastal land for industrial development. [9] [10]
The borough was reformed and enlarged on 1 April 1974, by the merger of the previous county borough of Hartlepool, along with the parishes of Brierton, Claxton, Dalton Piercy, Elwick, Elwick Hall, Greatham, Hart and Newton Bewley, from the Stockton Rural District, all of which had been part of the administrative county of Durham. The enlarged borough was transferred at the same time from County Durham to the new non-metropolitan county of Cleveland. [11]
Cleveland was abolished in 1996 following the Banham Review, which gave unitary authority status to its four districts, including Hartlepool. The borough was restored to County Durham for ceremonial purposes at the same time, but as a unitary authority it is independent from Durham County Council. [12] Hartlepool continues to share certain local services with the other former Cleveland boroughs, including the Cleveland Police and Cleveland Fire Brigade.
Hartlepool Borough Council | |
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Type | |
Type | |
Leadership | |
Denise McGuckin since 7 September 2020 [14] | |
Structure | |
Seats | 36 councillors |
Political groups |
|
Joint committees | Tees Valley Combined Authority |
Elections | |
First-past-the-post | |
Last election | 4 May 2023 |
Next election | 2 May 2024 |
Meeting place | |
Civic Centre, Victoria Road, Hartlepool, TS24 8AY | |
Website | |
www |
Hartlepool Borough Council provides both county-level and district-level services. There are also nine civil parishes in the borough, which form a second tier of local government for their areas; the rest of the borough is an unparished area. [15]
Since 2016 the council has been a member of the Tees Valley Combined Authority. [16]
In May 2021, the four parish councils of Elwick, Hart, Dalton Piercy and Greatham all issued individual votes of no confidence in Hartlepool Borough Council, and expressed their desire to re-join County Durham. [17] Subsequently quarterly parish liaison meetings were set up between the parish and borough councils, and a new Parish Charter was adopted. [18]
The council has been under no overall control since 2019. Following the 2023 election a coalition of the Conservatives, Independent Union and independents formed to run the council, led by Conservative councillor Mike Young. [19]
Political control of the council since the 1974 reforms has been as follows: [20] [21]
Non-metropolitan district
Party in control | Years | |
---|---|---|
Labour | 1974–1976 | |
No overall control | 1976–1979 | |
Labour | 1979–1996 |
Unitary authority
Party in control | Years | |
---|---|---|
Labour | 1996–2000 | |
No overall control | 2000–2004 | |
Labour | 2004–2008 | |
No overall control | 2008–2010 | |
Labour | 2010–2019 | |
No overall control | 2019–present |
Since 2013 the role of mayor has been largely ceremonial in Hartlepool. Political leadership is instead provided by the leader of the council.
Between 2002 and 2013, Hartlepool was one of a small number of councils in the United Kingdom to have a directly elected mayor. This followed a referendum held in the borough in October 2001. [22] The first mayoral election was held in May 2002, and became famous for being won by the mascot of Hartlepool United F.C., ' H'Angus the Monkey', [23] with a majority of approximately 500 over the second-placed Labour Party candidate. The man inside the monkey costume, Stuart Drummond, served as mayor as an independent, being re-elected in 2005 with a majority of over 10,000 [24] and again in 2009 with a second round majority of 844.
In November 2012 Hartlepool voted in a referendum to abolish the directly elected mayor and return to having a leader of the council, as it had done prior to 2002, being the leadership model used by most English councils. [25] 7,366 voted against the directly elected mayor system, while 5,177 voted to retain it, on a turnout of 18%. [25]
The leaders from 1999 to 2002 were:
Councillor | Party | From | To | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ray Waller [26] | Labour | 1999 | ||
Russell Hart [27] | Labour | 1999 | 2000 | |
Arthur Preece [28] | Liberal Democrats | 2000 | 5 May 2002 |
The directly elected mayor was:
Mayor | Party | From | To | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Stuart Drummond | Independent | 6 May 2002 | 2 May 2013 |
The leaders since 2013 have been: [29]
Councillor | Party | From | To | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Christopher Akers-Belcher | Labour | 2 May 2013 | May 2019 | |
Shane Moore | Independent Union | 23 May 2019 | 12 Sep 2019 | |
Brexit Party [30] | 12 Sep 2019 | 31 Jan 2020 | ||
Independent Union [31] | 31 Jan 2020 | 16 May 2023 | ||
Mike Young | Conservative | 16 May 2023 |
Following the 2023 election and a subsequent change of allegiance in July 2023, the composition of the council was: [32] [33]
Party | Councillors | |
---|---|---|
Labour | 17 | |
Conservative | 12 | |
Independent | 6 | |
Independent Union | 1 | |
Total | 36 |
The Conservatives, five of the six independent councillors, and the Independent Union councillor sit together as the "Conservative and Coalition Group" which forms the council's administration. [34] The next election is due in May 2024.
Since the last boundary changes in 2020 the council has comprised 36 councillors representing 12 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. [35]
The council is based at the Civic Centre on Victoria Road, which was built in the 1970s. [36] Prior to that it was based at the Municipal Buildings on Church Square, which had been built in 1889 for the old West Hartlepool Borough Council. [37] Before the 1967 merger the old Hartlepool Borough Council had been based at Hartlepool Borough Hall on Middlegate.
Settlements in the borough include:
Ethnic Group | Year | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1991 [38] | 2001 [39] | 2011 [40] | 2021 [41] | |||||
Number | % | Number | % | Number | % | Number | % | |
White: Total | 89,765 | 99.3% | 87,569 | 98.8% | 89,899 | 97.7% | 89,068 | 96.4% |
White: British | – | – | 86,874 | 98% | 88,924 | 96.6% | 87,761 | 95.0% |
White: Irish | – | – | 235 | 193 | 170 | 0.2% | ||
White: Gypsy or Irish Traveller | – | – | – | – | 40 | 37 | 0.0% | |
White: Roma | 19 | 0.0% | ||||||
White: Other | – | – | 460 | 742 | 1,081 | 1.2% | ||
Asian or Asian British: Total | 486 | 0.5% | 602 | 0.7% | 1,304 | 1.4% | 1,600 | 1.7% |
Asian or Asian British: Indian | 160 | 187 | 266 | 335 | 0.4% | |||
Asian or Asian British: Pakistani | 106 | 204 | 291 | 297 | 0.3% | |||
Asian or Asian British: Bangladeshi | 73 | 73 | 214 | 278 | 0.3% | |||
Asian or Asian British: Chinese | 94 | 110 | 229 | 217 | 0.2% | |||
Asian or Asian British: Other Asian | 53 | 28 | 304 | 473 | 0.5% | |||
Black or Black British: Total | 78 | – | 70 | – | 170 | 0.2% | 445 | 0.6% |
Black or Black British: African | 31 | – | 36 | – | 36 | 327 | 0.4% | |
Black or Black British: Caribbean | 21 | – | 16 | – | 129 | 57 | 0.1% | |
Black or Black British: Other Black | 26 | – | 18 | – | 5 | 61 | 0.1% | |
Mixed or British Mixed: Total | – | – | 311 | 0.4% | 550 | 0.6% | 671 | 0.8% |
Mixed: White and Black Caribbean | – | – | 85 | – | 180 | 143 | 0.2% | |
Mixed: White and Black African | – | – | 34 | – | 54 | 115 | 0.1% | |
Mixed: White and Asian | – | – | 94 | – | 173 | 240 | 0.3% | |
Mixed: Other Mixed | – | – | 98 | – | 143 | 173 | 0.2% | |
Other: Total | 80 | – | 59 | – | 105 | 0.1% | 554 | 0.6% |
Other: Arab | – | – | – | – | 57 | 270 | 0.3% | |
Other: Any other ethnic group | 80 | – | 59 | – | 48 | 284 | 0.3% | |
Total | 90,409 | 100% | 88,611 | 100% | 92,028 | 100% | 92,338 | 100% |