Local Government Reorganisation 2026
Must read
Service charge recovery and the Building Safety Act 2022
Fix it fast: How “Awaab’s Law” is forcing action in social housing
Housing management in practice: six challenges shaping the sector
Why AI must power the next wave of Social Housing delivery
Sponsored articles
Walker Morris supports Tower Hamlets Council in first known Remediation Contribution Order application issued by local authority
Unlocking legal talent
District and boroughs "extremely disappointed" over county council plan for reorganisation
- Details
Councils in Leicestershire are at odds over reorganisation plans, with a set of district and borough councils alongside Rutland County Council hitting out at Leicestershire County Council's proposal to create a single unitary authority for the whole county.
A joint statement issued by the leaders of all seven district and borough councils in Leicestershire and Rutland claimed Leicestershire County Council is pursuing its proposal without discussing it with the rest of the region's councils.
"This goes against the expectations of ministers and the intent of the government's white paper on how it wishes to see local government reorganisation developed," the statement said.
The councils behind the joint statement are Blaby District Council, Charnwood Borough Council, Harborough District Council, Hinckley and Bosworth District Council, Melton Borough Council, North West Leicestershire District Council, Oadby and Wigston Borough Council, and Rutland County Council.
All councils in Leicestershire are expected to submit their interim plans to the Government for reorganisation by 21 March 2025, ahead of a deadline of 28 November for their full proposals.
Leicestershire County Council launched a consultation on its 'One Council' proposal last week (20 February).
The county's plan involves creating a single local authority for Leicestershire, excluding Rutland and Leicester City.
Cllr Deborah Taylor, acting leader of Leicestershire County Council, said: "Splitting the county into two, as some might suggest, is a non-starter creating more pain than gain – fewer savings, more confusion and unhelpful competition for staff.
"Two sets of everything – from back-office staff to waste collection systems - and less choice about which libraries and waste sites residents could use."
The district and borough councils and Rutland meanwhile argue that a single council for the area, which would serve approximately 800,000 residents, "would be too remote, too cumbersome, too inaccessible and ultimately inefficient and unsustainable".
The joint statement added: "We are therefore exploring options for smaller unitary authorities which will serve our local communities' needs better, but also enhance their future prosperity."
The district and borough councils plan to carry out initial engagement with stakeholders to help shape their interim plans, before conducting a "more comprehensive package of public engagement" in the summer.
The Government will also consult on any final proposal.
The discord comes two weeks on from a letter sent by the Local Government and English Devolution Minister, Jim McMahon, which urged councils to make "every effort to work together" to submit a single proposal to the Government rather than competing proposals.
However, McMahon noted that cases where areas cannot submit a joint proposal "will not be a barrier to progress," and the Government will consider any suitable proposals submitted by the relevant local authorities.
Adam Carey
Assistant Director – Law, Governance and HR (Monitoring Officer)
Lawyer / Senior Lawyer
Locums
Poll
|
Click here to view our archived articles or search below.
|
|
ABOUT SHARPE PRITCHARD
We are a national firm of public law specialists, serving local authorities, other public sector organisations and registered social landlords, as well as commercial clients and the third sector. Our team advises on a wide range of public law matters, spanning electoral law, procurement, construction, infrastructure, data protection and information law, planning and dispute resolution, to name a few key specialisms. All public sector organisations have a route to instruct us through the various frameworks we are appointed to. To find out more about our services, please click here.
|
|
OUR KEY LOCAL GOVERNMENT CONTACTS
|
||
|
Partner 020 7406 4600 Find out more |
||
|
Partner 020 7406 4600 Find out more |
||
|
Rachel Murray-Smith Partner 020 7406 4600 Find out more |














Catherine Newman
