Non-metropolitan county


A non-metropolitan county, or colloquially, shire county, is a subdivision of England used for local government.
The non-metropolitan counties were originally created in 1974 as part of a reform of local government in England and Wales, and were the top tier of a two-tier system of counties and districts. 21 non-metropolitan counties still use a two-tier system; 56 are unitary authorities, in which the functions of a county and district council have been combined in a single body. Berkshire has a unique structure.
Non-metropolitan counties cover the majority of England with the exception of Greater London, the Isles of Scilly, and the six metropolitan counties: Greater Manchester, Merseyside, South Yorkshire, Tyne and Wear, West Midlands and West Yorkshire.
The non-metropolitan counties are all part of ceremonial counties. Some ceremonial counties, such as Norfolk, contain a single non-metropolitan county, but many contain more than one and it is also common for ceremonial counties and non-metropolitan counties to share a name. Lancashire, for example, contains the non-metropolitan counties of Lancashire, Blackpool, and Blackburn with Darwen.

Origins

Prior to 1974 local government had been divided between single-tier county boroughs and two-tier administrative counties which were subdivided into municipal boroughs and urban and rural districts. The Local Government Act 1972, which came into effect on 1 April 1974, divided England outside Greater London and the six largest conurbations into thirty-nine non-metropolitan counties. Each county was divided into anywhere between two and fourteen non-metropolitan districts. There was a uniform two-tier system of local government with county councils dealing with "wide-area" services such as education, fire services and the police, and district councils exercising more local powers over areas such as planning, housing and refuse collection.
As originally constituted, the non-metropolitan counties were largely based on existing counties, although they did include a number of innovations. Some counties were based on areas surrounding large county boroughs or were formed by the mergers of smaller counties. Examples of the first category are Avon and Cleveland. An example of the second category is Cumbria, formed by the merger between Cumberland and Westmorland. The counties were adopted for all statutory purposes: a lord-lieutenant and high sheriff was appointed to each county, and they were also used for judicial administration, and definition of police force areas. The Royal Mail adopted the counties for postal purposes in most areas.

Changes

1995–1998

A Local Government Commission was appointed in 1992 to review the administrative structure of the non-metropolitan counties. It was anticipated that a system of unitary authorities would entirely replace the two-tier system. The Commission faced competing claims from former county boroughs wishing to regain unitary status and advocates for the restoration of such small counties as Herefordshire and Rutland. The review led to the introduction of unitary local government in some areas but not in others. In the majority of unitary authorities an existing district council took over powers from the county council. The 1972 Act required that all areas outside Greater London form part of a non-metropolitan county, and that all such counties should contain at least one district. Accordingly, the statutory instruments that effected the reorganisation separated the unitary districts from the county in which they were situated and constituted them as counties. The orders also provided that the provisions of the 1972 Act that every county should have a county council should not apply in the new counties, with the district council exercising the powers of the county council.
An exception was made in the case of Berkshire, which was retained with its existing boundaries in spite of the abolition of its county council and the creation of six unitary authorities. This was done in order to preserve its status as a royal county.
With the creation of numerous new non-metropolitan counties, the areas used for lieutenancy and shrievalty began to diverge from local government areas. This led to the development of ceremonial counties for these purposes, a fact recognised by the Lieutenancies Act 1997.

2009

A further wave of unitary authorities were created in 2009 under the terms of the Local Government and Public Involvement in Health Act 2007. While a number of new counties were created, several of the new authorities continued to have the boundaries set in 1974.

2019–2023

The 2019–2023 structural changes to local government in England have involved changes to the non-metropolitan county of Dorset, and the abolition of the non-metropolitan counties Northamptonshire and Cumbria. In addition, the non-metropolitan counties of Buckinghamshire, North Yorkshire, and Somerset are unchanged, but their councils became unitary authorities as the existing non-metropolitan districts in these areas were consolidated and the district councils abolished.

List of non-metropolitan counties

The following list shows the original thirty-nine counties formed in 1974, subsequent changes in the 1990s, and further changes since then.
Non-metropolitan county 1974Changes 1995–1998Changes 2009Changes 2019 and 2020s
Avon 1996: North West Somerset
2005: Renamed North Somerset
NoneNone
Avon 1996: Bath and North East Somerset NoneNone
Avon 1996: South Gloucestershire NoneNone
Avon 1996: City of Bristol NoneNone
Bedfordshire 1997: Bedfordshire Bedford None
Bedfordshire 1997: Bedfordshire Central Bedfordshire None
Bedfordshire 1997: Luton NoneNone
Berkshire
1998: The county council was abolished, with each of the six district councils in the county becoming unitary authorities. The Royal County of Berkshire was not abolished.NoneNone
Buckinghamshire 1997: Buckinghamshire None2020: Buckinghamshire
Buckinghamshire 1997: Milton Keynes NoneNone
Cambridgeshire 1998: Cambridgeshire NoneNone
Cambridgeshire 1998: Peterborough None
Cheshire 1998: Cheshire Cheshire East None
Cheshire 1998: Cheshire Cheshire West and Chester None
Cheshire 1998: Halton NoneNone
Cheshire 1998: Warrington NoneNone
Cleveland 1996: Hartlepool NoneNone
Cleveland 1996: Middlesbrough NoneNone
Cleveland 1996: Redcar and Cleveland NoneNone
Cleveland 1996: Stockton-on-Tees NoneNone
Cornwall NoneBecame unitaryNone
Cumbria NoneNone2023: Cumberland
Cumbria NoneNone2023: Westmorland and Furness
Derbyshire 1997: Derby NoneNone
Derbyshire 1997: Derbyshire NoneNone
Devon 1998: Devon NoneNone
Devon 1998: Torbay NoneNone
Devon 1998: Plymouth NoneNone
Dorset 1997: Dorset None2019: Dorset
Dorset 1997: Bournemouth None2019: Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole
Dorset 1997: Poole None2019: Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole
Durham 1997: Durham Became unitaryNone
Durham 1997: Darlington NoneNone
East Sussex 1997: East Sussex NoneNone
East Sussex 1997: Brighton and Hove NoneNone
Essex 1998: Essex NoneNone
Essex 1998: Southend-on-Sea NoneNone
Essex 1998: Thurrock NoneNone
Gloucestershire NoneNoneNone
Hampshire 1997: Hampshire NoneNone
Hampshire 1997: Portsmouth NoneNone
Hampshire 1997: Southampton NoneNone
Hereford and Worcester 1998: Herefordshire NoneNone
Hereford and Worcester 1998: Worcestershire NoneNone
Hertfordshire NoneNoneNone
Humberside 1996: East Riding of Yorkshire NoneNone
Humberside 1996: City of Kingston upon Hull NoneNone
Humberside 1996: North Lincolnshire NoneNone
Humberside 1996: North East Lincolnshire NoneNone
Isle of Wight 1995: Became unitaryNoneNone
Kent 1998: Kent NoneNone
Kent 1998: The Medway Towns
1998: renamed Medway
NoneNone
Lancashire 1998: Lancashire NoneNone
Lancashire 1998: Blackburn with Darwen NoneNone
Lancashire 1998: Blackpool NoneNone
Leicestershire 1997: Leicestershire NoneNone
Leicestershire 1997: Leicester NoneNone
Leicestershire 1997: Rutland NoneNone
Lincolnshire NoneNoneNone
Norfolk NoneNoneNone
North Yorkshire 1996: North Yorkshire None2023: North Yorkshire
North Yorkshire 1996: York NoneNone
Northamptonshire NoneNone2021: North Northamptonshire
Northamptonshire NoneNone2021: West Northamptonshire
Northumberland NoneBecame unitaryNone
Nottinghamshire 1998: Nottinghamshire NoneNone
Nottinghamshire 1998: Nottingham NoneNone
Oxfordshire NoneNoneNone
Salop

1980: renamed Shropshire
1998: Shropshire Became unitaryNone
Salop

1980: renamed Shropshire
1998: The Wrekin

1998: Renamed Telford and Wrekin
NoneNone
Somerset NoneNone2019: Somerset
2023: Somerset
Staffordshire 1997: Staffordshire NoneNone
Staffordshire 1997: Stoke-on-Trent NoneNone
Suffolk NoneNone2019: Suffolk
Surrey NoneNoneNone
Warwickshire NoneNoneNone
West Sussex NoneNoneNone
Wiltshire 1997: Wiltshire Became unitaryNone
Wiltshire 1997: Thamesdown
1997: Renamed Swindon
NoneNone