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East Ayrshire Council

Local government body in Scotland

East Ayrshire Council

Summary

Local government body in Scotland

FieldValue
nameEast Ayrshire Council
native_nameComhairle Shiorrachd Inbhir Àir an Ear
coa_picCoat of Arms of East Ayrshire.svg
coa_captionCoat of Arms
logo_picEast_Ayrshire_Council_logo.svg
logo_captionCouncil logo
leader1_typeProvost
leader1Claire Leitch
party1
SNP
election131 October 2024
leader2_typeLeader
leader2Douglas Reid
party2
SNP
election217 May 2007
leader3_typeChief Executive
leader3Eddie Fraser
party3
election3January 2021
members32
structure1_altEast Ayrshire Council composition
:borderdarkgray}} SNP (15)
:borderdarkgray}} Labour (8)
:borderdarkgray}} Conservative (4)
:borderdarkgray}} Independents (4)
:borderdarkgray}} Rubbish Party (1)}}
last_election15 May 2022
next_election16 May 2027
session_roomEast Ayrshire Council Headquarters, Kilmarnock (cropped).jpg
meeting_placeCouncil Headquarters, London Road, Kilmarnock, KA37BU
website

SNP SNP ; Administration (15) : SNP (15) ; Other parties (17) : Labour (8) : Conservative (4) : Independents (4) :

East Ayrshire Council (Scottish Gaelic: Comhairle Shiorrachd Inbhir Àir an Ear) is the local authority for East Ayrshire, one of the 32 council areas of Scotland. It was created in 1996, and now comprises nine wards, each electing three of four local councillors through the single transferable vote system, creating a type of proportional representation. It is based at the Council Headquarters in Kilmarnock.

History

East Ayrshire and its council were created in 1996 under the Local Government etc. (Scotland) Act 1994, which replaced Scotland's previous local government structure of upper-tier regions and lower-tier districts with unitary council areas providing all local government services. East Ayrshire covered the combined area of the abolished Kilmarnock and Loudoun and Cumnock and Doon Valley districts, and the new council also took over the functions of the abolished Strathclyde Regional Council within the area. The first elections were held in April 1995. The council acted as a shadow authority operating alongside the outgoing authorities until 1 April 1996 when the new areas and their councils formally came into being and the old districts and regions were abolished. The area's name references its location within the historic county of Ayrshire, which had been abolished for local government purposes in 1975 when Kilmarnock and Loudoun, Cumnock and Doon Valley, and Strathclyde region had been created.

Coat of arms

The newly formed East Ayrshire Council adopted its own coat of arms, which appears on boundary signs and on the chains worn by the provost and depute provost. The top of the council's coat of arms features a black diamond to symbolise the area's history of coal mining. Next to the black diamond is a fir tree which represents the area's forestry, agriculture and rural landscape. Both components, the black diamonds and fir trees, were adopted from the former Cumnock and Doon Valley District Council's coat of arms. A red cog is situated next to the fir tree to symbolise the area's industry and industrial history.

The middle section of the coat of arms was lifted directly from the Boyds of Kilmarnock's coat of arms, which features blue wavy lines to symbolise the two river valleys within East Ayrshire - the Irvine Valley and the Doon Valley. The Campbells of Loudoun's coat of arms was incorporated in the bottom section of the coat of arms of East Ayrshire Council. The coat of arms of East Ayrshire Council is supported by a red squirrel, which was taken from the original Kilmarnock coat of arms, together with a lion rampant which was lifted from the coat of arms of the town of Cumnock. At the top features a coronet, a feature given to all landward councils in Scotland, whilst the council's motto, Forward Together, is featured at the bottom.

Political control

The council has been under no overall control since 2007, with the Scottish National Party leading a variety of minority administrations since then.

The first election to East Ayrshire Council was held in 1995, initially operating as a shadow authority alongside the outgoing authorities until the new system came into force on 1 April 1996. Political control of the council since 1996 has been as follows:

Party in controlYears
1996–2007
2007–

Leadership

The role of provost is largely ceremonial in East Ayrshire. They chair council meetings and act as the area's first citizen.

Political leadership is provided by the leader of the council. The first leader, David Sneller, had formerly been the leader of the old Cumnock and Doon Valley District Council. The leaders of East Ayrshire Council since 1996 have been:

CouncillorPartyFromTo
David Sneller1 Apr 1996May 1999
Drew McIntyre13 May 1999May 2007
Douglas Reid17 May 2007

The council's chief executive is Eddie Fraser, who was appointed to the role in January 2021.

Composition

Following the 2022 election and subsequent changes up to August 2025, the composition of the council was:

PartyCouncillorsTotal32
15
8
4
1
4

The next election is due in 2027.

Elections

Main article: East Ayrshire Council elections

Since 2007 elections have been held every five years under the single transferable vote system, introduced by the Local Governance (Scotland) Act 2004. Election results since 1995 have been as follows:

YearSeatsSNPLabourConservativeIndependent / OtherNotesScottish National Party}}; width: 3px;"Scottish Labour}}; width: 3px;"Scottish Conservatives}}; width: 3px;"Independent politician}}; width: 3px;"Scottish National Party}}; width: 3px;"Scottish Labour}}; width: 3px;"Scottish Conservatives}}; width: 3px;"Independent politician}}; width: 3px;"
19953082200Labour majority
199932141710New ward boundaries. Labour majority
20033282310Labour majority
200732141431New ward boundaries.
201232151421SNP / Conservative coalition
20173214962New ward boundaries. SNP minority administration
202232141044SNP minority administration

Council Committees

East Ayrshire Council have a number of committees that support its work in delivering services to the population of East Ayrshire. Some committees, such as the Ayrshire Shared Services Joint Committee, also have representatives from South Ayrshire and North Ayrshire attending.

The current committees of East Ayrshire Council are;

  • Ayrshire Economic Joint Committee

  • Ayrshire Economic Partnership

  • Audit and Performance Committee

  • East Ayrshire Council Executive Committee

  • Appeals Panel

  • Ayrshire Shared Services Joint Committee (with South Ayrshire Council and North Ayrshire Council)

  • Cabinet

  • Community Planning Partnership Board

  • Council

  • East Ayrshire Integration Joint Board

  • East Ayrshire Strategic Planning Group

  • Governance & Scrutiny Committee

  • Grants Committee

  • JCC Central

  • JNC for Teaching Staff

  • Licensing Forum

  • Local Government Licensing Panel

  • Local Review Body

  • Planning Committee

  • Police and Fire and Rescue Committee

  • Recruitment Panel

Premises

The council's main offices are at Council Headquarters on London Road, Kilmarnock. The building was built as the James Hamilton School, which was designed by William Reid, the Ayrshire county architect, and opened in 1933. The school relocated to a new site in 1977 and the buildings became the London Road Centre and were used for various purposes until they were converted to offices for East Ayrshire Council ahead of the new council's creation in 1996.

Wards

Map of 2017 election results

Since 2017 the area has divided into nine multi-member wards returning 32 members:

Ward
NumberWard NameLocationSeats
1Annick[[File:Annick.svg100px]]4
2Kilmarnock North[[File:Kilmarnock North.svg100px]]3
3Kilmarnock West and Crosshouse[[File:Kilmarnock West and Crosshouse.svg100px]]4
4Kilmarnock East and Hurlford[[File:Kilmarnock East and Hurlford.svg100px]]4
5Kilmarnock South[[File:Kilmarnock South.svg100px]]3
6Irvine Valley[[File:Irvine Valley.svg100px]]3
7Ballochmyle[[File:Ballochmyle.svg100px]]4
8Cumnock and New Cumnock[[File:Cumnock and New Cumnock.svg100px]]4
9Doon Valley[[File:Doon Valley.svg100px]]3

References

References

  1. "Provost's office".
  2. (22 January 2021). "East Ayrshire Council's new chief executive aims to help those hit hardest by Covid pandemic". Daily Record.
  3. {{cite legislation UK. (1994)
  4. {{cite legislation UK. (1973)
  5. "East Ayrshire Coat of Arms · East Ayrshire Council".
  6. "East Ayrshire Coat of Arms · East Ayrshire Council".
  7. "Compositions Calculator". University of Exeter.
  8. (28 April 1995). "East Ayrshire". Ayrshire World.
  9. "Council minutes, 18 April 1995".
  10. (8 May 1999). "Labour loses Dundee in day of mixed fortunes". The Scotsman.
  11. "Council minutes, 13 May 1999".
  12. (24 October 2008). "Labour split over East Ayrshire leadership battle". Daily Record.
  13. "Council minutes, 17 May 2007".
  14. (30 November 2020). "Eddie Fraser appointed as new Chief Executive - East Ayrshire Council News".
  15. "East Ayrshire". Thorncliffe.
  16. {{cite legislation UK. (1998)
  17. {{cite legislation Scotland. (2006)
  18. {{cite legislation Scotland. (2016)
  19. "Document reader - East Ayrshire Council".
  20. "Council Committees".
  21. (23 February 1933). "Official Opening of James Hamilton Central School". Kilmarnock Herald.
  22. "London Road School".
  23. (29 March 1996). "Contact East Ayrshire Council". Irvine Herald.
  24. (30 June 2019). "United Kingdom: Scotland {{!}} Council Areas and Electoral Wards".
  25. [https://lgbc-scotland.gov.uk/5th-reviews-ward-maps 5th Reviews of Electoral Arrangements Maps], [[Local Government Boundary Commission for Scotland]]
  26. [https://statistics.gov.scot/atlas/resource?uri=http%3A%2F%2Fstatistics.gov.scot%2Fid%2Fstatistical-geography%2FS12000008 Council Area: East Ayrshire], [[Scottish Government]] Statistics
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