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Luton Borough Council

Local council of Luton, England


Summary

Local council of Luton, England

FieldValue
nameLuton Borough Council
coa_res150
coa_altLuton Council Crest
logo_picLuton Council Logo, 2016.svg
logo_res250
logo_altLuton Council's logo
logo_captionCouncil logo
house_typeUnitary authority
foundation
leader1_typeMayor
leader1Amy Nicholls
party1
Labour
election120 May 2025
leader2_typeLeader
leader2Hazel Simmons
party2
Labour
election222 May 2007
leader3_typeChief Executive (interim)
leader3Mark Fowler
party3
election34 April 2025
seats48 councillors
:borderdarkgray}} Labour (29)
:borderdarkgray}} Liberal Democrats (15)}}
:borderdarkgray}} Conservative (3)
:borderdarkgray}} Independent (1)
term_length4 years
last_election14 May 2023
next_election16 May 2027
session_roomLuton Town Hall and War Memorial (01).jpg
session_res250
session_altLuton Town Hall
meeting_placeTown Hall, George Street, Luton, LU12BQ
website

Labour Labour ; Administration (29) : Labour (29) ; Other parties (19) : : Conservative (3) : Independent (1) Luton Borough Council, also known as Luton Council, is the local authority of Luton, in the ceremonial county of Bedfordshire, England. Luton has had an elected local authority since 1850, which has been reformed several times. Since 1997 the council has been a unitary authority, being a district council which also performs the functions of a county council.

The council has been under Labour majority control since 2007. It is based at Luton Town Hall.

History

Luton's first elected local authority was a local board established in 1850, prior to which the town had been administered by the parish vestry. The town became a municipal borough in 1876 governed by a body formally called the 'mayor, aldermen and burgesses of the borough of Luton', generally known as the corporation, town council or borough council.

In 1964 the borough was elevated to county borough status, which saw the council take over county-level functions from Bedfordshire County Council.

On 1 April 1974, under the Local Government Act 1972, the county borough was reconstituted as a non-metropolitan district. Between 1974 and 1997 Luton was a lower-tier district council, with Bedfordshire County Council again providing county-level services to the town.

In 1997, Luton Borough Council regained responsibility for county-level services from Bedfordshire County Council. The way this change was implemented was to create a new non-metropolitan county of Luton covering the same area as the existing borough, but with no separate county council; instead the existing borough council took on county functions, making it a unitary authority. This therefore restored the borough council to the powers it had held when Luton was a county borough prior to 1974. Luton remains part of the ceremonial county of Bedfordshire for the purposes of lieutenancy.

Governance

Luton Borough Council provides all local government services in the area. As a unitary authority it provides both county-level and district-level services. There are no civil parishes in the borough.

Political control

Political control of the council since the 1974 reforms has been as follows:

Lower-tier non-metropolitan district

Party in controlYears
1974–1976
1976–1991
1991–1997

Unitary authority

Party in controlYears
1997–2003
2003–2007
2007–present

Leadership

The role of mayor is largely ceremonial in Luton, with political leadership instead provided by the leader of the council. The leaders since 1976 have been:

CouncillorPartyFromTo
Viv Dunington1976May 1991
Roy DavisMay 1991May 1999
Bill McKenzieMay 1999May 2003
David Franks22 May 2003May 2007
Hazel Simmons22 May 2007

Composition

Following the 2023 election and subsequent changes of allegiance up to March 2024, the composition of the council was:

PartyCouncillorsTotal:48
29
15
3
1

The next election is due in 2027.

Elections

Main article: Luton Borough Council elections

Elections are held every four years. Since the last boundary changes in 2023 there have been 48 councillors elected from 20 wards.

Wards

  • Barnfield
  • Beech Hill
  • Biscot
  • Bramingham
  • Central
  • Challney
  • Dallow
  • Farley
  • High Town
  • Leagrave
  • Lewsey
  • Northwell
  • Poets
  • Round Green
  • Saints
  • South
  • Stopsley
  • Sundon Park
  • Vauxhall
  • Wigmore

Premises

The council is based at Luton Town Hall at the head of George Street, the town centre's main street. The current building was completed in 1936, replacing an earlier town hall of 1847 on the same site. The earlier building had been destroyed in a fire in 1919 in the town's "Peace Riot" which followed the formal proclamation of peace at the end of the First World War.

NHS

In July 2017 it decided to merge its health commissioning budget with the local Clinical Commissioning Group, establishing an integrated commissioning committee. It is one of the first areas which the NHS has designated an Accountable care system.

Arms

References

References

  1. "A fresh and modern brand for Luton". Luton Council.
  2. (21 May 2025). "Former Luton Sixth Form College student is town's new mayor". Luton Today.
  3. (1 April 2025). "Interim chief executive steps into role at Luton council this week". Luton Today.
  4. "Open Council Data UK - compositions councillors parties wards elections".
  5. {{London Gazette. (21 June 1850)
  6. (4 March 1876). "The incorporation of Luton". Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire News.
  7. "Luton Municipal Borough / County Borough". GB Historical GIS / University of Portsmouth.
  8. "The English Non-metropolitan Districts (Definition) Order 1972". Legislation.gov.uk.
  9. "The English Non-metropolitan Districts (Names) Order 1973". Legislation.gov.uk.
  10. {{cite legislation UK. (1995)
  11. {{cite legislation UK. (1997)
  12. "Election Maps". Ordnance Survey.
  13. "Compositions Calculator". University of Exeter.
  14. (10 May 2011). "Luton". [[BBC News Online]].
  15. (26 October 2023). "'Generous and wise' former Luton Council leader has died aged 95". Luton Today.
  16. (1 May 1991). "Report 'not ready yet'". Luton News.
  17. (8 May 1991). "Labour joy after Tories hammered". Luton News.
  18. (19 May 1999). "What Bill McKenzie wants to do for the future of Luton". Luton News.
  19. (24 June 2008). "Lord McKenzie of Luton". Department for Work and Pensions.
  20. (28 May 2003). "Liberal Democrats win council power". Luton News.
  21. "Council minutes, 22 May 2003".
  22. "Council minutes, 22 May 2007".
  23. "Luton election result". BBC News.
  24. (10 October 2023). "Luton councillor who quit Labour party joins Conservatives". Luton Today.
  25. (14 March 2024). "Former Labour deputy leader of Luton Borough Council becomes interim leader of Conservative group". Luton Today.
  26. "Luton". Thorncliffe.
  27. {{cite legislation UK. (2022)
  28. {{NHLE
  29. (13 July 2017). "CCG and council to merge commissioning budgets". Health Service Journal.
  30. "East of England Region". Civic Heraldry of England.
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