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Chief executive (Irish local government) : ウィキペディア英語版
Chief executive (Irish local government)
In local government in the Republic of Ireland, the chief executive of a city or county is the senior permanent official of its local authority. Whereas the county council and city council are elected officials who formulate policy, the chief executive is an appointed official who manages the implementation of policy.〔(【引用サイトリンク】date=24 June 2010 )〕 The position was introduced in 1929–42 based on the American council–manager government model, and until 2014 the chief executive was styled the county manager or city manager. Their salaries range from €132,511 to €189,301 per annum.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Current local authority scales - Management grades )〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】work=The Mayo News )〕 The County and City Management Association (formerly the County and City Managers' Association) is the professional association for chief executives,〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=County & City Managers’ Association )〕 and it is affiliated to the International City/County Management Association (ICMA).〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=ICMA Home )
==History==
The Local Government (Ireland) Act 1898 established elected county and town councils with executive authority, with the Local Government Board for Ireland having the power to dissolve councils which did not comply with their statutory obligations. After the Irish Free State was established in 1922, the Local Government Board's functions were taken by the Minister for Local Government.〔(Local Government (Temporary Provisions) Act, 1923 §12 ); (Ministers and Secretaries Act, 1924, Schedule, Third Part ) (Local Government Act, 1925 §72 )〕 During and immediately after the Irish Civil War, the Minister dissolved several councils, including those of Dublin and Cork cities, and replaced each with an unelected commissioner. In both cities, there was a body of opinion that the services provided by the councils were delivered more efficiently and fairly under the commissioners than under the previous system, where the executive function had been, in effect, vested in the councils and their committees.
In 1926, a committee of commercial and industrial interests in Cork came together to consider a scheme of city government. Having regard to the city's experience of commissioners and recent experience in the United States a council manager plan of city government was proposed. After discussion between the minister for local government and local representatives, the minister, Richard Mulcahy, introduced as a government measure, The ''Cork City Management Bill, 1929'', and it became law despite opposition. The first Cork city manager, Philip Monahan, had previously been the commissioner who replaced Cork Corporation and before that Kerry County Council. The minister proposed and the Oireachtas enacted similar provision for Dublin in 1930. Similar laws were passed under the next, Fianna Fáil, government for the other two county boroughs: Limerick in 1934 and Waterford in 1939. The previous office of town clerk was superseded by the new manager, except in Cork where it remained separate until 1941.〔Local Government (Dublin) Act, 1930, Section 47; Limerick City Management Act, 1934, Section 13; Waterford City Management Act, 1939, Section 12 (2); Cork City Management (Amendment) Act, 1941, Section 11〕 The County (Management) Act, 1940, which commenced in August 1942, extended the manager system from the urban county boroughs to the rural administrative counties. The system was modified also in subsequent legislation, particularly the City and County Management (Amendment) Act, 1955, which made some adjustments to give greater power to the council members.
Under 1940 the act a county manager was the manager of every borough or municipal town in that county, but from the 1990s had the power to delegate these functions to any other officer of that borough or town council. The Borough of Dún Laoghaire, with nearly the level of autonomy as a county borough, had a borough manager from its 1930 creation. Initially, some smaller counties shared a manager. On several occasions, the Minister for the Environment has suspended a fractious elected council, leaving the manager to run its affairs until the next local elections. The split of Galway city from County Galway in 1985, and of County Dublin into three counties in 1993 saw separate managers appointed. A 2010 report commissioned by the Government suggested reducing the number of county managers from 34 to 24. The mergers of three pairs of county/city councils in 2014 were preceded by the appointment of joint managers from 2012.〔Local Government (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2012, Part 4〕
Under provisions of the Local Government Reform Act 2014, the position of "County/City Manager" was replaced by that of "Chief Executive". Existing managers became the initial chief executives, with county/city councils gaining the power to veto subsequent appointments and to remove a chief executive for "stated misbehaviour".〔Local Government Reform Act 2014, §§144–146〕

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