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Local Government Boundary Commission (1945–1949) : ウィキペディア英語版
Local Government Boundary Commission (1945–49)

The Local Government Boundary Commission was established in 1945 to review the boundaries of local authority areas in England and Wales outside the Counties of London and Middlesex. The Commission produced its report in 1948 which proposed large changes to county-level areas of local government and changes in the structure and division of powers between tiers of administration. The Commission's proposals were not acted on, and it was disbanded in 1949.
==Background==
Alterations to local government boundaries had been suspended with the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939. Previously they had been carried out by a number of processes: county boroughs could be constituted or extended by private act of parliament, while county councils were to carry out reviews of county districts (non-county boroughs, urban and rural districts) on a ten yearly cycle. There was no general procedure for adjusting boundaries between administrative counties, or for amalgamating them. The different procedures were not coordinated.

The wartime coalition government published a white paper in January, 1945 entitled ''Local government in England and Wales during the period of reconstruction''.〔Cmd. 6579〕 The document proposed the establishment of a Local Government Boundary Commission with executive powers to alter council areas, taking over the powers of the county councils and Minister for Health to change areas. In future all proposed changes by local authorities were to be submitted to the Commission. The Commission was to consider administration in each geographical county (the administrative county plus associated county boroughs) and see if there was a ''prima facie'' case for a review. If it felt a review was warranted the commission was to notify the Minister and the relevant county council, who could then require the holding of an inquiry into local government in the county.
The problem of local government in the County of London and Middlesex were deemed to be a special case, with the extension of the County of London, the probable disappearance of Middlesex and annexing of parts of the surrounding counties envisaged. The Commission was not to be allowed to consider these issues, which were to be considered by an "authoritative body" at a later stage. It was recognised that Middlesex contained a number of towns ''"large enough on any standard for county borough status"'' but the commissioners were not given the power to ''"entertain applications for county borough status in the county"''.
The Commission was to have the power to:
*Extend or create county boroughs
*Reduce the status of county boroughs to non-county boroughs
*Merge contiguous county boroughs
*Merge small administrative counties
The decisions of the commission were to be subject to parliamentary review. The proposals in the white paper were enacted as the Local Government (Boundary Commission) Act 1945 (1945 c.38). It received the royal assent on the last day in office of the caretaker government that had taken over from the coalition in May.〔''Back to Planning'', The Times, 6 October 1945〕 Outside observers considered that the establishment of the Commission meant that the Government did not intend to make any changes in the basic structure of local government, and noted that the Commission lacked the power to recommend radical changes such as the establishment of regional councils.〔"The Councillor's Handbook" by H. Townshend-Rose and H.R. Page, 2nd Edition, Sir Isaac Pitman & Sons Ltd, London, 1946, pp. 6-7.〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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