Lancaster leader lukewarm at suggestion of tie-up with Wyre, Blackpool, Fylde and Ribble Valley

The leader of Lancaster City Council says she will consider "in good faith" a proposal to explore whether the authority should join up with Wyre, Blackpool, Fylde and Ribble Valley to form a single council covering all five areas.
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However, Erica Lewis says that she is yet to be convinced that the embryonic suggestion – from Wyre Council leader David Henderson - would be the right move for the district.

It comes amid ongoing efforts to create a combined authority and elected mayor for the whole of Lancashire, as part of attempts to secure a devolution deal for the county.

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The government has previously said that Lancashire’s complex local government landscape would need simplifying first, because the current tally of 15 councils across the region would make a combined authority – whose membership would be drawn from Lancashire’s local authority base – unworkable.

Lancaster City Council leader Erica LewisLancaster City Council leader Erica Lewis
Lancaster City Council leader Erica Lewis

However, last week, regional growth minister Simon Clarke went further and told so-called “two-tier” areas like Lancashire that they would have to redraw the local government map to create standalone “unitary” councils, as already exists in Blackpool. A government white paper on devolution is expected in September.

Whitehall has already indicated that any new council areas must have a population range of between 300,000 and 700,000 people and represent a “functional economic area”.

Cllr Lewis said that she was willing to work on a “paper-based exercise” to determine whether the geography proposed by Wyre met that latter criteria, but added: “I don’t think [the process] will demonstrate that we meet the test for becoming a unitary.

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“A council that runs from the southern tip of Lancashire all the way up to the edge of Yorkshire is not one that people will identify with and I don’t think it will deliver good decision-making.

“However, I will enter into discussions in good faith and see where the data leads us,” she added.

Lancaster last year formed an economic partnership body with Barrow and South Lakeland councils in Cumbria and Cllr Lewis said that these three areas had “strong ties in terms of family, education and jobs”.

“I don’t think the same can be said for Lancaster, Blackpool, Wyre, Fylde and Ribble Valley.

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“However, I gave an undertaking to my council that I would explore all options for reorganisation, both north and south.”

Wyre Council leader David Henderson said that at this stage, the move was a simple “tick-box” process to explore whether the five areas would be deemed suitable by the government for unitary status.

“I asked my chief executive to contact the leaders of our neighbouring authorities [to establish] their appetite for opening up very initial conversations about moving forward with a combined authority, with a view to devolution.

“Wyre Council is happy to sit around a table and discuss the way forward. There is no point waiting for the white paper to come out and then waking up one morning and realising that you have got to create a unitary council by teatime.

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“But my bottom line is that it would have to be for the betterment of the people of Wyre,” Cllr Henderson added.

He said that the authority was proceeding on the basis of a government stipulation earlier this year that any council proposing a merger with others had to share a common boundary with them, so that no area could be “leapfrogged”.

Before any formal process of reorganisation can begin, an authority or a group of authorities has to be invited by the government to submit a proposal. Crucially, unanimous agreement is not required amongst councils that would be affected by any proposed changes.

In theory, all 15 Lancashire councils could put forward their own competing visions of a new local authority map if the government invited them to do so.

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Currently, services in the Lancashire County Council area are split between County Hall – which is responsible for matters such as social care and highways – and the 12 district councils, like Lancaster, which look after services including parks and planning.

Blackpool Council opted out of that arrangement back in 1998 and became a unitary authority, responsible for all services within its borders.

A combined authority would operate alongside any new councils created in Lancashire.

Blackpool and Fylde councils are yet to respond to a request for a comment on the approach from Wyre.

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Ribble Valley Council leader Stephen Atkinson has previously said that devolution and reorganisation should be treated as “two separate issues”.

Responding to Wyre’s approach, he said: We have a council meeting next week to discuss a combined authority and will be awaiting the government’s devolution white paper in September for details of any requirement for reorganisation.”

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