East Hampshire

East Hampshire is a local government district in Hampshire, England. Its council is based in Petersfield. Other towns are Alton and Bordon.

East Hampshire

East Hampshire District
East Hampshire shown within Hampshire
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Constituent countryEngland
RegionSouth East England
Non-metropolitan countyHampshire
StatusNon-metropolitan district
Admin HQPetersfield
Incorporated1 April 1974
Government
  TypeNon-metropolitan district council
  BodyEast Hampshire District Council
  LeadershipLeader & Cabinet (Conservative)
  MPsDamian Hinds
Flick Drummond
Area
  Total198.6 sq mi (514.4 km2)
Area rank88th (of 317)
Population
 (mid-2019 est.)
  Total122,308
  Rank191st (of 317)
  Density620/sq mi (240/km2)
  Ethnicity
98.3% White
Time zoneUTC0 (GMT)
  Summer (DST)UTC+1 (BST)
ONS code24UC (ONS)
E07000085 (GSS)
OS grid referenceSU7659323528
Websitewww.easthants.gov.uk

The district was originally to be known as the District Council of Petersfield. It comprised 42 seats and first met on 18 June 1973. For ten months it operated alongside the councils that it was formed to replace: the Alton and Petersfield urban districts along with Alton Rural District and Petersfield Rural District.

On 8 October 1973, the new council changed its name to the current East Hampshire District Council (or EHDC as it is usually known).

On 1 April 1974, the old councils were dissolved, leaving only EHDC.

Sandy Hopkins was the first joint Chief Executive in Hampshire when she was appointed to head both EHDC and Havant Borough Council in October 2009.

Councillors approved the business case put forward by the Chief Executive for a shared management team between the two authorities in June 2010.

The new team took up its position in October 2010 and consists of five Executive Heads reporting to two Executive Directors.[1] This is a reduction in senior management from 15 to 7 positions.

Politics

East Hampshire District Council is elected every four years, with currently 44 councillors being elected at each election. The Conservative party has controlled the council for much of its history including having a majority from 1976 to 1991, with the only other party to have had a majority being the Liberal Democrats from 1991 to 1999. Most recently the Conservatives have controlled the council since the 1999 election, and as of the 2019 election the council is composed of the following councillors:

Party Councillors
Conservative Party 32
Liberal Democrats 7
Independents 2
Labour Party 2

Settlements and parishes

For a list of civil parishes in East Hampshire, see List of civil parishes in Hampshire#East Hampshire.

Settlements in East Hampshire include:

gollark: Modern reverse proxies/webservers (caddy/træfik are the ones I know of) do nice things like configuring SSL/TLS with Let's Encrypt automatically.
gollark: It will? Madness.
gollark: If you try and use it to proxy, I don't know, telnet, it'll not work.
gollark: Isn't HTTP.
gollark: I have nginx as a static file server (for my static-site-generated website), but a few things need to be dynamic, so I forward those URLs to actual backends.

References

  1. "Management structure". East Hampshire District Council. Retrieved 13 March 2017.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.