Local Government Association

The Local Government Association (LGA) is  the  national  membership body for local authorities. Its  core membership  is made up of 339 English councils and the 22 Welsh councils through the Welsh Local Government Association.  

Local Government Association building, Smith Square, Westminster

The LGA is politically led  and cross-party. As the national voice of local government, it works on behalf of councils to give local government a strong, credible voice with national  government, to promote the positive reputation of the sector and to secure funding and powers on behalf of councils and the communities they serve. Through its programme of practical peer-based support it helps councils continuously to improve and innovate and it co-ordinates collective legal actions on behalf of the sector.

The LGA also provides membership services to other organisations through an associate scheme, including fire and rescue  authorities, national parks authorities, town councils, police & crime commissioners and elected mayors of combined authorities.

The Chairman of the LGA is Cllr James Jamieson and the Chief Executive is Mark Lloyd.

History

On 1 April 1997, the Association of County Councils, the Association of District Councils and the Association of Metropolitan Authorities came together to form a single membership body for local government in England – the Local Government Association (LGA). 

In 2010, the LGA merged with the Improvement and Development Agency (IDeA), Local Government Employers (LGE), Local Authority Co-ordinators of Regulatory Services (LACORS) and the Leadership Centre for Local Government. The IDeA, whilst wholly owned by the LGA, continues to exist as a company and the recipient of central government grant for improvement activities. The Leadership Centre is now an independent body based in North London.

In April 2019, the former unincorporated LGA was replaced by the LGA unlimited company , enabling it to hold title to its two properties – its headquarters in Smith Square, Westminster and the former IDeA headquarters in Farringdon.

The LGA’s annual meeting – the General Assembly - takes place on the first Tuesday of July each year. The 2019 Assembly passed a motion declaring a climate emergency and calling on government to explore the domestic implementation of the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) through funded partnership roles with local authority areas and encouraging councils to continue to link local priorities with the overall ambitions of the SDGs.

Chairs of the LGA

Board Directors

Chairman Cllr James Jamieson (Central Bedfordshire Council)

Vice chairs Cllr Nick Forbes CBE (Newcastle Upon Tyne City Council)

Cllr Izzi Seccombe OBE (Warwickshire County Council)

Cllr Howard Sykes MBE (Oldham Metropolitan Borough Council)

Cllr Marianne Overton MBE (Lincolnshire County Council and North Kesteven District Council)

Deputy chairs Cllr John Fuller OBE (South Norfolk District Council

Cllr David Simmonds CBE (Hillingdon London Borough Council)

Cllr Robert Alden (Birmingham City Council)

Cllr Michael Payne (Gedling Borough Council)

Cllr Anne Western CBE (Derbyshire County Council)

Cllr Peter Box CBE (Wakefield Metropolitan District Council)

Cllr Anntoinette Bramble (Hackney London Borough Council

Cllr Ruth Dombey OBE (Sutton London Borough Council)

Cllr Clive Woodbridge (Epsom and Ewell Borough Council)

Main priorities

The LGA's published business plan sets out the Association's main lobbying priorities for 2019-22. They are:

  • Funding for local government
  • Adult social care, health and wellbeing
  • Children, education and schools
  • Places to live and work
  • Strong local democracy
  • Sustainability and climate action

Associated companies

The LGA has a number of associated companies.

gollark: No, it's a distributional issue.
gollark: I am a VERY qualified economist. I passed a GCSE in it. This was definitely not worthless.
gollark: What happens if farming gets even more automated than now, and you can just trivially produce reasonable amounts of food from a small hydroponics thing? It won't be significantly valuable.
gollark: Food will have nonzero value as long as there are biological humans? Sure. SIGNIFICANT value? No.
gollark: You could also just directly sell goods/services to people, which may turn out to be a more money-efficient use of time.

See also

References

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