Labour got in there, boots and all, worked with local government, and put up the money. |
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Just over 2 years ago, local government legislation was passed under urgency and in haste. |
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It was said in the 1980s that local government was the bulwark against Thatcherism. |
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In the current climate government and local government has to be honest and open. |
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Regulating the appearance of a public burial ground is among the most difficult and thankless tasks in local government. |
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Drug screening is not only used by the US military, but by state and local government. |
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Together they decide to set up an internet company to make money out of local government. |
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Apart from local government offices and lawyers, the area is more notable for bail bondsmen, thrift shops and old houses. |
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The charity gets no support from national or local government and is entirely reliant on donations, bequests and fundraising. |
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Aged 39, he was looking forward to a long and successful career in local government. |
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It is just that I can no longer tolerate the time-wasting and silly game-playing that characterise local government. |
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Where are the applications for people who live in tight communities of a thousand people and strong local government? |
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Some form of hybrid body that was distinct from both central and local government seemed to offer an ideal solution. |
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All local government services are to be housed in a new one-stop shop facility which will open its doors next week. |
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The same insouciance was evident in the other revelation anent local government last week. |
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Nationally, we are the second party of local government and run councils up and down the country. |
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Yet the tradition of unpaid public services is still important in local government. |
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The company will even lobby local government to change zoning regulations in order to get the location they want. |
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Both have had long and distinguished careers and I wish them well in their retirement from local government. |
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Party divisions led to huge losses in by-elections and local government elections until the party at the grass roots seemed close to extinction. |
|
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People think planners are simpletons, local government idiots, but they're not. |
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Plans to radically shake up local government and to divide the country into elected regional assemblies are currently under debate. |
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It was the imagined glory of his role in local government which went to his head. |
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You would be most unwise, in local government, to assess a person as having needs that you knew you could not possibly pay for. |
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The four-day conference in the Lao capital brings together central and local government health officials from across the region. |
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Although the local government has built new houses at lower elevations for them, Yao people are more accustomed to living in high places. |
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He is one of those people who has been synonymous with local government in Auckland. |
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It is irresponsible that certain sections of local government have chosen to needlessly scare the public with unfounded and baseless accusations. |
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The shortfall will be made up of local government allocations, town councils and the rates. |
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It was not good for local government when people were voted back in by default, she said. |
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Most of the money that finances local government comes from the national coffers. |
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Clearly, this is part of the Government's agenda to regionalise the service, along with the rest of local government. |
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Elected assemblies will draw their powers mainly from central government, its agencies and quangos not from local government. |
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The local government has thus far built shelters to accommodate people from the area. |
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The company was involved in an acrimonious tax dispute with the local government earlier this year. |
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A big part of his job, therefore, is to restore trust by demonstrating that local government is whiter than white. |
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Merger plans will form part of a vote on whether people want a wholescale re-organisation of local government, due to take place next autumn. |
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In central and local government, for example, the majority of employees in the lowest grades are women. |
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These proposals have won wide support from local government, business, and community groups. |
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We see more and more non-productive, non-essential posts being created to give the illusion that local government is doing something. |
|
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But the region lagged behind in wages, with most local government areas in the bottom third for average weekly incomes. |
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In February 2002 he received a knighthood from the Queen for his services to local government. |
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He says local government red tape is killing housing availability and affordability. |
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The local government is saying the workers will all have jobs, but says it cannot afford to keep the plant going. |
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New Labour set up executive mayors to make local government even less accountable. |
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He wants to see the government put more money into local government so that council tax bills can be kept down. |
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It is what leads them into a coalition with the Lib Dems when they get the chance in local government. |
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Such a concern adds a new paternalistic layer to the increasingly authoritarian role of local government. |
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It would be better to argue that local government should be funded entirely by business rates. |
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These hold to account the executive councillors in the new form of cabinet local government. |
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Each worker has to apply for a permit from their local government to work in the townships. |
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This is not going to be an easy hurdle for local government to come to terms with. |
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It changed the entire planning world and left local government to deal with it all by itself. |
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This was the glaring omission from not one but two local government bills announced on Wednesday. |
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He is coping with local government bureaucracy and finds the system not very frustrating. |
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There have already been huge votes for strike action in local government and elsewhere. |
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According to the company, this will be the first time the local government has held such a public auction to sell land. |
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Even the contact made with local government was inadequate to plan appropriately for operation and maintenance of the facility. |
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Workers have occupied this sprawling factory since the local government sold it to a private enterprise, three years ago. |
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As leaders of the Venda people, I urge you to take part in the local government structures. |
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I think the local government officials were still deeply at fault in some ways. |
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The apparatus of local government is obviously much less complex than that of semi-independence. |
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Zuma said local government could also provide recreational facilities for children, especially after school hours. |
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The three parties are anxious to avoid political turmoil to keep local government stability in the town. |
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Hundreds of thousands of local government workers have been refused pensions for their unmarried partners. |
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At this stage, there is a real mess out there in local government in respect of aquaculture reform. |
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We need their assistance in our work in Parliament and in local government. |
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Craig used a forthcoming review of local government structures to procrastinate on the issue of universal suffrage in local government. |
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David Newble attempts to unravel the mysteries behind local government finance. |
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The people and the communities that local government purports to serve will be the real losers if this fails to happen. |
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In reviewing the performance of councillors, there is also need for a second look at the qualifications for aspirants to local government office. |
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What followed was nothing less than a battle between public opinion and local government officials in Hubei Province. |
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The party faces further losses at the polls tomorrow when the counts begin for the local government elections, which were held on the same day as the general election. |
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Last Monday at 11 a.m., 9 monks led religious ceremonies to sanctify the occasion and create solidarity among the 1,500 plus local government employees. |
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A spokeswoman said the panel was set up by the council as part of statutory local government regulations requiring all councils to look at members' allowances. |
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He says local government would realise benefits through reduced costs of kerbside collection, as well as through the value of unredeemed material in the collection. |
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In a White Paper currently before Parliament, the office of Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott, is setting out new regulations for local government finance. |
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The local government was strongly supportive of the fugitive president and vocal in its criticism of the Maidan. |
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The proceedings however, are heavy with the hand of the local government. |
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Even after devolution, local government had little autonomy. |
|
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The result of short-term royal success in eviscerating local government was a system of degenerate petty oligarchies dependent on government initiative. |
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If the Government can get away with it, it will put more and more of its social services on to local government without a brass razoo going along with it. |
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The philosophy behind it is to drive shonks out of local government, particularly in an environment were the contracting out of services is increasing. |
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The implementation of such policies may therefore require cross-border agreements and cooperative arrangements between neighbouring local government bodies. |
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Last week, the four Berlin universities and three of the four advanced technical colleges also withdrew from the local government employers' association. |
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As part of the activities of the trust we have started free classes for girl students from local government schools from a nearby slum who come from poor families. |
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Traditionally, these are issues of state and local government, the criminal code. |
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Although I hated the menial tasks the job required, it gave me a window into the power of local government. |
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He primarily worked around local government and workers compensation. |
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The legitimacy of local government was also occasionally called into question in the late 1980s and 1990s, though again by no means without precedent. |
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He stands accused of splitting unionism, losing massive tranches of support and endangering the party in the face of next year's local government elections. |
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What is lacking in local government is a truly independent tribunal. |
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Aside from network neutrality, some senators are concerned that streamlined regulation of telecom video services might take too much power from local government. |
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Lo thinks the local government should designate one or two protest sites and leave the demonstrators alone. |
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Financing an effective air-sea rescue service may not be a priority and local government may lack the resources or the interest to mount an effective sea and airborne search. |
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He added that local government officials now had a benchmark to govern their behavior and be judged by. |
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The revolt began as a protest against a share-out of Executive funds to local government which Labour councils in the poorer areas of Scotland said was unfair. |
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The layering of local government is not unique to Pennsylvania. |
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But over the years this profile has been destroyed and now these critical organs of local government development are mere excess baggage to Government. |
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Under local government rules, any councillor who does not attend meetings for six months without sending apologies can be disqualified from the council. |
|
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He called for proper funding to be put in place for hospitals, schools and local services but felt that a great opportunity to reform local government had been lost. |
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Under a further Statute of 1 January 1864, zemstvos or local government assemblies were elected at district and province level, essentially by the landed gentry. |
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The local government, despite all the invective directed at its leadership, seems to be functioning normally for the moment. |
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Although in Portugal there are at present only two levels, central and local government, regionalization and creation of agencies are currently on the political agenda. |
|
By the time McLeish was 24, local government was being radically reformed. |
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In 1996, as part of the 1990s UK local government reform, Cleveland was abolished and its districts were reconstituted as unitary authorities. |
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The name Gwynedd is also used for a preserved county, covering the two local government areas of Gwynedd and the Isle of Anglesey. |
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As a local government area, it is the second biggest in Wales in terms of geographical area and also one of the most sparsely populated. |
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From the early 1900s, however, Labour candidates began to gain ground and dominated local government from the 1920s onwards. |
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Devolved areas include health, education, social services, local government and environment. |
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The Assembly has powers to make laws on 20 subject areas, such as agriculture, education, the environment, health, housing, local government. |
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In those states with an administrative county court, the body acts as the executive agency for the local government. |
|
However, when local government legislation was introduced no change was made. |
|
As local government is a devolved matter in Wales, the legislation for both Councils is a responsibility of the National Assembly for Wales. |
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It is the second tier of local government in the area and is a unitary authority with a wide range of powers and responsibility. |
|
On 27 June 2012, the Task Force, comprising tourist chiefs, local government spokesmen and trade unionists, met for the first time. |
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They introduced their own local government system with a parliament at Thingwall. |
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No Conservative has been elected in Northern Ireland since the 1997 local government elections. |
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In local government, Arklow and the surrounding areas has six councillors on Wicklow County Council, representing the Arklow Municipal District. |
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The local government is presided over by Fernando Clavijo, the current President of the Canary Islands. |
|
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Since 2002, Svalbard's main settlement, Longyearbyen, has had an elected local government, somewhat similar to mainland municipalities. |
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County councils and municipalities have different roles and separate responsibilities relating to local government. |
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The local government sponsors carsharing and carpooling initiatives such as Autodelen and Meerijden. |
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Craftsmen were paid by their employers, whilst others were paid by the local government out of the profit from the sales of farm produce. |
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This was abolished in 1974, since when Ramsgate has been part of the Thanet local government district. |
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On 1 April 1974, Bristol became a local government district of the county of Avon. |
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Many local fishermen noticed the drastic decrease of cod and tried to inform local government officials. |
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Exeter's city council is a district authority, and shares responsibility for local government with the Devon County Council. |
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It is also the name of a former local government district, whose council was based in Penzance. |
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The district was abolished as part of the 2009 structural changes to local government in England. |
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The counties to be used for local government were to be the historic counties of England and Wales. |
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In local government, a sui generis entity is one which does not fit with the general scheme of local governance of a country. |
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For local government purposes Scottish counties were replaced in 1975 with a system of regions and island council areas. |
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It was generally agreed that there were significant problems with the structure of local government. |
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Section 265 of the Act allowed for the continuation of the local government arrangements for the Isles of Scilly. |
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Names such as Herefordshire and the East Riding of Yorkshire reappeared as local government entities, although often with new boundaries. |
|
Some A roads are designated trunk roads, which implies that central government rather than local government has responsibility for them. |
|
Counties were used for the administration of justice, the organisation of the military, local government and parliamentary representation. |
|
Richmondshire is today the name of a local government district of North Yorkshire. |
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The whole of the Isle of Purbeck lies within the local government district of Purbeck, which is named after it. |
|
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In such cases, the borough will normally have either limited powers delegated to it by the city's local government, or no powers at all. |
|
The Colombian Municipalities are subdivided into boroughs with a local executive and an administrative board for local government. |
|
In the United States, a borough is a unit of local government below the level of the state. |
|
The Council flag can only be used by the Council on its local government buildings. |
|
In addition, New Zealand is organised into 11 regional councils and 67 territorial authorities for local government purposes. |
|
In New England, the town, not the county, is the primary division of local government. |
|
Formal methods may involve official courts, local government officials, police, and the military. |
|
They designated chiefs as units of local government, rather than dealing with them individually as had been previous practice. |
|
The other roads are local roads falling under local government authorities. |
|
Navy facilities at Roosevelt Roads, Vieques, and Sabana Seca have been deactivated and partially turned over to the local government. |
|
The Metropolitan Municipality has authority over the entire city, while each district has its own local government. |
|
The service is run by 464 private companies that are poorly regulated by local government. |
|
In 1634, a new system of local government was created in the Virginia Colony by order of the King of England. |
|
Fiji's local government, in the form of city and town councils, is supervised by the Ministry of Local Government and Urban Development. |
|
In the 1550s, he declared a new law code, revamped the military, and reorganized local government. |
|
It did not become a viable local government unit until created as a civil parish. |
|
The Index Expurgatorius was administered by the Roman Inquisition, but enforced by local government authorities, and went through 300 editions. |
|
In some areas of England and Wales, counties still perform the functions of modern local government. |
|
These correspond to areas used for the purposes of local government and may consist of a single district or be divided into several. |
|
They mainly functioned as local government authorities at the county level. |
|
|
The local government is divided into differently structured rural and urban councils depending on the level of development in the area. |
|
Most of the goals could apply to any organisation be it a manufacturing facility, marketing firm, hospital or local government. |
|
From 1974 to 1996, Leominster served as the administrative centre for the former local government district of Leominster District. |
|
High tech, services, distribution, life sciences, hospitality, local government, education and tourism offer local jobs. |
|
In the event, the county was left out of the 2009 structural changes to local government in England. |
|
Since the local government reforms enacted in England in 1974 the town has been within the administrative county of Cumbria. |
|
For local government purposes the civil parish forms part of the district of Allerdale within the county of Cumbria. |
|
For local government purposes Seathwaite forms part of the civil parish of Borrowdale, the district of Allerdale, and the county of Cumbria. |
|
In the 1910s, local government reforms to administer this conurbation as a single entity were proposed. |
|
It was established on 1 April 2011 as a pilot combined authority, unique to local government in the United Kingdom. |
|
A referendum for a further local government reform connected with an elected regional assembly was planned for 2004, but was abandoned. |
|
Northumberland has a relatively weak economy amongst the counties and other local government areas of the United Kingdom. |
|
Following local government reform in 1974, city status was bestowed upon the wider metropolitan borough. |
|
Initially, local government services were provided by Leeds City Council and West Yorkshire County Council. |
|
The City of Leeds is the local government district covering Leeds, and the local authority is Leeds City Council. |
|
At the upper tier of local government Dartmouth and Kingswear Electoral Division elects one member to Devon County Council. |
|
His mother wore the trousers, and father, a gentle man who worked in local government, was not ambitious enough for her. |
|
Judging from available ATF data, there have been few thefts of explosives from state and local government storage facilities. |
|
All levels of state and local government spending for audiovisual are expected to increase. |
|
Of course, it is quite clear why Tony Blair wants to talk about reinvigorating government and in particular, local government. |
|
|
That was the argument being pushed by the Tories and the civil servants when the Conservatives were rejigging local government in Wales. |
|
Mayas are actually more likely to support their local government than are Ladino Guatemalans. |
|
The Highland council area is a local government area in the Scottish Highlands and Britain's largest local government area. |
|
The organisation of local government in England is complex, with the distribution of functions varying according to local arrangements. |
|
For local government purposes, Scotland is divided into 32 council areas, with wide variation in both size and population. |
|
A reform of local government abolished Cleveland and created several unitary districts. |
|
In the 1970s there were major reforms of local government throughout the United Kingdom. |
|
In the 17th century, the creation of Justices of Peace and Commissioners of Supply helped to increase the effectiveness of local government. |
|
In the Republic of Ireland, counties form the basis of the system of local government. |
|
The service was withdrawn following an election manifesto pledge by the Labour Group at the 2011 local government election. |
|
The settlers came from Spain had to settle in towns, where the local government belonged to the Cabildo. |
|
Virginia's property tax is set and collected at the local government level and varies throughout the Commonwealth. |
|
In 1661, Charles II issued a proclamation forbidding overhanging windows and jetties, but this was largely ignored by the local government. |
|
Not only citizens opposed and even mocked such decrees, also local government officials refused to enforce such laws. |
|
The marriage question was settled in 1837, by allowing local government registrars to handle marriages. |
|
Below the region level and excluding London, England has two different patterns of local government in use. |
|
Often, local government elections are watched closely to detect the mood of the electorate before upcoming parliamentary elections. |
|
The Corporation has been broadly untouched by local government reforms and democratisation. |
|
This included responsibility for education, small business, public works, social services and local government. |
|
The government chose the civil parish as the basic unit of local government in rural areas. |
|
|
These institutions have typically included the welfare state, the BBC, and local government. |
|
It has various councillors in UK local government and two members of the London Assembly. |
|
At the 2012 local government elections the Green Party gained 5 seats, and retained both AMs at the 2012 London Assembly election. |
|
At the local government elections the following year, the Greens gained 18 seats overall. |
|
For the purposes of local government, the country is divided into counties, districts and parishes. |
|
It was renamed but otherwise unreformed by the changes in local government that occurred in 1974 in the rest of England outside Greater London. |
|
In terms of local government, it was divided after 1974 into Avon, Cornwall, Devon, Dorset, Gloucestershire, Somerset, and Wiltshire. |
|
In 1975 counties ceased to be used for local government purposes in Scotland. |
|
Under local government reforms coming into effect in 2009, the number of such counties was reduced. |
|
Since 2000, Greater London has had an elected Assembly and Mayor responsible for strategic local government. |
|
By the late 1960s, it had become obvious that the structure of local government in England and Wales needed reforming. |
|
A metropolitan borough is a type of local government district in England, and is a subdivision of a metropolitan county. |
|
The review led to the introduction of unitary local government in some areas but not in others. |
|
Following local government reforms in the 1970s, county councils no longer exist in Scotland or Northern Ireland. |
|
Unitary authorities of England are local authorities that are responsible for the provision of all local government services within a district. |
|
The Local Government Act 1972 created areas for local government where large towns and their rural hinterlands were administered together. |
|
The London boroughs were created by combining groups of former local government units. |
|
The large county boroughs provided all local government services and held the powers usually invested in county councils. |
|
The boroughs are local government districts and have similar functions to metropolitan boroughs. |
|
The City as a distinct polity survived despite its position within the London conurbation and numerous local government reforms. |
|
|
In 2006 the name was changed from Corporation of London to avoid confusion with the wider London local government, the Greater London Authority. |
|
A parish council is a civil local authority found in England and is the lowest, or first, tier of local government. |
|
Reviews may also be triggered by a petition of local government electors for an area. |
|
The City of Liverpool is one of the six constituent local government districts of the Liverpool City Region. |
|
Consequently, they have to perform all the duties of a local government planning authority. |
|
It has no connexion with the status of the borough in respect of local government and confers no powers or privileges. |
|
Since 2000, city status has been awarded to towns or local government districts by competition on special occasions. |
|
On 1 April 1974, the city council was abolished, becoming part of the Borough of Medway, a local government district in the county of Kent. |
|
In the case of Lisburn, the status extends to the entire local government district. |
|
There are some cities where the local government district is in fact smaller than the historical or natural boundaries of the city. |
|
The grant was specifically awarded to the relevant local government area such as a civil parish or borough. |
|
West Yorkshire does not have a county council, so Leeds City Council is the primary provider of local government services. |
|
These form the lowest tier of local government and absorb some limited functions from Leeds City Council in their areas. |
|
The mural crown is a frequent symbol of local government, but here also suggests a well head. |
|
The two authorities are responsible for different aspects of local government. |
|
TfL is part of the Greater London Authority and is constituted as a statutory corporation regulated under local government finance rules. |
|
Herefordshire is officially known as a unitary authority for local government purposes. |
|
In 2006 a local government white paper supported proposals for new unitary authorities to be set up in England in certain areas. |
|
Lancashire is smaller than its historical extent following a major reform of local government. |
|
The building, which is the borough's new civic headquarters, will be used by various local government agencies. |
|
|
As a French overseas collectivity, the local government has no competence in justice, university education, security and defense. |
|
These bodies were not directly elected but members were appointed by local government and local interest groups. |
|
Votes from the 32 local government areas were counted and announced by each area separately. |
|
Following local government reorganisation in 1975, control subsequently passed to Strathclyde Regional Council. |
|
Other major employers include NHS Scotland and local government administration. |
|
Following local government reorganisation in 1996, Edinburgh constitutes one of the 32 council areas of Scotland. |
|
Since 1973 it has been a local government district under local administration by Belfast City Council. |
|
Taxes in the United States are levied at the federal, state and local government level. |
|
Since 1996, for the purposes of local government, Scotland has been divided into 32 council areas. |
|
After the 1975 reorganisation of local government Arran became part of the district of Cunninghame in Strathclyde Region. |
|
From an administrative viewpoint, 21 of the counties in the republic are units of local government. |
|
The GLA is unique in the British local government system, in terms of structure, elections and selection of powers. |
|
It shares local government powers with the councils of 32 London boroughs and the City of London Corporation. |
|
In Canada, each province creates its own system of local government, so terminology varies substantially. |
|
Northern Ireland is divided into 11 districts for local government purposes. |
|
Similar to the civil parishes in England, the lowest tier of local government in Wales are the communities. |
|
The history of Scottish local government mainly surrounds involves the counties of Scotland. |
|
Under the name of Dundee City, it forms one of the 32 council areas used for local government in Scotland. |
|
Three of the older management areas, Caithness, Nairn and Sutherland, were very similar to earlier local government counties. |
|
However, there is no legal basis for this restriction and in practice the title is applied to all councillors at all levels of local government. |
|
|
The Welsh Local Government Association was established in 1996 to represent the interests of local government in Wales. |
|
Since 1999 the WLGA has had a specific role in representing local government to the National Assembly for Wales. |
|
This system, with the abolition of rural districts, remains the model for local government in the Republic of Ireland. |
|
The Pitcairn Islands are a British overseas territory with a degree of local government. |
|
Guernsey is divided into ten administrative parishes for local government purposes. |
|
On 27 June 2012 the Task Force, comprising tourist chiefs, local government spokesmen and trade unionists, met for the first time. |
|
On 19 September 1991, the JNA moved extra troops to the area around the city of Mostar, which was publicly protested by the local government. |
|
Further, local government loans are sometimes guaranteed by the national government, and this reduces the risk. |
|
England has several tiers of local government and the relevant local authority varies. |
|
The laws also finished the partitioning of Wales into counties that was begun in 1282 and established local government on the English model. |
|
The airport is jointly owned by the Minnesota Department of Transportation and the local government of Piney, Manitoba. |
|
In addition, the county serves as the local government for all unincorporated areas. |
|
As the new local government authority, the Highland Council then adopted the areas of the districts as council management areas. |
|
Although officially within the county, the burghs of Wick and Thurso retained their status as autonomous local government areas. |
|
Although steeped in history, Scotland's burghs remained the foundation of the country's system of local government for centuries. |
|
Dumfries remains a centre of local government for a much bigger area than just the town itself. |
|
In modern times the Inner Hebrides have formed part of two separate local government jurisdictions, one to the north and the other to the south. |
|
Lochgilphead later claimed to be the county town, as the seat of local government for the county from the 19th century. |
|
Inhabitation of the city was subsidized by the local government, through the concession of free empty lots and funding for building houses. |
|
From 1975 East Kilbride lent its name to a local government district in the Strathclyde region. |
|
|
Ulster has no official function for local government purposes in either country. |
|
The islands areas were unitary local government areas, exercising the powers of both a regional and district council. |
|
Modern Stirling is a centre for local government, higher education, tourism, retail, and industry. |
|
This is in addition to employees of the government in the civil service and in local government as well as public bodies and corporations. |
|
The modern day boundaries of Moray date from the 1975 reorganisation of local government in Scotland. |
|
The lowest tier of local government in Wales is the community council, which is analogous to a civil parish in England. |
|
At a county level, the Local Government Act 1888 reorganised local government throughout England and Wales. |
|
Luis Carlos Setim, the mayor of SEuo Jose dos Pinhais, attended together with other local government officials. |
|
Her local government has sent Baker a letter asking her to cease her cartwheeling because it's disruptive and poses a risk to others. |
|
Cary says that local government relies on citizen activists in quality-of-life issues. |
|
For the insult of a public official or local government body in a public statement, published in media, the fine would comprise 5-7 thousand som. |
|
Westminster Newspeak for 'localism' has meant more powers for local government while cutting their council budgets. |
|
Just 59 per cent voted in the 2001 general election while in last year's local government elections the turn-out was only 32 per cent. |
|
It is said that alone in the local government department of Sindh there are fifty thousand undeservingly PPP appointed workers. |
|
Oriental Energy Resources, AFREN Services Ltd and Amni are exploiting oil in Eastern Obolo and Mbo local government regions of the state. |
|
Aslam Abro said that the PML-N Sindh will fully and vibrantly contest the local government elections in the province. |
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The local government has decided that gastric band patients are entitled to cheaper eats. |
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This is a sum of money which is trivial in relation to the local government budget and disappearingly small in relation to the nation's finances. |
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The group double-checks the students' research and uses it in advocacy reports and presentations to local government agencies. |
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There was a major reform of the electoral system for Scottish local government introduced in time for the 2007 Scottish local elections. |
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