Council agrees not to merge Wilmslow, Handforth and Chorley

c5ce444a4aaf0e7d0ea9e0a615125fdf

Cheshire East Council has agreed not to make changes to the governance arrangements for Wilmslow, Handforth and Chorley town and parish councils.

The decision by full council today (Wednesday, 27th April) follows more than three years of work and a 12-week consultation on proposals to merge the parishes of Wilmslow, Handforth and Chorley to "form a single community" called Wilmslow.

The Council has also agreed backtracked on its proposals to increase the number of seats on Wilmslow Town Council from 15 to 20 and from 9 to 12 members on Alderley Edge Parish Council.

However, the adopted recommendations do include transferring the new housing development of 185 properties between Clay Lane and Sagars Road be from the parish of Styal to Handforth.

By the end of the consultation process, the council had received around 5,000 responses.

The views of respondents and stakeholders were considered alongside key legislation, central government guidance and the terms of reference of the review.

This resulted in council officers making revised recommendations, which were approved by the council's cross-party community governance review sub-committee on 4 April, and the corporate policy committee on 14 April 2022.

The review recommendations were given final approval by a vote at a meeting of full council today (27 April).

Councillor Sam Corcoran, leader of Cheshire East Council and chair of its corporate policy committee, said: "This community governance review, including extensive consultation and engagement with stakeholders, was necessary to ensure that town and parish arrangements meet local needs and are fit for purpose for the future.

"The adoption of the review recommendations is the culmination of an incredibly complex and important project for the governance of the whole borough.

"I would like to take this opportunity to thank the officers and members of the cross-party community governance review sub-committee for their dedication and hard work – especially during the additional challenges of the Covid pandemic. I would also like to thank the many members of the public who contributed so much to help deliver a successful outcome of this process.

"The changes made to the proposals, following consultation, demonstrate that the council has listened."

The borough-wide review was undertaken as Cheshire East is responsible for the governance and electoral arrangements for the borough's 186 town and parish council wards in 135 town and parish councils.

The purpose of the review, which follows government and Local Government Boundary Commission for England guidance, was to ensure community governance arrangements continue to reflect local identities and facilitate convenient and effective local government.

As communities change over time, government guidance advises a review of town and parish governance every 10-15 years, to ensure the arrangements are fit for purpose. The last one was done before Cheshire East Council was created in 2009.

The community governance review draft recommendations report made a series of draft proposals for consultation at the end of last year, beginning with parishes where no changes are being proposed, to other relatively minor proposals, and, finally, to more significant area or boundary changes – largely adjoining the borough's urban parishes – which have a knock-on effect for surrounding parishes.

This consultation stage provided people and stakeholder bodies with an opportunity to make the case for alternative proposals or to endorse the draft proposals as they were.

A multi-disciplinary team of officers has been working on the review since 2019 and members of all the council's political groups were involved in finalising the recommendations for future governance arrangements for the borough's town and parish councils. The revised proposals have now been approved by the council.

These approved changes will form the basis of a new Cheshire East (Parish Areas and Electoral Arrangements) Order. The Council intends that this Order will be in place in time for the next ordinary elections for the parish councils which is scheduled for 2023.

The changes that the Council is making include:

  • Alderley Edge - no change and keeping the number of seats on the Parish Council at nine.
  • Chorley - no change and and keeping the number of seats on the Parish Council at seven.
  • Handforth - External boundary change and increasing the number of seat numbers on the Two Council from 7 to 11. with 4 East seats (increase from 2), 3 South (increase from 2) and 4 West (increase from 3).
  • Wilmslow - No change to the total number of 15 seats on the Town Council, but internal changes in each ward - Dean Row 4 seats (no change), East 3 (decrease from 4), Lacey Green 3 (increase from 2), West 5 (no change).

Full details of the changes and maps showing boundary alterations can be found here.

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Comments

Here's what readers have had to say so far. Why not add your thoughts below.

Judith Gordon
Thursday 5th May 2022 at 3:12 pm
Would Cheshire East like to share with the residents of Handforth what extra facilities will be available (school places, doctors, dentists etc) for the extra 185 residents of Handforth who have now been transferred from Styal?
Mark Goldsmith
Friday 6th May 2022 at 6:50 am
Hi Judith

This is the town council boundary and they do not have responsibility for schools, doctors, etc.

The new residents you mention will now pay their town council precept to Handforth, which will cover the non-essential services they provide.

Cllr Mark Goldsmith
Residents of Wilmslow
Wilmslow West & Chorley