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Saturday, July 12, 2025

Two new unitary councils could be best option for local government, says city council

Five towns could be absorbed by Nottingham City Council as part of a local government shake-up, one authority’s leader has claimed.

The potential plan was shared by Broxtowe Borough Council leader, Milan Radulovic (Brox Alliance) during the authority’s cabinet meeting on Tuesday (July 1).

The leader discussed the “difficult situation” his council and others in Nottinghamshire are facing in deciding on an agreed option for local government reorganisation.

The reshaping of councils is part of the Labour Government’s plans to give more powers back to local areas by creating more “strategic authorities” and new combined councils.

In practice, it means merging smaller councils with larger ones, meaning all seven of Nottinghamshire’s district and borough councils could disappear by 2027 or 2028.

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Speaking during the meeting, Cllr Radulovic said: “I’m sure you’re all aware of the city’s new option, which is an enlarged city taking in West Bridgford, Beeston, Hucknall, Arnold and Carlton.

“So we seem to be in a difficult situation at the moment on forming any sort of consensus across Nottinghamshire.”

This option is different from ones previously suggested as it would involve the city absorbing only parts of other boroughs – not the boroughs as a whole.

A Nottingham City Council spokesperson said the idea had not been officially proposed by the authority.

The spokesperson added: “Nottingham is a significantly under-bounded local authority, covering a population of 328,000 at the centre of a built-up area of well over 750,000 (and a wider county population of 1.17 million).

“We are responsible for delivering the services expected in a Core City, but many of the people who work in the city, and use Council services currently live in the suburbs, meaning they can’t vote in city elections, and pay council tax elsewhere. We need to address that imbalance through LGR.

“Backed by interim findings from PwC, at this point we believe that the most sustainable model would be two new unitaries, however no final decisions have been made, and what’s clear from the Government feedback is that there is still a lot of work to be done to review options.”

Options previously put forward include a new unitary authority combining Nottingham, Broxtowe and Gedling with a new unitary authority for the rest of the county and another that would see Nottingham, Broxtowe and Rushcliffe combining with a new unitary authority for the rest of Nottinghamshire.

Option three sees Nottingham remaining as an existing unitary authority with a new ‘county-only’ unitary authority for the rest of Nottinghamshire.

A full business case for an option is expected to be submitted to the government by November 2025.

•  Rushcliffe: Labour and Tories at odds over councils merging under new reforms

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