North Down Borough Council

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North Down Borough
Image:NorthernIrelandNorthDown.png
Geography
Area
- Total
- % Water
Ranked 26th
81 km²
? %
Admin HQ Bangor
ISO 3166-2 GB-NDN
ONS code 95W
Demographics
Population
- Total (2006)
- Density
Ranked 7th
78,700
966 / km²
Community Protestant: 80.5%
Catholic: 12.6%
Politics
North Down Borough Council
http://www.northdown.gov.uk
MPs Sylvia Hermon
North Down border
North Down border

North Down Borough Council is a Local Council in County Down in Northern Ireland with an overall population of around 80,000. Its main town is Bangor, 20 km east of Belfast with a population of approximately 55,000. The Council is headquartered in Bangor. Its secondary centre is the former Urban District of Holywood, 8 km northeast of Belfast with a population of approximately 10,000. Most of the remainder of a total population is in suburban villages along the southern shore of Belfast Lough. The Borough is heavily suburbanised, railway links with Belfast are good and the area has been the domain of Belfast commuters since the mid-19th Century. The Borough is often held to be the wealthiest area in Northern Ireland, although there are pockets of deprivation in a string of overspill public housing estates along the Bangor Ring Road.

The borough consists of 4 electoral areas: Abbey, Ballyholme and Groomsport, Bangor West and Holywood. In the 2005 election 25 members were elected from the following political parties: 8 Democratic Unionist Party, 8 Ulster Unionists, 6 Alliance, 1 Green, and 2 Independents. The current mayor is Alderman Leslie Cree (Ulster Unionist) and the Deputy Mayor is Councillor Ian Parsley (Alliance).[1]

The Borough of North Down was formed in 1973 in the local government reorganisation from the old Bangor Urban District, Holywood Urban District, North Down Rural District and part of Castlereagh Rural District.

In elections for the Westminster Parliament it is part of the slightly larger North Down constituency

See Also: Districts of Northern Ireland

Contents

[edit] 2005 Election results

Party seats change +/-
Democratic Unionist Party 8 +3
Ulster Unionist Party 8 -
Alliance Party of Northern Ireland 6 +1
Green Party in Northern Ireland 1 +1
Northern Ireland Women's Coalition 0 -1
United Kingdom Unionist Party 0 -2
Independent 2 -2

[edit] Mayor

1981/2: Mary O'Fee, Ulster Popular Unionist Party
1985/6: Hazel Bradford, Ulster Unionist Party
1990-2: Denny Vitty, Democratic Unionist Party
1992: Leslie Cree, Ulster Unionist Party
1993/4: Brian Wilson, Alliance
1994/5: Roy Bradford, Ulster Unionist Party
1995/6: Susan O'Brien, Alliance
1999/0: Marion Smith, Ulster Unionist Party
2000/1: Alan Chambers, Independent
2002/3: Alan Graham, Democratic Unionist Party
2003/4: Anne Wilson, Alliance
2004/5: Valerie Kinghan, UK Unionist Party
2005/6: Roberta Dunlop, Ulster Unionist Party
2006/7: Alan Leslie, Democratic Unionist Party
2007/8: Stephen Farry, Alliance

[edit] Review of Public Administration

Under the Review of Public Administration (RPA) the Council is due to merge with Ards Borough Council in 2011 to form a single council for the enlarged area totalling 451 Sq Km and a population of 149,567.[2] The next election was due to take place in May 2009, but on April 25, 2008, Shaun Woodward, Secretary of State for Northern Ireland announced that the scheduled 2009 district council elections were to be postponed until the introduction of the eleven new councils in 2011.[3]

[edit] References

[edit] External links