Urban Council

Urban Council
市政局

Logo

Emblem of Urban Council
Type
Type
History
Established 18 April 1883
Disbanded 31 December 1999
Elections
First-past-the-post
Last election
7 March 1995
Meeting place
City Hall Lower Block, Edinburgh Place
Urban Council
Chinese 市政局
The armorial bearings granted by the College of Arms, appointed by the British Sovereign, a part of the Royal Household of the United Kingdom.
The Urban Council's service area (in pink).
The Urban Council ran numerous public services including public libraries. Shown here is the logo of the Urban Council Public Library Reading Programme, a reading programme in the 1990s which provided gifts as incentives for children to read, based on the number of books they borrowed and read.
The Hong Kong Park was jointly built by the Urban Council and the Royal Hong Kong Jockey Club

The Urban Council (UrbCo) was a municipal council in Hong Kong responsible for municipal services on Hong Kong Island and in Kowloon (including New Kowloon). These services were provided by the council's executive arm, the Urban Services Department. The equivalent body for the New Territories was the Regional Council.

The council was founded as the Sanitary Board in 1883. It was renamed the Urban Council when new legislation was passed in 1936 expanding its mandate. In 1973 the council was reorganised under non-government control and became financially autonomous. Originally composed mainly of ex officio and appointed members, by the time the Urban Council was disbanded following the Handover it was composed entirely of members elected by universal suffrage.

History

The Urban Council was first established as the Sanitary Board in 1883. In 1887, a system of partial elections was established, allowing selected individuals to vote for members of the Board. On 1 March 1935, the Sanitary Board was reconstituted to carry out the work which remained much the same until World War Two broke out. The board was renamed the Urban Council in 1936 when the government passed the Urban Council Ordinance, which gave legal motive to the already expanding range of services provided by the Council.[1]

After the Second World War, the Council returned to its pre-war form but without any elected members. The work of the Sanitary Department of the government began to separate out from the medical and health service. On 28 May 1946, the Council met for the first time after the Japanese occupation. It was given power to carry out all its old duties – cleaning, burying the dead, running bath houses and public lavatories, hawker control – as well as some new ones, such as the use of bathing beaches throughout Hong Kong.

Only in May 1952 did elections return to the Urban Council. Two members were elected. Later in 1952, the number of elected members was doubled, their terms of office extended to two years and the franchise enlarged.

By April 1956 half of the members of the Urban Council were elected, but by a minority of the population. A voter had to be at least 21 years of age, to have lived in Hong Kong for at least 3 years and to be qualified in at least one of 23 categories, which included educational qualifications (School Certificate Examination or equivalent), be a juror, salaried taxpayer, or a member of certain professional organisations. More details can be found in Schedule 1 of the Urban Council Ordinance (Cap. 101, Laws of Hong Kong).[2] It was estimated that in 1970 there were 250,000 eligible voters[3] and in 1981 the number had increased to 400,000 – 500,000.[4]

In the 1960s, the duties of the Urban Council continued to multiply. The City Hall in Central was opened in 1962, followed by the first multi-storey markets in Jardine's Bazaar in March 1963.

In 1973, the Council was reorganised under non-government control. It was given financial autonomy, which meant the budget could be planned without the approval of the Legislative Council. It was also no longer primarily in charge of housing. From then onwards, there were no government officials on the Council and both the chairman and vice-chairman were elected among the 24 members. At the time, the Council was the one which solely consisted of members of the public.


Ex officio
members

Appointed
unofficials

Elected
unofficials

Total
1946
5
6
-
11
1952
5
6
2
13
1953
5
6 4
15
1956
6
8
8
22
1956
6
10
10
26
1973
-
12
12
24
1983
-
15
15
30

Source: Norman Miners, 1986, The Government and Politics of Hong Kong p. 167.

Year Number of
registered voters
Number of
registered voters who
voted in the election
Voting rate (%)
1952 9,074 3,368 35.0
1965 29,529 6,492 22.0
1967 26,275 10,189 38.8
1969 34,392 8,175 23.8
1971 37,788 10,047 26.6
1973 31,284 8,675 24.4
1975 34,078 10,903 32.0
1977 37,174 7,308 19.7
1979 31,481 12,426 39.5
1981 34,381 6,195 18.0

Source: Norman Miners, The government and politics of Hong Kong (Hong Kong; New York: Oxford University Press, 1981), p. 224.

Prominent elected Urban Councilors included Elsie Tu and Brook Bernacchi of the Reform Club.

The Urban Council celebrated its centennial anniversary in 1983. The Urban Council Centenary Garden was named to commemorate the occasion.

In the 1960s, the council proposed that its jurisdiction should be expanded to encompass the entire colony, but this was not accepted. The Urban Services Department already provided services in the New Territories despite the council not having jurisdiction there. In 1979, the New Territories Services Department was created (within the Urban Services Department) as a dedicated unit to take up these responsibilities. In 1986, a Regional Council was set up to serve the New Territories (excluding New Kowloon), analogous to the Urban Council. The New Territories Services Department was reorganised to form the Regional Services Department, the executive arm of the Regional Council.

In 1994 the Council became fully elected based on universal and equal adult suffrage.[5]

After the transfer of sovereignty in 1997, the name was changed to Provisional Urban Council, consisting of members of the pre-handover Council, and new members were appointed by the Chief Executive.

Duties and services

The former Urban Services Department Training School

The Urban Council provided many services to the Hong Kong people over the years. The Urban Services Department was the executive branch of the Council to implement policies and services. In 1997, it had about 16,000 employees, according to its published leaflet of 'service promises'.

The Council's services included: recreational venues and activities, libraries, museums, cultural and entertainment venues, ticketing, wet markets, hawker registration and control, cremation, street cleansing, issuing licenses, and operating abattoirs.

Arts and culture

The Urban Council played a significant role in the artistic and cultural development of Hong Kong.

It also managed the Urban Council Public Libraries system in Hong Kong Island and Kowloon which, upon the dissolution of the municipal councils, was merged with the Regional Council Public Libraries to form Hong Kong Public Libraries.

Cultural events

The Council held the Festival of Asian Arts every year since 1976. The Council also sponsored the International Film Festival, which took place annually mid-year and which gave Hong Kong people a rare chance to see a range of international film making, as well as Chinese films. The Independent Short Film and Video Awards were founded in 1993.

Museums

The Hong Kong Museum of Art regularly exhibits Chinese and Western art and frequently arranges art exchanges with overseas countries. The Hong Kong Museum of History, once housed in Kowloon Park, records local history and oral tradition. It is now located at Chatham Road in Tsim Sha Tsui. The Hong Kong Space Museum presents shows in the Space Theatre and exhibitions on astronomy, nature and space exploration with IMAX techniques.

Arts groups

The Council directly financed and often even managed many local arts groups. In 1983, at "An Evening With the Council's Performing Companies" – one of the events in the Urban Council Centenary Celebration – the then-council chairman Hilton Cheong-Leen said, "Together with the Government, the Urban Council is committed to the development of the arts in Hong Kong. We aim to do so at the professional level so that gifted Hong Kong citizens can develop their artistic potential. We also aim to make available to all members of the community a wide range of artistic performance for their enjoyment and appreciation. And in the not too distant future we hope to see Hong Kong recognised as a major international centre of the performing arts."

The Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra was established in 1977, under direct financial support and management by the Urban Council.

The Hong Kong Repertory Theatre was also founded in 1977 and was directly financed and administered by the Urban Council. It aims to promote and raise the standards of the theatrical "stage play" drama in Cantonese in the territory with professional actors, directors, playwrights, administration, training and production.

The Hong Kong Dance Company was established in May 1981, and was at one time directly administered by the Urban Council. It aims to combine classical and folk traditions of China with contemporary international awareness. These groups were later taken over by the Leisure and Cultural Services Department when the Urban Council was dissolved. In 2001, the groups were privatised and became limited companies, but still receive funding from the government.

Recreation and sport

The Council operated sports grounds, parks, indoor games halls, and public swimming pools.

Sanitation

The Council was responsible for street cleansing, refuse collection, and pest control. It operated refuse collection points, public toilets and bathhouses, and was responsible for rubbish bins throughout the urban area. It was also responsible for the control of hawkers, issuing hawker licences and operating hawker bazaars.

Demise

In early 1997, chief executive-designate Tung Chee-hwa announced that the two municipal councils would be disbanded on 1 July 1997 (the Handover) and replaced by two provisional councils, with members appointed by the government, that would serve until elections in 1999. Tung said that those reappointed must "love China [and] love Hong Kong" and refused to clarify whether democratic politicians met this definition.[6][7][8] The announcement caused a row at the Urban Council and was unpopular with the public.[9] Likewise, the pre-handover government opposed China's decision to disband the two councils and the 18 district boards, and to reintroduce appointed seats, which had been abolished under democratic reforms.[10]

The post-handover provisional executive council met in May 1997 and drafted new legislation that would allow the chief executive-designate to appoint members to the new provisional bodies.[11] Three bills re-introducing appointed seats to the post-handover municipal councils and district boards were passed by the provisional legislature on 7 June 1997. The Urban Council, Regional Council and District Boards (Amendment) Bills 1997 stipulated that Tung Chee-hwa could appoint no more than 50 seats to the provisional municipal councils.[12] Frederick Fung, chairman of the ADPL, called the bills a "retrogression of democracy" while Chan Kam-lam of the pro-Beijing DAB asserted that "elections were divisive and appointments would stabilise the community".[12] Also on 1 July, elements of the Urban Council Ordinance and Regional Council Ordinance were repealed to allow the government to determine the composition and tenure of the councils.[13][14]

After the handover the council was disbanded and replaced with the Provisional Urban Council, which comprised pre-handover councillors plus new members appointed by the new government. The same was done with the Regional Council. The government then announced that the councils would be abolished in 1999. Both councils jointly objected to this plan, putting forward an alternative merger proposal entitled "One Council, One Department", which was not accepted by the government.[15]

Both councils were dissolved on 31 December 1999 as planned. Within days of the dissolution of the Urban Council, its distinctive symbol was systematically removed from public sight, such as by pasting over it with paper on all litter bins and information boards. Shortly afterwards, all the litter bins were themselves discarded, replaced by a similar design, but in green rather than purple. The duties of the councils were taken up by two newly created government departments: the Food and Environmental Hygiene Department and the Leisure and Cultural Services Department.

The archives of the two municipal councils are held by the Hong Kong Public Libraries, and are available online in digitised form.[16]

Chairmen

Before 1973, the chairmanship was occupied by the Director of Urban Services:

References

Citations

  1. Lau 2002, p. 32.
  2. Norman Miners. 1981. The Government and Politics of Hong Kong. Hong Kong: Oxford University Press.
  3. “Elected Urbco protest over reform plan,” in: South China Morning Post, 1970
  4. “Sing Tao Jih Pao,” in Hong Kong Standard, 8 March 1981
  5. CACV 1/2000
  6. No, Kwai-yan (13 March 1997). "No firm answer from Tung". South China Morning Post. p. 6.
  7. Li, Angela (17 March 1997). "Number of members for bodies yet to be decided". South China Morning Post. p. 5.
  8. "Tung adds condition for handover survivors". South China Morning Post. 2 February 1997. p. 2.
  9. Li, Angela (5 February 1997). "Let councillors stay, says poll". South China Morning Post. p. 6.
  10. Li, Angela (18 March 1997). "Legislators reveal concern at secondment". South China Morning Post.
  11. Hon, May Sin-mi; Li, Angela (7 May 1997). "Power to appoint in pipeline". South China Morning Post. p. 6.
  12. 1 2 "Appointed seats bills passed". South China Morning Post. 8 June 1997. p. 4.
  13. "Laws to be scrapped". South China Morning Post. 20 January 1997. p. 4.
  14. "How the laws are affected". South China Morning Post. 21 January 1997. p. 6.
  15. Lau 2002, p. 150.
  16. "Municipal Councils Archives Collection". Hong Kong Public Libraries. Retrieved 27 January 2015.

Sources

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