Hertfordshire councils submit joint response to Government on local government reform
20 March 2025
All 11 councils in Hertfordshire and the Office of the Police and Crime Commissioner (OPCC) have agreed a joint interim proposal outlining a number of initial options for the reorganisation of local government structures in the county.
Hertfordshire is what's known as a two-tier area with the county council responsible for services such as highways and transport, adult social care and children's services, and 10 district and borough councils providing services such as bin collections, leisure and housing.
As part of their plans to reshape local government, the Government requested councils in all two-tier areas to submit initial proposals for moving to a single tier of unitary councils providing all services.
Hertfordshire’s councils and the OPCC's shared priority remains ensuring that any changes benefit residents and businesses, maintains our excellent local government services, and enables strong democratic accountability to our communities.
Officers from all 11 councils and the OPCC worked together to produce the interim plan and updates have been provided to elected members at each individual organisation.
The submission sets out a number of options for further consideration, ranging from one to four unitary councils providing all services.
It also includes early thinking on how each option could support devolution, improve services, deliver value for money and maintain strong links to communities.
While a joint submission has been agreed, councils have differing views on the options set out and no decisions are being made at this stage.
Councils and the OPCC will continue collaboration over the coming months to collate and analyse further evidence for each option.
The Government will provide feedback on the options put forward, which will also inform the development of final proposals. These will need to be submitted to Government by 28 November 2025 for a decision by Ministers.
The views of residents, businesses, local government partners, our colleagues, and other stakeholders across the public and private sectors will be essential as proposals develop. We are committed to providing updates throughout the process.
Councillor Adrian England, Leader of the Council, said: “This will be a once-in-a-generation change that affects local people and services for decades to come. It is therefore important that there is proper consideration of the options and meaningful consultation with residents, key local organisations, businesses, and our public sector partners. Our priority is to ensure that any changes genuinely benefit residents and businesses while safeguarding high-quality local services."