Craigavon Borough Council Headquarters, September 2009
Craigavon Borough Council is
a local council in counties Armagh,
Down and Antrim, in Northern Ireland
. The headquarters of the council is in
Craigavon
, on the shores of Lough Neagh
, a new town built between
Lurgan
and Portadown
. The council area includes the large towns of
Lurgan and Portadown, as well as smaller ones including Waringstown
and Donaghcloney
. The council budget of £15.5 million
provides a wide range of services to over 90,000 people living in
the area.
The council area consists of four electoral areas - Central,
Loughside, Lurgan and Portadown - in which 26 councillors are
elected every four years. The council holds an annual meeting in
June, at which a new Mayor and Deputy Mayor are elected. Parties
elected in 2005 were
Democratic Unionist Party (DUP)
nine seats,
Ulster Unionist
Party (UUP) six,
Sinn Féin six,
Social Democratic and
Labour Party (SDLP) four, and Independent one. 1 member has
since defected to
Traditional
Unionist Voice. The current Mayor is DUP Councilor Robert
Smyth, and his Deputy is Ken Twyble of the UUP.
Together
with part of the district of Banbridge
, it forms the Upper Bann
constituency for elections to the Westminster
Parliament
and Northern
Ireland Assembly.
Summary of seats won 1973-2005
Note: The Workers Party were known as The Republican Clubs in 1977
and Workers Party Republican Clubs in 1981.
Source:
[108245]
Mayor of Craigavon
| Year |
Name |
Political affiliation |
Deputy |
Deputy's affiliation |
| 1973 - 75 |
Joseph A. Johnston
|
James McCammick
|
| 1975 - 76 |
James McCammick
|
Tom Creith
|
| 1976 - 77 |
Tom Creith
|
Herbert Whitten
|
| 1977 - 78 |
Sydney Cairns
|
Brian T. English
|
| 1978 - 79 |
Herbert Whitten
|
David Calvert
|
| 1979 - 80 |
Alan Locke
|
James McDonald
|
| 1980 - 81 |
Frank Dale
|
Sean Hagan
|
| 1981 - 82 |
Mary Simpson
|
David Calvert
|
| 1982 - 83 |
Sam Gardiner
|
James Gillespie
|
| 1983 - 84 |
James Gillespie
|
Frederick Baird
|
| 1984 - 85 |
Arnold Hatch
|
Patrick J. Crilly
|
| 1985 - 87 |
George Savage
|
James Gillespie
|
| 1987 - 88 |
Sydney Cairns
|
Arnold Hatch
|
| 1988 - 89 |
Sam Gardiner
|
James McCammick
|
| 1989 - 91 |
James McCammick
|
Joy Savage, then
Joe Trueman
|
| 1991 - 92 |
Joe Trueman
|
Fred Crowe
|
| 1992 - 93 |
Fred Crowe
|
Sam Lutton
|
| 1993 - 94 |
Joy Savage
|
Ruth Allen
|
| 1994 - 95 |
Brian Maguinness
|
Sean McKavanagh
|
| 1995 - 96 |
Meta Crozier |
|
|
Hugh
Casey
|
|
| 1996 - Dec 96 |
Hugh Casey
|
Sam Lutton
|
| Dec 1996 - 97 |
Sam Lutton
|
Hugh Casey
|
| 1998 - 99 |
Mervyn Carrick
|
Dolores Kelly
|
| 1999 - 00 |
Dolores Kelly
|
Fred Crowe
|
| 2000 - 01 |
Fred Crowe
|
Mark Neale
|
| 2001 - 02 |
Sam Gardiner
|
Jonathan Bell
|
| 2002 - 03 |
Jonathan Bell |
|
|
Sydney Anderson
|
|
|
| 2003 - 04 |
Ignatius Fox
|
David
Simpson
|
| 2004 - 05 |
David
Simpson
|
Ignatius Fox
|
| 2005 - 06 |
George Savage
|
Robert Smith
|
| 2006 - 07 |
Kenneth Twyble
|
Mary McAlinden
|
| 2007 - 08 |
Robert Smith
|
Kenneth Twyble
|
| 2008 - 09 |
Sydney Anderson
|
Arnold Hatch
|
Source:
Freedom of
Information request to Craigavon Borough Council
Review of Public Administration
Under the Review of Public Administration (RPA) the Council is due
to merge with
Banbridge
District Council and
Armagh City and District
Council in 2011 to form a single council for the enlarged area
totalling 1,502 km² and a population of 176,326. 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.
See also
References
- Northern Ireland elections are postponed,
BBC News, April 25, 2008, accessed April 27, 2008