In the
United
Kingdom
, a Deputy Lieutenant is one of
several deputies to the Lord-Lieutenant of a lieutenancy area; an English ceremonial county, Welsh
preserved county,
Scottish lieutenancy
area, or Northern Irish county
borough or county.
In titles, the suffix
DL may be added; e.g.
John
Brown, CBE, DL. However, it is generally omitted if the
subject has many honours and titles. The relevant Act of Parliament
is the
Lieutenancies Act
1997. Deputy lieutenants are chosen by the local
Lord-Lieutenant, to assist him with any duty that may be required
of him. They receive their commission only when the appropriate
Minister communicates that Her Majesty the Queen does not
disapprove of the appointment. In England and Wales, since November
2001, the appropriate Minister is the
Lord Chancellor . In Scotland, since July
1999 it has been the
Scottish
Ministers .
The maximum number of Deputy Lieutenants allowed in a county may be
several dozen, and is related to the population of that county. DLs
tend to be people who either have served the local community, or
have a history of service in other fields. They may represent the
Lord-Lieutenant in his (or her) absence. This would include local
ceremonies and official events, from opening exhibitions to
inductions of vicars.
DLs must live within the county, or within seven miles (11 km) of
the boundary. Their appointment does not terminate with the
changing of the Lord-Lieutenant . They usually retire at age
75.
One of the serving Deputy Lieutenants is appointed as Vice
Lord-Lieutenant , and under most circumstances will stand in for
the Lord-Lieutenant when he cannot be present. The appointment as
Vice Lord-Lieutenant does, however, end when the Lord-Lieutenant
who made the appointment leaves his/her post .
References
- [1] Lieutenancies Act 1997 (c. 23), section
2(4)
- The Transfer of Functions (Miscellaneous) Order 2001 (SI
2001/3500)
- The Scotland Act 1998 (Transfer of Functions to the Scottish
Ministers etc.) Order 1999 (SI 1999/1820)
- Lieutenancies Act 1997, section 2(2)(a)
- Lieutenancies Act 1997, section 2(2)(b)
- Lieutenancies Act 1997, section 2(5)
- Lieutenancies Act 1997, section 3
- Lieutenancies Act 1997, section 3(2).
External links