Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
County Dublin was divided into three electoral counties, each with its own council: Dublin–Fingal (24 members), Dublin–Belgard (26 members), and Dún Laoghaire–Rathdown (28 members). [ 22 ] [ 23 ] Elections were to be administered through these electoral counties, rather than to the County Council or the Borough Council of Dún Laoghaire.
The municipal borough of Dublin has historically been administered separately from the county. It was renamed a county borough under the Local Government (Ireland) Act 1898. In 1994, County Dublin was abolished as a local government area, to be replaced by Dún Laoghaire–Rathdown, Fingal and South Dublin. In 2001, the county borough of Dublin ...
The functions of local government in the Republic of Ireland are mostly exercised by thirty-one local authorities, termed County, City, or City and County Councils. [1] [2] [3] The principal decision-making body in each of the thirty-one local authorities is composed of the members of the council, elected by universal franchise in local elections every five years from multi-seat local ...
The county council was established on 1 April 1899 under the Local Government (Ireland) Act 1898 for the administrative county of County Dublin. [1] [2] [3] Its headquarters were established at 10–11 Parnell Square in 1900 [4] but, due to the cramped conditions, it transferred to 46–49 O'Connell Street, Dublin City in 1975.
an act to extend the area of the city of dublin by including therein the urban district of pembroke, the urban district of rathmines and rathgar, and certain rural areas, to establish a new borough comprising the urban districts of blackrock, dun laoghaire, dalkey, and killiney and ballybrack, to regulate and amend the local government of the city of dublin as so extended and the local ...
From that date, its functions were succeeded by Dún Laoghaire–Rathdown County Council, Fingal County Council and South Dublin County Council, each with its county seat, respectively administering the new counties established on that date. [72] The city was previously designated a county borough and administered by Dublin Corporation.
In 1986, the Borough of Galway became the County Borough of Galway and ceased to part of County Galway. [91] [117] The Borough Council became the "City Council" and it acquired its own "City Manager". [91] This was not presented as the acquiring of city status; Minister for the Environment Liam Kavanagh said it was "the extension of the Galway ...
Under the 1940 act, a county manager was the manager of every borough or municipal town in that county, but from the 1990s had the power to delegate these functions to any other officer of that borough or town council. The Borough of Dún Laoghaire, with nearly the level of autonomy as a county borough, had a borough manager from its 1930 creation.