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[7] [8] Exeter's city status was re-conferred on the reformed district, allowing the council to take the name Exeter City Council. [9] The city's mayor was raised to the status of a lord mayor in 2002. [10] In 2010 the government proposed that the city should become an independent unitary authority, like nearby Plymouth and Torbay. The ...
The 1988 Exeter City Council election took place on 5 May 1988 to elect members of Exeter City Council in Devon, England. [1]
The Devon Heritage Centre (DHC) is the successor to the Devon Record Office (DRO) that was established by Devon County Council in 1952. The DRO incorporated the Exeter City Record Office that had collected Devon's records since 1946, when it took over from the Exeter City Library, which had collected documents since the early 20th century. [2]
The city is subdivided into thirteen wards, for electoral and other purposes relating to Exeter City Council. Since boundary changes came into effect in 2016 , the following is the list of current wards:
The 2024 Exeter City Council election took place on 2 May 2024 to elect members of Exeter City Council in Devon, England. [1] This was on the same day as other local elections . There were 13 of 39 seats on the council up for election, being the usual third of the council.
RAMM is owned and partly funded by Exeter City Council, with additional funding from Arts Council England's National Portfolio Organisation programme of investment in the arts. Significant development funding was received from the Heritage Lottery Fund in 2007–11.
The constituency currently covers most of the city of Exeter in Devon. It covered the entire city until 2010, when, under the Fifth Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies, which increased the number of seats in the county from 11 to 12, two wards of the City of Exeter (St Loyes and Topsham) were transferred to the neighbouring East Devon ...
Countess Wear is a district within the city of Exeter, Devon, England. It lies about two miles south-east of the city centre, on the north bank of the estuary of the River Exe . Historically an estate known as Weare, part of the manor of Topsham, was in this area.