Halton (borough)

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Borough of Halton
Location within England
Location within England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Constituent country England
Region North West England
Ceremonial county Cheshire
Admin HQ Widnes
Settled 12th century
Incorporated 1974 (borough)
  1998 (Unitary authority)
Government [1]
 - Type Unitary authority, Borough
 - Governing body Halton Borough Council
 - Leadership Leader & Cabinet
 - Executive Labour
 - MPs Mike Hall (L)
Derek Twigg (L)
Area
 - Total 30.5 sq mi (79.09 km²)
Population (2006 est.)
 - Total 119,500 (Ranked 168th)
 - Density 3,890.2/sq mi (1,502/km²)
 - Ethnicity
(2001 Census)
98.8% White
Time zone GMT (UTC+0)
ONS code 00ET
Website: http://www.halton.gov.uk/

Halton is a local government district in North West England, with borough status and administered by a unitary authority. It was created in 1974 as a district of Cheshire, and became a unitary authority area on 1 April 1998. It consists of the towns of Widnes and Runcorn and the civil parishes of Hale, Daresbury, Moore and Preston Brook.[1]

Halton dates back to the 12th century (and beyond) when land on both sides of the river belonged to the Barony of Halton. The area borders Merseyside, Warrington and the shire county of Cheshire. The borough straddles the River Mersey — the area to the north (including Widnes) is historically part of Lancashire, that to the south, Cheshire.

The district was originally formed on April 1, 1974, from Runcorn urban district and part of Runcorn Rural District from Cheshire, and the borough Widnes and the parish of Hale from the Whiston Rural District in Lancashire. The unitary authority associates with the five Merseyside councils to form the "Greater Merseyside" group and is considered part of the "Liverpool city-region".[2]

Contents

[edit] Local sites of interest

The borough is home to a large number of historic sites:

All Saints' Church, Daresbury [3] is a church well-known as the inspiration for Alice In Wonderland. Lewis Carroll was born in the village, and his father was rector there. The church contains a carving of a grinning cat, a play on the wildcat in the arms of a local family empowered in the Middle Ages to kill poachers by hanging or garrotting (giving them a "permanent grin").

[edit] Economy

This is a chart of trend of regional gross value added of Halton and Warrington at current basic prices published (pp.240-253) by Office for National Statistics with figures in millions of British Pounds Sterling.

Year Regional Gross Value Added4 Agriculture1 Industry2 Services3
1995 3,636 14 1,361 2,261
2000 4,768 10 1,433 3,324
2003 5,774 18 1,399 4,356

Note 1: includes hunting and forestry

Note 2: includes energy and construction

Note 3: includes financial intermediation services indirectly measured

Note 4: Components may not sum to totals due to rounding

[edit] Demographics

The population of Halton in 2004 was 118,915 and it is the most densely populated district in Cheshire at 15.01 persons per hectare (3,890.2/sq mi).[4] The change in population during the 20th century is shown in the following table.

Year 1901 1911 1921 1931 1941 1951 1961 1971 1981 1991 2001
Population 57,755 57,062 61,039 65,309 71,835 79,026 87,168 96,150 121,861 124,915 118,215
Source: [5]

In 2003 Halton had the largest proportion of the population in Cheshire in the age groups under 5, 5 to 15 and 16 to pension age and, at 16.1% the lowest proportion of people at pension age or older. At 1.2% the proportion of non-white ethnic groups in 2001 equalled the lowest in all local authorities in Cheshire. At 11.5 per 1,000 population, the live birth rate in Halton and Warrington, is the highest in the county. At 121 the standardised mortality ratio and at 21.5% the percentage of persons with limiting long-term illness are considerably the highest in Cheshire.[6]

There has been an increase in the number of households from 47,214 in 1991 to 52,501 in 2006. The average household size has reduced from 2.70 in 1991 to 2.44 in 2001. 89.8% of houses had central heating in 2001 compared with 75.8% in 2001. The type of housing has also changed with an increase from 15.5% to 19.2% in detached houses from 1991 to 2001, an increase over the same years in semi-detached houses from 30.0% to 33.0% and a corresponding decrease in terraced houses from 44.0% to 37.5%.[7] The percentage of dwellings in council tax bands A-B is, at 69% the highest in any Cheshire local authority while the percentages in bands E-F (8%) and G-H (1%) are the lowest.[6]

There has been a shift in employment from manufacturing to service industries. In 1991 34% worked in the manufacturing sector and 61% were in the service sector. By 2004 17% were in manufacturing jobs and 78% were in service jobs.[7]

[edit] Education

[edit] Performance table

The following table shows the percentage of pupils gaining five GCSE A*–C level grades, including and excluding English and Maths in 2007.[8]

School Eligible Pupils Including English and Maths Excluding English and Maths
Wade Deacon High School 220 67 89
The Heath School 202 50 83
Saints Peter & Paul Catholic High School 296 48 61
St Chad's Catholic High School 150 39 56
Fairfield High School 198 37 45
The Bankfield School 178 33 64
The Grange Comprehensive School 223 27 46
Halton High School 131 24 59
National average 46.7 62

[edit] Council political composition

Party Councillors
Labour 33
Liberal Democrat 14
Conservative 9

[edit] Twin towns

[edit] Notes

[edit] See also