What are the six main types of local governments?

Local governments include municipalities (and their councils) and regional districts (and their boards). They are  governed by the Community Charter and the Local Government Act.

Local Governments and Economic Development Strategy

Local governments are key in leading or supporting the creation of an economic development strategy. The strategy's success will have a direct effect on a community's tax base. The goal is to provide revenue to maintain, grow and improve local infrastructure and community services. 

Local governments can initiate a community's economic planning efforts, to build on their official community plan and role of shaping community growth and determining land use. 

Local government functions that influence economic development and planning include:

  • Planning and zoning bylaws
  • Taxation
  • Local business support
  • Collaborating between communities and in the larger region 
  • Accessing and using programs offered by provincial and federal governments 
  • Advocating for community economic development priorities with governments and industry

The benefits of local government activities that support economic development include: 

  • Helping create and keep stable, well-paying jobs in the community
  • Improving the quality of life by providing:
    • Improved services
    • Environmental and recreational areas
    • Cultural and social activities

Promoting Economic Development

Local governments can promote economic development by:

  • Keeping your community members informed and include them whenever possible in the decision making and marketing of the community
  • Promoting the growth of all economic sectors in the region
  • Encouraging sustainable business practices
  • Creating an official community plan and a strategic plan
  • Developing, using and promoting business retention strategies
  • Identify and market the community's assets 
  • Creating projects that support economic development
  • Acting as point of contact for possible investors; providing accurate information, encouragement and support
  • Championing current economic development plans; reviewing and updating as needed
  • Identifying key members for boards and assignments
  • Working with and supporting economic development officers
  • Building a shared understanding with the community that economic development is a long-term process and success must be measured over time

How is the Role of Regional Districts Different?

The governing authority is different for regional districts. Regional districts do not have “natural person powers” under the Community Charter. They also don't have exemption from elector approval for agreements with capital liabilities, unlike municipalities. 

The Provincial Government's Role

The B.C. Government works with local governments by providing information, resources and services that support economic development.  

It is the duty of the chief executive along with the directors of services and other members of the local authority management team to advise and assist the elected council while carrying out ‘executive functions’. The chief executive, assisted by a senior management team, manages a local authority on a day-to-day basis. Some of the chief executive’s responsibilities include delivering on strategic objectives as set out in the corporate plan, administering schemes and allocating grants. Policy areas under the responsibility of the chief executive include transport, social housing, economic development and local authority governance.

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Alternate titles: municipal government

By The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica Last Updated: Nov 5, 2022 Article History

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What are the six main types of local governments?

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local government, authority to determine and execute measures within a restricted area inside and smaller than a whole state. Some degree of local government characterizes every country in the world, although the degree is extremely significant. The variant, local self-government, is important for its emphasis upon the freedom of the locality to decide and act.

There is more than a technical importance in the difference between the two terms, because they are related to the distinction sometimes drawn between deconcentration and decentralization. Local government is often, but not necessarily, related to the former; local self-government to the latter. These distinctions are important, even if they are blurred. Deconcentration broadly means that, for the sake of convenience, some functions have been devolved from a central government to administration on the spot. Power is still administered through officials appointed by and responsible to the centre, and authority and discretion are vested in the centre. On the other hand, decentralization represents local government in areas where the authority to decide has been devolved to a council of locally elected persons acting on their own discretion with officials they themselves freely appoint and discipline.

The term local self-government has been traditionally used of local government in the United Kingdom and Germany. Thus, the Basic Law (the constitution of Germany) says, “Municipalities must be guaranteed the right to regulate all local affairs on their own responsibility, within the limits prescribed by the laws.” On the other hand, the amended constitution of the French Fifth Republic says, “In the conditions provided for by statute, these [local communities] shall be self-governing through elected councils and shall have power to make regulations for matters coming within their jurisdiction.” This expresses the spirit of deconcentration.

However tightly bound to the central office’s authority and regulations local officials may be, a degree of discretion is unavoidable. Often, again, the fairly pure organs of local self-government, such as the borough councils in the United Kingdom, are obliged to execute the purposes of the central government. Primarily units of local self-government, they are simultaneously units of local obligation acting as ordered by the central government for services such as education and policing.

Thus, modern local government has a twofold aspect—it is a mixture of both deconcentration and decentralization, of central convenience and an acknowledgment that not all authority ought to be exerted by the centre. The mixture is revealed by the extent to which some of the powers exercised by local government units are exercised compulsorily and under fairly strict control by central authority with financial assistance, while others are not. This mixture produces the high complexity of modern local government. Further, local government is a departmentalization of the state’s work, based on the territorial distribution of services, as contrasted with (1) division into departments at the centre or (2) decentralization of functions to public corporations. In local government, territorial distribution of power is the essence.

What are the six main types of local governments?

Jean-Baptiste Colbert

The history of local government in Western Europe, Great Britain, the United States, and Russia exhibits the growing awareness of its significance. This awareness is a product of a development of parochial and town life which began long before the modern state emerged between the 15th and 17th centuries. Any central control over these and other areas was, until the 18th century, rather scanty. Notable exceptions were France under Jean-Baptiste Colbert or 17th-century Prussia, where local authorities were already overlaid by the heavy hand of the central intendants in the former and the war commissariat in the latter. Many Germanic states, such as the Hanse towns, were nothing but cities. In England and especially New England, the local units—parishes, towns, and cities—emerged from their origins as spontaneous self-governing units. This was also the case in Russia, although there the tsars took strict control of the cities through their provincial governors and over the mir—the village-cum-agricultural unit—through taxes, the police, and the boyars. The state colonized some cities from the beginning. The various local units were gradually integrated by the state, which exacted obligations from them regarding peace, crime and police duties, taxes, military supplies, assistance to the poor, and highways. By ordinances or statutes or judicial decisions, local units were subordinated, so that the idea of an inherent right to self-government was extinguished. By the 19th century all local units had become legal creatures of the state, subsidiary in authority and acting independently by sufferance alone.

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What are the six main types of local governments?

Tennessee Valley Authority

The local freedoms of the 19th century were challenged by (1) speed of communications, which reduced administrative time, (2) demands of a planned economy, (3) growth of nationwide political parties with social welfare programs uniform for all parts of the nation, (4) growth of a consciousness favouring a national minimum of services, (5) realization that the best technical administration of modern utilities requires areas knitted together by a central plan that differs from the traditional ones, and (6) needs of civil defense against air attack. These are powerful forces working against claims to purely self-regarding government. On the other hand, local freedom is supported by need for (1) intimate local knowledge and variation, (2) intensity of local interest and enlistment of loyalty and cooperation, (3) small areas for easy impact of the citizen-consumers upon officials-producers, (4) an accessible area of political education, (5) counterweight to the abuse of central power, and (6) the democratic value of a plurality of political experience and confidence. In all plans, decentralization, whether to a regional agency such as the Tennessee Valley Authority in the U.S. or to traditional units, is pressing, necessary, and fruitful.

What are the six roles of local government?

What is the Role of Local Government?.
Planning and zoning bylaws..
Taxation..
Local business support..
Collaborating between communities and in the larger region..
Accessing and using programs offered by provincial and federal governments..
Advocating for community economic development priorities with governments and industry..

How many types of government are there in the local government?

There are 3 types of municipalities based on the population, Municipal Corporation (Nagar Nigam) with more than 1 million population, Municipal Councils (Nagar Palika) with more than 25,000 and less than 1 million population, and Municipal Committee (Nagar Panchayat) with more than 10,000 and less than 25,000 ...

What are the 7 powers of local government?

Municipalities generally take responsibility for parks and recreation services, police and fire departments, housing services, emergency medical services, municipal courts, transportation services (including public transportation), and public works (streets, sewers, snow removal, signage, and so forth).

What is local government and its types?

Local government is the public administration of towns, cities, counties and districts. Local government includes both county and municipal government structures. County government is the public administration of a county, borough or parish.