West Dunbartonshire

West Dunbartonshire
Wast Dunbartanshire
Siorrachd Dhùn Bhreatainn an Iar

Coat of arms
Coordinates: 55°59′24″N 4°30′54″W / 55.99000°N 4.51500°W / 55.99000; -4.51500Coordinates: 55°59′24″N 4°30′54″W / 55.99000°N 4.51500°W / 55.99000; -4.51500
Admin HQ Dumbarton
Government
  Body West Dunbartonshire Council
  Control Labour
  MPs
  MSPs
Area
  Total 61 sq mi (159 km2)
Area rank Ranked 31st
Population (2010 est.)
  Total 91,000
  Rank Ranked 22nd
  Density 1,500/sq mi (570/km2)
ONS code 00QG
ISO 3166 code GB-WDU
Website http://www.west-dunbarton.gov.uk/

West Dunbartonshire (Scots: Wast Dunbartanshire; Scottish Gaelic: Siorrachd Dhùn Bhreatainn an Iar, pronounced [ʃirˠəxk ɣumˈpɾʲɛʰt̪ɪɲ ə ɲiəɾ]) is one of the 32 local government council areas of Scotland. The area lies to the west of the City of Glasgow and contains many of Glasgow's commuter towns and villages, as well as the city's suburbs. West Dunbartonshire also borders onto Argyll and Bute, East Dunbartonshire, Renfrewshire and Stirling.

The area was formed on 1 April 1996 from part of the former Strathclyde Region, namely the entire district of Clydebank and the Dumbarton district less the Helensburgh area. In the Local Government etc. (Scotland) Act 1994 that created the council area its name was Dumbarton and Clydebank. The council, elected as a shadow authority in 1995, resolved to change the name of the area to West Dunbartonshire.[1]

The area is essentially composed of three parts: the towns of Clydebank, Dumbarton and the Vale of Leven district.

West Dunbartonshire is administered from Dumbarton, although Clydebank is the largest town.

Governance and politics

The council is run by 22 councillors elected from 6 wards.[2] All Scottish local authorities were last elected in 2012; in West Dunbartonshire, the following parties were elected:[3]

The Labour Party regained control of the council from an SNP/independent coalition at the 2012 local election.

On the 18th September 2014, West Dunbartonshire was one of few council areas who said "Yes" in the Scottish Independence Referendum at 54% with a 87.9% turnout rate.[4]

Towns and villages

Main sights

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, March 24, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.