Corporate joint committee
Local government body in Wales
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A corporate joint committee (CJC; Welsh: cyd-bwyllgorau corfforedig) is a type of local government institution introduced in Wales by the Local Government and Elections (Wales) Act 2021.[1][2]

History
A Local Government and Elections (Wales) Act 2021 became law in January 2021. It contained provisions to reduce the voting age from 18 to 16 for local elections in Wales and to extend the franchise to include eligible foreign nationals. It extended the term of local councillors from four years to five years. The law allows local councils to decide to continue to hold elections under first past the post system or to switch to the single transferable vote system. It created a framework for joint regional coordination between local authorities through the formation of corporate joint committees.[3] Four corporate joint committees covering all of Wales, were established by statutory instruments in April 2021.[4][1]
Structure
Powers
List of corporate joint committees
In April 2021, four corporate joint committees were created covering all of Wales:[9]
See also
- Local government in Wales
- Regions of Wales
- History of local government in Wales
- Regional economy in Wales
- Trunk road agent
- Partnership Council for Wales, a body which brings together Welsh ministers and council leaders
- Combined authority, similar strategic authorities in England