North East Combined Authority

North East Combined Authority
North East Combined Authority within England
Type
Type
HousesUnicameral
Term limits
4 Years (Mayor)
History
Founded7 May 2024
Preceded byNorth East Combined Authority & North of Tyne Combined Authority
Leadership
Kim McGuinness,
Labour
since May 2024
Deputy Mayor
Martin Gannon,
Labour
since June 2024
Structure
Political groups
  Labour (6)
  Liberal Democrats (1)
  Conservatives (1)
CommitteesAudit and Standards Committee, Overview and Scrutiny Committee. [1]
Length of term
None
Elections
Last election
2 May 2024
Next election
4 May 2028
Meeting place
The Lumen, St James Boulevard, Newcastle upon Tyne[2]
Website
www.northeast-ca.gov.uk Edit this at Wikidata
Constitution
https://www.northeast-ca.gov.uk/governance/constitution

The North East Combined Authority (NECA) is a combined authority in North East England. NECA has a directly-elected Mayor and seven member councils; two county unitary authorities (Durham and Northumberland) and five metropolitan boroughs (Gateshead, Newcastle, North Tyneside, South Tyneside, Sunderland).

A separate devolved region comprising five councils, the Tees Valley, borders the south of the combined authority's devolved region. Together the two combined authorities occupy the geographic extent of the North East England English region.[3][4]

The authority was announced on 28 December 2022 in the North East devolution deal and will be fully operational by May 2024. On 6 March 2024, the Government announced the North East deeper devolution deal, which supersedes the previous devolution deal and will give NECA increased devolved powers.[5][6][7]

The first election for the authority took place on 2 May 2024, and the replacement of both the non-mayoral North East Combined Authority and the North of Tyne Combined Authority happened on 7 May 2024.[3]

  1. ^ https://www.northeast-ca.gov.uk/governance/committees
  2. ^ "Contact us". 19 March 2024.
  3. ^ a b "North East devolution deal". GOV.UK. Retrieved 29 December 2022.
  4. ^ https://www.sunderland.gov.uk/media/28957/North-East-Devolution-Scheme/pdf/Scheme_-_final.pdf?m=638103399897930000
  5. ^ "North East deeper devolution deal". GOV.UK. Retrieved 7 March 2024.
  6. ^ Holland, Daniel (6 March 2024). "What the North East's £100m-plus 'trailblazer' deal means for the region". Chronicle Live. Retrieved 7 March 2024.
  7. ^ Ford, Coreena (6 March 2024). "'Trailblazer' deal set to deliver massive boost to North East". Business Live. Retrieved 7 March 2024.

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