noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
conservative
▪ But Pat Butler, a school governor and a Conservative county councillor, is less sanguine.
▪ Yet they must not lose the support of the environmental lobby or local Conservative councillors.
elected
▪ I have reflected on the position of elected councillors being allowed to become chairmen of college boards.
▪ Does not the hon. Gentleman think it wrong in principle that elected councillors should be paid such salaries on these corporation bodies?
▪ Voters also elected new regional councillors.
labour
▪ Does he agree that it is all about the priorities of Labour councillors?
▪ Labour plans schools bid LABOUR councillors are bidding to overturn a decision which stalled reorganisation of Liverpool's special schools.
▪ Darlington's Labour councillors were locked in negotiations with Kimberly-Clark management months before the company finally decided on Humberside.
▪ We never see him round here, nor any of the Labour councillors, if it comes to that.
▪ However, Labour councillors want a review to begin next year.
leading
▪ A leading councillor said yesterday that the charge is likely to be reduced after consultation currently being carried out.
▪ A leading councillor is concerned about the way the Government is handing out community care cash.
▪ Too often the literature gives the impression of leading councillors and officers being a united, cohesive group.
liberal
▪ The opposition cuts across party boundaries, with Labour, Conservative and Liberal Democrat councillors all against the scheme.
▪ He says that the council has already had extra funding, how much more do the labour and liberal democrat councillors want?
▪ I think people wanted a change and that's why they voted for a liberal democrat councillor.
local
▪ These are composed largely of local councillors indirectly appointed by their local authority but not directly elected to these bodies.
▪ The plan has the enthusiastic support of local councillors, who believe it will bring tourism and industry to the area.
▪ However, most national politicians and local councillors share the civil service preference for the functional and centralized system based on Whitehall.
▪ The chairman will take up the matter with the local councillors. 2.
▪ Talk to your local councillor as well, if you feel there is a need which is not being met.
▪ But local councillors say it's a silly idea.
▪ But local councillors don't like them.
privy
▪ Charles I was equally well disposed towards Salisbury and made him a privy councillor in 1626.
▪ He was created baronet in 1895 and a privy councillor in 1906.
regional
▪ The project has also been endorsed by 11 of the city's 19 regional councillors including new Chairman Bob Chiarelli.
▪ In Great Britain there are some 20,650 district and borough councillors and some 4,100 county, regional and islands councillors.
▪ Voters also elected new regional councillors.
tory
▪ New chairman, Tory councillor Keith Bland admitted that the council had made mistakes.
▪ A TORY councillor says Labour advertising on buses in Darlington will put people off using them.
■ NOUN
borough
▪ A recent report by borough councillor and community health council chairwoman Eleanor Young made the point clearly.
▪ And a report to Darlington borough councillors says the plans could affect small housing developments to the south of Court Arcade.
▪ The Sainsbury plans have received wholehearted support from borough councillors anxious to attract a prestigious development to the Grange Road site.
▪ In Great Britain there are some 20,650 district and borough councillors and some 4,100 county, regional and islands councillors.
▪ Darlington borough councillors heard the two-storey extension at Walworth Castle Hotel would not affect the ancient part of the building.
city
▪ On July 17, 11 city councillors were arrested in Reggio Calabria.
▪ It will be put to city councillors next week at the information and leisure committee meeting.
▪ The attractions of LET's scheme are easy for city councillors to appreciate.
▪ It did happen at times but they were usually people who fancied their power, such as city councillors.
▪ He is a city councillor for the Peartree ward.
▪ Read in studio A new video that's intended to attract more tourists to Oxford has been condemned by city councillors.
▪ Former city councillors John Nelson, 49, and Hannah Folan, 47, face one charge each.
county
▪ Trips abroad: County councillors have claimed £2,087 for trips abroad during the past year.
▪ Time allowed 00:19 Read in studio A controversial plan for a bypass around Aylesbury has been delayed by county councillors.
▪ If our county councillors don't look after us then the future is bleak.
▪ But county councillors claimed it would reduce parental choice by restricting the number of 11-year-old pupils the popular school can recruit.
▪ The review's been welcomed by the county councillor who represents the Fairford area.
▪ Durham county councillors decided at a private meeting yesterday that the club building in Duke Street should be repossessed.
▪ But Pat Butler, a school governor and a Conservative county councillor, is less sanguine.
democrat
▪ The opposition cuts across party boundaries, with Labour, Conservative and Liberal Democrat councillors all against the scheme.
▪ He says that the council has already had extra funding, how much more do the labour and liberal democrat councillors want?
▪ I think people wanted a change and that's why they voted for a liberal democrat councillor.
district
▪ He has an adult son, David, and is also a Mid Suffolk district councillor.
▪ County and district councillors came along and after searching questions, agreed with our plan wholeheartedly and gave us very good advice.
▪ Phil Hughes, a district councillor and parish councillor, who lives in Bowes parish.
▪ Meal fees: Wear Valley district councillors are being asked to approve increased charges for meals on wheels and luncheon clubs.
▪ Local district councillors are furious that they are being forced by the Government to introduce fees for commercial waste collection.
▪ He also served as a district councillor for eight years, before retiring in July last year.
▪ Recognising the problem, district councillors have come up with a much needed cash injection to ease the crisis.
parish
▪ He concluded by thanking vice-chairman Tony Rudgard who has produced the useful monthly newsletter for parish councillors.
▪ Campaigners now hope parish councillors will abandon their scheme for 30 new lights and accept alternative proposals instead.
▪ He is a parish councillor, school governor and a member of Yorkshire Water Consultative Committee.
▪ He spent 33 years as a parish councillor, 24 of them as parish council chairman.
▪ Phil Hughes, a district councillor and parish councillor, who lives in Bowes parish.
▪ Traffic moan: Parish councillors at Robin Hood's Bay are calling for policing to be stepped up.
town
▪ Javier Mugica Astibia, a town councillor in Navarra, by placing a bomb under his van.
▪ He is a former Whitby town councillor and was elected to Cleveland county council in 1985.
▪ The town councillors said the fountain was the first of many such gifts that would improve the villagers' quality of life.
ward
▪ Gresham ward councillor Barry Coppinger has taken up their case.
■ VERB
elect
▪ Aldermen were indirectly elected by the councillors for a six-year term and comprised one-quarter of the total council membership.
▪ They were kidding themselves if they believed they were just electing a bunch of councillors to run local services.
▪ Besides the elected councillors, members of existing community-based organisations were supposed to take part in the process.
tell
▪ Mr Newport told councillors that one Monday 146 juggernauts were unloaded at Park Foods.
▪ The chief executive or clerk of the authority will tell the councillor when they apply to him.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ As a councillor himself, the author would surely have drawn attention to such a reversal.
▪ He is a parish councillor, school governor and a member of Yorkshire Water Consultative Committee.
▪ In close touch with the monarch, he was the best informed and most constantly attendant councillor.
▪ It has been passed round the parish councillors for any information or comments.
▪ Not until they opened a sealed box in Virginia did they even learn who were to be their councillors.
▪ The government was concerned that the administration of local services was being politically compromised by more assertive councillors.
▪ Trips abroad: County councillors have claimed £2,087 for trips abroad during the past year.