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Calls for 'Forest of Dean independence or joining Wales' as council shake-up looms

The Forest of Dean District Council is calling on civic chiefs to not be afraid in standing up for the area

Councillor Tim Gwilliam speaking at the Forest of Dean District Council meeting (Image: Local Democracy Reporting Service)

Proposals for a local government overhaul that could lead to the Forest of Dean lose its own council have sparked calls for residents to assert their rights and even "consider independence or joining Wales".

Concerns are mounting the district is being sidelined as the "poor relation" amidst talks about reorganising councils in Gloucestershire.

Forest of Dean District Councillors are urging local leaders to be bold in defending an area famed for its history of outspokenness. They are adamant about not repeating past patterns of "being put upon and shut out of the way".

At their March 20 meeting, councillors reviewed the letter sent to Jim McMahon, Minister for Local Government and English Devolution, on behalf of all the county's councils the week previously.

This correspondence presented three proposals for Gloucestershire: one featuring a unitary authority merging all six districts with the Gloucestershire County Council; another suggesting two unitary councils with one covering Gloucester, Forest of Dean, and Stroud in the west, and the other encompassing Cheltenham, Cotswolds, and Tewkesbury in the east; and lastly, the idea of a city-centred unitary council focussed on a 'Greater Gloucester', in addition to either one or two unitaries for the remaining county areas.

Councillor Tim Gwilliam (Progressive Independents), former leader of the Forest of Dean District Council, emphasised that they "cannot be left to be the poor relation again".

He said some of the discussion around council reorganisation reminded him of Depeche Mode's1983 hit song Everything Counts: "I'm reminded, because of my vintage, of a Depeche Mode song which goes 'the grabbing hands, grab all they can' when I see leaders of Gloucester City Council who want to claim parts of places around them and I see Cheltenham Borough Council issuing reports they haven't shown to other people."

He added: "I'm pleased the leader, cabinet and officers are taking a forward thinking view from the Forest of Dean. We can't be left just to be left to be the poor relations again. There's an element of that going on.