Humberside was not well-loved: to quote
James Cran, MP for
Beverley, "almost the day after the decision was announced a campaign began to have Humberside abolished". North Wolds Borough Council changed its name to East Yorkshire Borough Council and Beverley Borough Council formally included "East Yorkshire" in its name. According to Cran, there was a campaign in 1987 to get Humberside County Council to change its name to something like "East Yorkshire and North Lincolnshire". The county's boundary signs, particularly in the East Riding of Yorkshire, continually suffered vandalism, to the extent that Humberside County Council had boundary signs reading "Welcome to England's Newest County" removed in 1990 to deter vandals and save costs on producing replacement signs. This attitude was reported as less common in the port towns of the county. For example,
The Times noted in 1974 that Hull and Grimsby "regard the advantages of unification as an exciting prospect". In 1982 the
Local Government Boundary Commission for England advised the
Secretary of State for the Environment,
Michael Heseltine, that "a review of the Humberside county boundary [was] warranted". The Local Government Boundary Commission reviewed the existence of Humberside from 1985 to 1988, but found that "Humberside County Council could not be shown to have failed". In 1989 the
Secretary of State for the Environment called for a further review, which resulted in a proposal made in November 1990 to transfer the four districts south of the Humber to the non-metropolitan county of Lincolnshire, which would have left the remaining part north of the Humber free to change its name to include "Yorkshire". A report prepared for the Commission in 1990 indicated that 63 per cent of respondents thought that the creation of Humberside was "bad" and only 14 per cent thought that it was "good". However, before the proposal could be implemented, a general
local government review for England was announced. This was conducted with an eye to creating unitary authorities, and Humberside was one of the areas that the commission was expecting "early wins" in, and was in the first tranche of reviews. The Commission recommended that the county and its districts be abolished and replaced with four unitary authorities, a proposal that the government accepted. The Order for abolition and replacement was debated in the
House of Commons on 28 February 1995 and in the
House of Lords on 6 March 1995, and it came into effect on 1 April 1996. There were questions raised as to whether the boundaries of Hull should be expanded, given that they had been set many decades before and never altered despite continuous urbanisation in the neighbouring area, the former urban district of
Haltemprice.
Michael Brown, the Conservative MP for
Brigg and Cleethorpes, was particularly vociferous in support of the Order, saying in the debate regarding abolition: "I want to see the word 'Humberside' expunged from the English language". Few voices were heard in defence of Humberside.
Elliot Morley, Labour MP for
Glanford and Scunthorpe, claimed that "young people who were born in Humberside and have an affinity with Humberside identify with it," but he agreed that the council was a "flawed idea". The abolition of the county thus resulted in four successor
unitary authorities: •
Kingston upon Hull •
East Riding of Yorkshire:
Beverley,
East Yorkshire,
Holderness, and northern
Boothferry •
North Lincolnshire:
Glanford,
Scunthorpe and southern
Boothferry •
North East Lincolnshire:
Great Grimsby,
Cleethorpes There was some debate as to the fate of Goole and the surrounding area, historically part of the West Riding. The Secretary of State,
John Gummer, initially proposed that Goole should be "incorporated in
Selby of
North Yorkshire", but it was decided to associate it with the rest of North Humberside. The offices of
Lord Lieutenant of Humberside and
High Sheriff of Humberside were also abolished. The Yorkshire part became the
ceremonial county of the East Riding of Yorkshire, which includes Hull, while the Lincolnshire part reverted to Lincolnshire for ceremonial purposes. The whole of the area once covered by the former non-metropolitan county of Humberside, including the Lincolnshire parts, is part of the
government office region of
Yorkshire and the Humber (originally Yorkshire and Humberside). ==Postal counties==