Leeds City Council is responsible for providing all statutory local authority services in Leeds, except for those it provides jointly in conjunction with other West Yorkshire authorities. This includes education, housing, planning, transport and highways, social services, libraries, leisure and recreation, waste collection, waste disposal, environmental health and revenue collection. The council is one of the largest employers in West Yorkshire, with around 33,000 employees.
Education Leeds Education Leeds was set up in 2001 as a non-profit making company wholly owned by Leeds City Council to provide education support services for the council. For its first five years it operated as a
public-private partnership between the Council and
Capita. The senior councillors of the council's executive board voted in March 2010 to stop using Education Leeds to provide services from 31 March 2011, thereby effectively causing it to cease operation.
Housing Until 1 October 2013, Leeds City Council's housing stock was managed and operated by three
arms-length management organisations (ALMOs) since 2007. They were wholly owned by the council but operated as autonomous and self-governing organisations. The ALMOs, which are arranged on a regional basis were: • East North East Homes • West North West Homes • Aire Valley Homes As of 1 October 2013, the ALMOs returned to Leeds City Council and all management of council housing stock became the responsibility of Housing Leeds. At this point, the ALMOs ceased to exist. Management of more than 2000 homes in
Belle Isle is carried out by Belle Isle Tenant Management Organisation, the largest tenant management organisation in the UK outside London.
Leeds Museums and Galleries Leeds Museums & Galleries is a museum service run by Leeds City Council. Established in 1821, it is the largest local authority-run museum service in England, with one of the larger and more significant multidisciplinary collections in the UK, looking after 1.3 million objects. The service is run and primarily funded by Leeds City Council (LCC), and plays a significant role in shaping the cultural life of the city, but as a leading museum service it has a regional and national reputation and role. In 2012 the organisation achieved Major Partner Museum status from Arts Council England, which brought significant additional funding and further national prominence and expectation. The service has at times run major events across the city, with visitors numbering in the millions, such as the 2014–19 Legacies of War Project, which examined how Leeds was affected by the First World War, and developed teaching materials for schools. Leeds Museums & Galleries is made up of nine different sites:
Leeds Art Gallery,
Leeds City Museum,
Kirkstall Abbey,
Abbey House Museum,
Leeds Industrial Museum at Armley Mills,
Thwaite Mills,
Lotherton Hall,
Temple Newsam and
Leeds Discovery Centre.
Waste disposal and recycling The city operates waste disposal and recycling facilities in
Kirkstall,
Meanwood,
Middleton,
Otley,
Pudsey,
Seacroft, Wetherby (
Thorp Arch) and
Yeadon.
West Yorkshire Joint Services West Yorkshire Joint Services provides services for the five district local authorities in West Yorkshire (Leeds,
Bradford,
Calderdale,
Kirklees and
Wakefield) in the areas of archaeology, archives, ecology, materials testing, public analyst, and trading standards. ==Council structures==