Thurrock Urban District had been created in 1936 from the former
urban districts of
Grays Thurrock,
Purfleet and
Tilbury and the
Orsett Rural District. Urban districts were abolished in 1974 under the
Local Government Act 1972. A new
non-metropolitan district called Thurrock was created covering almost the same area as the former Thurrock Urban District, with just a minor change on the border with
Basildon to place the whole designated area for Basildon
new town in that district. The reformed Thurrock district was given
borough status at the same time, allowing the council to call itself "Thurrock Borough Council" and letting the chair of the council the title of mayor. The council was made a
unitary authority on 1 April 1998, taking over county-level services in the area from
Essex County Council. The way the change was implemented was to create a new
non-metropolitan county of Thurrock covering the borough, but with no separate county council; instead, the existing borough council took over county council functions, making it a unitary authority. Since 1998 the council has generally styled itself "Thurrock Council" rather than "Thurrock Borough Council". Thurrock remains part of the
ceremonial county of Essex for the purposes of
lieutenancy. The planning function for large developments was exercised by the
Thurrock Thames Gateway Development Corporation in the whole of the borough from 2003 to 2012.
Financial difficulties In 2020, it emerged that the council had borrowed £420 million to buy into the solar power market, eventually rising to a total investment of £655million. One of the companies in which the council had invested, Toucan Energy, went into administration on 11 November 2022. Businessman Liam Kavanagh is accused of cheating the council out of as much as £130 million in relation to the deals. Thurrock also made a £94million loan to the Just Loans Group plc, a business lender which went bankrupt in June 2022. The council's financial exposure arises from loans of more than a billion pounds used to fund commercial investments. Council leader Rob Gledhill resigned on 2 September 2022, the day the government intervention was announced. On 29 November 2022, Thurrock Council admitted that in that financial year it had a near £500 million budget deficit, mostly from failed investments. It asked for emergency financial assistance from the government. On 19 December 2022 the council issued a
Section 114 notice barring any new expenditure, being the local authority equivalent of declaring bankruptcy. In March 2023 the government appointed a new managing director for the council, Dave Smith. ==Governance==