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To register and start your entry, please use the button below. If you have previously started, please login on the right-hand side.
We would advise completing your entry in Word or a similar programme first before copying and pasting into the entry form.
If you need help with your entry or require any clarification, please contact Kieran McDougall on 020 3953 2019 or email Kieran.McDougall@emap.com .
The entry deadline for the LGC Awards is 10 January.
The winners will be announced at Grosvenor House, London on 11 June 2025.
Why enter
Winning a prestigious LGC Award not only provides you and your team with the recognition you deserve at an event celebrating your achievements, but also has a whole host of benefits you might not have realised.
What can winning an LGC Award do for you and your team?
- Share best practice across the local government community: promote and share your work to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of local government services across the UK
- Reward your team: gain recognition for the excellent services you and your team are delivering
- Showcase your council: highlight the innovative projects within your council and demonstrate how it is a great place to work
- Raise your morale: hardworking council teams don’t get the recognition they deserve and what better confirmation that you and your team are delivering for your community than by winning an LGC Award?
- Promote innovation: disseminate new ideas and demonstrate the impact they have on your communities
Don't miss your chance to win an LGC Award. Entries are now open and you have until Friday 13 December 2024 to submit a winning application.
Please note that live judging for the shortlist takes place between 27 March - 04 April 2025 at our London offices:
emap Publishing
Harmsworth House
13-15 Bouverie Street
London
EC4Y 8DP
Categories
- These awards primarily cover achievement and performance in the calendar year 2024, and entries should have a particular focus on that period. However, judges will take into account work that began before that period, as well as achievement and performance since that period.
- You only have to submit a single statement explaining why you should win (up to 1,000 words).
- Please also provide a 100-word summary of your entry. Please use this as an opportunity to make a pitch to our judges about what makes your work innovative and bold. Please note the summary of your entry will be published by LGC.
- Please use the questions outlined in the criteria as a guide and break up your submission accordingly. Some may be more applicable than others for your entry.
- Please specify which private sector partners you do work with (if any).
- While you have the option of providing supporting material, we urge you to do this sparingly, and only if you feel further evidence is required to back-up your entry. The critical information should however be included in the main part of your entry.
Stage one of the judging process involves judges shortlisting entries based solely on the information
provided here, so please make sure this entry includes as much evidence as possible.
In stage two of judging, shortlisted entrants will present their entries to the panel of high profile judges for deliberation.
This will take place from 27 March - 04 April 2025 in-person at our London offices:
emap Publishing
Harmsworth House
13 – 15 Bouverie Street
London EC4Y 8DP
Campaign of the Year
This award is open to a single council or where appropriate a council-owned company or a partnership of councils, including a combined authority. Private sector partners can enter on a council’s behalf, with the permission of the council itself.
The communications function is more integral to what councils do than ever. There is increasing need to influence behaviour in relation to, for example, recycling, transport, looking out for older neighbours, or reinforcing public health messaging. And there is the importance of building trust in the difficult decisions councils have to take in these challenging times.
Campaigns can make a significant contribution to achieving these objectives, and this award is designed to showcase councils’ expertise in this area.
This category will be judged in-person in our London offices on Thursday 27 March 2025.
Should you be successfully shortlisted please be aware you are required to present in-person on this day. All shortlisted entrants will be allocated 25 minutes with the judges for presentation and Q&A. Full guidance will be distributed after the shortlist announcement.
Children’s Services
This award is open to a single council or where appropriate a council-owned company or a partnership of councils, including a combined authority. Private sector partners can enter on a council’s behalf, with the permission of the council itself.
Children’s services have operated under huge pressure for a number of years now, but the current cost of living crisis is increasing demand even further. Ensuring the best outcomes for vulnerable children in the face of budget cuts and major staffing shortages amid growing understanding of risks outside the home, such as county lines and child sexual exploitation, is extremely challenging. This award is intended to recognise the success of those councils that adopt a genuinely strategic approach to this vital service area to deliver improvements for children and young people despite this difficult environment.
Entries can focus either on a specific aspect of the council’s work on children’s services or the entirety of its work on children’s services.
This category will be judged in-person in our London offices on Thursday 27 March 2025.
Should you be successfully shortlisted please be aware you are required to present in-person on this day. All shortlisted entrants will be allocated 25 minutes with the judges for presentation and Q&A. Full guidance will be distributed after the shortlist announcement.
Community Involvement
This award is open to a single council or where appropriate a council-owned company or a partnership of councils, including a combined authority. Private sector partners can enter on a council’s behalf, with the permission of the council itself.
Many councils are seeking to establish a new relationship with local people and local communities. Community involvement and engagement is increasingly important as a way of shaping council thinking, co-designing services and responding to continuing resource pressures. It may also involve direct community involvement in service delivery. This award is intended to showcase the whole range of community involvement.
This category will be judged in-person in our London offices on Thursday 27 March 2025.
Should you be successfully shortlisted please be aware you are required to present in-person on this day. All shortlisted entrants will be allocated 25 minutes with the judges for presentation and Q&A. Full guidance will be distributed after the shortlist announcement.
Council of the Year
LGC’s Council of the Year will be the council which has the most learning and inspiration to offer the rest of local government. The winner should demonstrate underlying sustained strong performance, innovation and excellent leadership across the broad spectrum of its work.
Judges will be asked to disregard any advantages a council has based on its size or location, and they will not award Council of the Year on the basis of the scale of the challenges a council has faced. The winner will be chosen on the basis of the delivery of strong outcomes, the quality of the council’s community leadership, and the evidence that the council is doing the best for its area, all in response to the specific challenge the council has faced in all areas of its work.
Judges will also look for qualities including resilience, compassion, inclusion and adaptability, as well as the quality of the council’s cooperation with partners.
This award is open to a council or, in exceptional circumstances, a partnership of councils – for instance when two councils share the same officer leadership.
Judging for this award takes place in May 2025.
Judging panels visit every single shortlisted council. Entrants organise this visit by judges on a specified date. Judges therefore make their judgement based on a combination of the written entry, statistics, and the experience of the visit, the evidence presented, etc. The visit is a cruicial and mandatory part of the entry for this award. Should you be successful in being shortlisted for this award, the LGC team will be in touch to walk you through the judging process and provide support.
Digital Impact
This award is open to a single council or where appropriate a council-owned company or a partnership of councils, including a combined authority. Private sector partners can enter on a council’s behalf, with the permission of the council itself.
Technology has the potential to bring about a far more efficient use of resources but also the potential to land public sector procurers with huge bills for projects that do not meet their goals. This award will go to the council that can best show how its use of digital technology is significantly improving outcomes for its residents and/or place. This could be in a specific service area or organisation wide.
Among the attributes you may seek to showcase in your entry are the benefits of data sharing; how your organisation is ensuring it supports people before they fall into crisis; and how ground-breaking collaboration between local partners has had a significant impact on your local population.
This award is designed to recognise vision and farsightedness but may also be suitable for councils which have used their existing digital technology approach in a new or innovative way.
This category will be judged online via Microsoft Teams in virtual presentations to judges, in-keeping with the theme of the category, on Friday 04 April 2025.
Should you be successfully shortlisted please be aware you are required to present on this day via Microsoft Teams. All shortlisted entrants will be allocated 25 minutes with the judges for presentation and Q&A. Full guidance will be distributed after the shortlist announcement.
Diversity and Inclusion
This award is open to a single council or where appropriate a council-owned company or a partnership of councils, including a combined authority. Private sector partners can enter on a council’s behalf, with the permission of the council itself.
This award recognises strong performance by a council, with a primary focus on the relevant timescale, in developing a diverse and inclusive culture that permeates the council itself and its workforce and/or the broader local area.
The entry could demonstrate the council’s attempts to foster a more diverse and inclusive workplace for all employees, and members - promoting and progressing diversity and inclusion values from within - and describe how this is helping to attract and retain talent. It could include internal council initiatives, customer/service user-facing work, or work to promote a wide range of careers on the council to appeal to different people.
The entry could alternatively focus more on the broader local area, highlighting initiatives driven by the council to foster diversity and help facilitate inclusion across the local community. It could include how the council has worked with other business and other local organisations to improve opportunity, participation and engagement.
This category will be judged in-person in our London offices on Friday 28 March 2025.
Should you be successfully shortlisted please be aware you are required to present in-person on this day. All shortlisted entrants will be allocated 25 minutes with the judges for presentation and Q&A. Full guidance will be distributed after the shortlist announcement.
Economic Development
This award is open to a single council or where appropriate a council-owned company or a partnership of councils, including a combined authority. Private sector partners can enter on a council’s behalf, with the permission of the council itself.
Councils have a major role in supporting their local economy, both in their own right and as partners alongside other local bodies, including business and (in some cases) as members of combined authorities.
This award is intended to highlight the key role that local authorities play in supporting their local economy.
It is open to projects that secure economic growth locally and/or improve economic outcomes for residents, for example through innovative approaches to skills and worklessness.
The support in question could include, but is not limited to, advice services, infrastructure, regulatory work, their role as employers and purchasers of services.
This category will be judged in-person in our London offices on Friday 28 March 2025.
Should you be successfully shortlisted please be aware you are required to present in-person on this day. All shortlisted entrants will be allocated 25 minutes with the judges for presentation and Q&A. Full guidance will be distributed after the shortlist announcement.
Environmental Services
This award is open to a single council or where appropriate a council-owned company or a partnership of councils, including a combined authority. Private sector partners can enter on a council’s behalf, with the permission of the council itself.
This award is intended to mark innovation and excellence in any aspect of a council’s work in environmental services, including sustainability, energy, recycling, refuse collection and street cleaning.
Entries will be judged on the innovation of their submissions and the extent to which it is demonstrated the council’s work has improved the environment in their area and/or the efficiency of service delivery.
This category will be judged online via Microsoft Teams in virtual presentations to judges, in-keeping with the theme of the category, on Friday 04 April 2025.
Should you be successfully shortlisted please be aware you are required to present on this day via Microsoft Teams. All shortlisted entrants will be allocated 25 minutes with the judges for presentation and Q&A. Full guidance will be distributed after the shortlist announcement.
Future Places
This award is open to a single council or where appropriate a council-owned company or a partnership of councils, including a combined authority. Private sector partners can enter on a council’s behalf, with the permission of the council itself.
This award is for councils that have stimulated and supported the development of bold new solutions and services in the market through challenge-led commissioning or procurement. Public procurement has a reputation for being a blocker to innovation, but more and more councils are finding it a powerful tool to deliver strategic objectives including making the area they serve more prosperous, ‘liveable’ and resilient in the face of likely social, economic, demographic, political or environmental trends.
The Future Places Award recognises councils which are using their spending power to engage creatively with innovative suppliers to accelerate decarbonisation and climate resilience, enable greater inclusion, and harness digital technologies.
This category will be judged in-person in our London offices on Friday 28 March 2025.
Should you be successfully shortlisted please be aware you are required to present in-person on this day. All shortlisted entrants will be allocated 25 minutes with the judges for presentation and Q&A. Full guidance will be distributed after the shortlist announcement.
Health and Social Care
This award is open to a single council or where appropriate a council-owned company or a partnership of councils, including a combined authority. Private sector partners can enter on a council’s behalf, with the permission of the council itself.
With financial challenges and a growing population of older people and people with disabilities adult social care continues to be under severe pressure. This award recognises how councils have worked to improve or maintain services amid these pressures.
It seeks to recognise innovative projects likely to facilitate integration between health and social care, boost personalisation, and improve collaboration between the public, private and voluntary sectors to improve delivery. This award is intended to recognise and promote best practice in this critically important area.
This category will be judged in-person in our London offices on Monday 31 March 2025.
Should you be successfully shortlisted please be aware you are required to present in-person on this day. All shortlisted entrants will be allocated 25 minutes with the judges for presentation and Q&A. Full guidance will be distributed after the shortlist announcement.
Housing
This award is open to a single council or where appropriate a council-owned company or a partnership of councils, including a combined authority. Private sector partners can enter on a council’s behalf, with the permission of the council itself.
Many parts of the country are facing major housing problems. While a soaring market has left property beyond the reach of many potential buyers, there is a major undersupply of rented accommodation, and often housing can be of a poor quality. More and more households are stuck in temporary accommodation while the need to find homes for refugees has added to pressure on limited supply.
This award is for the local authorities that have done most to devise imaginative solutions to ease such problems, be they in social housing, the private rental sector, in accelerated house building or in enabling home ownership, or in tackling homelessness.
This category will be judged in-person in our London offices on Monday 31 March 2025.
Should you be successfully shortlisted please be aware you are required to present in-person on this day. All shortlisted entrants will be allocated 25 minutes with the judges for presentation and Q&A. Full guidance will be distributed after the shortlist announcement.
Innovation
This award is open to a single council or where appropriate a council-owned company or a partnership of councils, including a combined authority. Private sector partners can enter on a council’s behalf, with the permission of the council itself.
Councils have a long track record of innovation, but the current combination of rising demand and inflationary pressures means it is more important than ever.
This award is intended to celebrate councils which have used innovation to re-think services in order to achieve better outcomes for citizens and communities either at less cost, or with improved experience. The project should centre on the relevant timescale.
This category will be judged in-person in our London offices on Monday 31 March 2025.
Should you be successfully shortlisted please be aware you are required to present in-person on this day. All shortlisted entrants will be allocated 25 minutes with the judges for presentation and Q&A. Full guidance will be distributed after the shortlist announcement.
Large Team of the Year
This award is open to a single council or where appropriate a council-owned company or a partnership of councils, including a combined authority. Private sector partners can enter on a council’s behalf, with the permission of the council itself.
The team in question should have more than 20 members.
Teams are critically important to the effective working of local government, whether the team is a management team, a frontline service team or a central services team. This award is intended to showcase the ingredients that make council teams effective and contribute to local democracy, local service delivery and the smooth operation of the organisation. Entries may focus on the team’s innovation, resilience, inclusivity and, of course, results.
This category will be judged in-person in our London offices on Tuesday 01 April 2025.
Should you be successfully shortlisted please be aware you are required to present in-person on this day. All shortlisted entrants will be allocated 25 minutes with the judges for presentation and Q&A. Full guidance will be distributed after the shortlist announcement.
Medium Team of the Year
This award is open to a single council or where appropriate a council-owned company or a partnership of councils, including a combined authority. Private sector partners can enter on a council’s behalf, with the permission of the council itself.
The team in question should have between 11 and 20 members.
Teams are critically important to the effective working of local government, whether the team is a management team, a frontline service team or a central services team. This award is intended to showcase the ingredients that make council teams effective and contribute to areas such as local democracy, local service delivery and the smooth operation of the organisation. Entries may focus on the team’s innovation, resilience, inclusivity and, of course, results.
This category will be judged in-person in our London offices on Tuesday 01 April 2025.
Should you be successfully shortlisted please be aware you are required to present in-person on this day. All shortlisted entrants will be allocated 25 minutes with the judges for presentation and Q&A. Full guidance will be distributed after the shortlist announcement.
Most Improved council
This award is open to a single council or in exceptional circumstances, such as where two or more councils share a management, a partnership of councils.
After more than a decade of funding restraint, times have never been harder for local government. Even well-run councils must constantly look to improve and innovate to ensure they are making the most of limited funding to deliver high quality services and provide active place leadership. However, years of restructuring and efficiencies have left some more junior staff wary of some so-called transformation programmes.
This award seeks to recognise those local authority senior management teams that have successfully led major organisational change or reform to deliver genuine improvement, wherever they are starting from. This could be a successful change programme that has improved the culture, efficiency or reputation of the organisation. Entries should be able to demonstrate tangible outcomes along with buy in from the workforce and evidence the change has become embedded in the organisation.
This category will be judged in-person in our London offices on Tuesday 01 April 2025.
Should you be successfully shortlisted please be aware you are required to present in-person on this day. All shortlisted entrants will be allocated 25 minutes with the judges for presentation and Q&A. Full guidance will be distributed after the shortlist announcement.
Net Zero
This award is open to a single council or where appropriate a council-owned company or a partnership of councils, including a combined authority. Private sector partners can enter on a council’s behalf, with the permission of the council itself.
Councils are uniquely placed to effect change in response to the climate crisis and many are leading the way on the road to net zero. This award is intended to mark excellence in any aspect of a council’s work in addressing the carbon footprint of the council, its services and its broader local area.
Entries may include work to capture climate benefits from changed behaviours or work with local businesses and communities to address the climate crisis and secure environmental improvements. Entries will be judged on the innovation of their submissions, the extent to which it has delivered measurable change, the quality of evidence of support from local communities, and the ability for other councils to replicate the work.
This category will be judged online via Microsoft Teams in virtual presentations to judges, in-keeping with the theme of the category, on Friday 04 April 2025.
Should you be successfully shortlisted please be aware you are required to present on this day via Microsoft Teams. All shortlisted entrants will be allocated 25 minutes with the judges for presentation and Q&A. Full guidance will be distributed after the shortlist announcement.
Outstanding Individual Contribution
This award aims to recognise an exceptional individual in local government who embodies the qualities of resilience, compassion, flexibility, innovation and creativity to cope with adversity. The recipient may have developed innovative solutions to enable their council and its partners to manage a challenging situation whether as a result of national or local issues.
Anyone working in local government at any level is eligible to apply. This is not a lifetime achievement award – it is a reflection of the individual’s contribution predominantly during the period in question.
The individual needs to still be working in local government at the time of the announcement of the Awards shortlist and have no plans or expectation to not be working in local government at the time of the Awards ceremony.
We welcome entries from candidates themselves or nominations from those who wish to highlight an individual they believe merits this recognition.
This category will be judged in-person in our London offices on Wednesday 02 April 2025.
Should you be successfully shortlisted please be aware you are required to present in-person on this day. All shortlisted entrants will be allocated 25 minutes with the judges for presentation and Q&A. Full guidance will be distributed after the shortlist announcement.
Public Health
This award is open to a single council or where appropriate a council-owned company or a partnership of councils, including a combined authority. Private sector partners can enter on a council’s behalf, with the permission of the council itself.
Local government’s role in public health presents a major opportunity for councils and their partners to protect and improve the health and wellbeing of their local communities. The impact of social determinants of health on health inequalities was tragically highlighted during the pandemic but the development of integrated care systems with their stated focus on population health could present an opportunity for more wide ranging action.
Entries are likely to focus on the development of evidence-based solutions to reduce health inequalities, the impact of the work in question such as better health and wellbeing, and (potentially) how the totality of the council’s work is helping to achieve the objectives in question.
This award is intended to recognise the councils that are making the most of their role in public health.
This category will be judged in-person in our London offices on Wednesday 02 April 2025.
Should you be successfully shortlisted please be aware you are required to present in-person on this day. All shortlisted entrants will be allocated 25 minutes with the judges for presentation and Q&A. Full guidance will be distributed after the shortlist announcement.
Public/Private Partnership
This award is open to any partnership featuring one or more councils and alongside one or more private or voluntary sector partners. It could potentially additionally include a partner from another part of the public sector, although it is the public/private or public/voluntary partnership which is the key element.
Councils no longer work in isolation. Increasingly they work with other councils, public sector bodies, private firms or voluntary sector organisations to devise more seamless, more efficient and integrated services.
This award is intended to showcase the whole range of partnership working. Entries should demonstrate that the partnership has brought about service improvements and/or improved efficiency.
This category will be judged in-person in our London offices on Thursday 03 April 2025.
Should you be successfully shortlisted please be aware you are required to present in-person on this day. All shortlisted entrants will be allocated 25 minutes with the judges for presentation and Q&A. Full guidance will be distributed after the shortlist announcement.
Public/Public Partnership
This award is open to any partnership featuring two or more public sector bodies, at least one of which is a council. Eligible partners can be from any part of the public sector, including NHS bodies, police, central government or agencies, as well as other councils.
Councils no longer work in isolation. Increasingly they work with other councils, public sector bodies, private firms or voluntary sector organisations to devise more seamless, more efficient and integrated services.
This award is intended to showcase the whole range of partnership working. Entries should demonstrate that the partnership has brought about service improvements and/or improved efficiency, or brought about the best outcome possible.
This category will be judged in-person in our London offices on Thursday 03 April 2025.
Should you be successfully shortlisted please be aware you are required to present in-person on this day. All shortlisted entrants will be allocated 25 minutes with the judges for presentation and Q&A. Full guidance will be distributed after the shortlist announcement.
Rising Star
The effectiveness of councils depends to a significant extent on the quality of their political and managerial leadership. Tomorrow’s chief executives and directors are almost certainly working in councils today in both service areas and corporate roles. The part they are playing now in helping councils to respond to continued budget pressures, developing new relationships with communities and tackling issues such as the housing need, the ageing population and economic growth, will help to prepare them for the challenges of tomorrow.
Local government needs to get better at spotting and developing the managerial leaders of tomorrow. This award is designed to help the sector to do just that. It is intended to highlight local government’s exceptional young officers and professionals who are currently not in corporate management team roles. They are likely to be heads of service or team leaders. They are making change happen, taking difficult decisions and asking important questions – while at the same time preparing to deliver excellent local government in the future.
The award recognises sustained contribution from an exceptional individual who is expected to continue to progress within local government.
The individual needs to still be working in local government at the time of the announcement of the Awards shortlist and have no plans or expectation to not be working in local government at the time of the Awards ceremony. Entrants for this award can nominate themselves or be nominated by others.
This category will be judged in-person in our London offices on Wednesday 02 April 2025.
Should you be successfully shortlisted please be aware you are required to present in-person on this day. All shortlisted entrants will be allocated 25 minutes with the judges for presentation and Q&A. Full guidance will be distributed after the shortlist announcement.
Small Team of the Year
This award is open to a single council or where appropriate a council-owned company or a partnership of councils, including a combined authority. Private sector partners can enter on a council’s behalf, with the permission of the council itself.
The team in question should have 10 or fewer members.
Teams are critically important to the effective working of local government, whether the team is a management team, a frontline service team or a central services team. This award is intended to showcase the ingredients that make council teams effective and contribute to areas such as local democracy, local service delivery and the smooth operation of the organisation. Entries may focus on the team’s innovation, resilience, inclusivity and, of course, results.
This category will be judged in-person in our London offices on Thursday 03 April 2025.
Should you be successfully shortlisted please be aware you are required to present in-person on this day. All shortlisted entrants will be allocated 25 minutes with the judges for presentation and Q&A. Full guidance will be distributed after the shortlist announcement.