##  [Local government reorganisation](/what-we-do/local-government-reorganisation) 

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    ![graphic of uk map with buildings and networks iconography](/sites/default/files/2025-10/lgr-series-hero.png)  

 

 

 

 



 



#  Local government reorganisation 

 

  



  Local government reorganisation creates an immediate digital challenge. Councils that are merging need to present a coherent face to residents from day one of the new authority, often while legacy systems are still running and staff are adjusting to new structures. The window to get this right is narrow, and the consequences of getting it wrong — residents unable to find services, broken links, duplicated or contradictory content — fall on the people councils exist to serve.We have been through this with councils in Cumbria. We know what the pressure looks like from the inside.

  

  



  **What LGR means for your website**

When two or more councils become one, the website question is more complex than it first appears. It is not just a matter of picking one site and redirecting the others. There are decisions to make about:

- Which content comes across and which is retired
- How to handle URLs so existing links do not break
- How staff from different predecessor authorities access and manage the new CMS
- Whether microsites for specific services need to be consolidated or maintained separately
- How to communicate clearly with residents about which authority is now responsible for what

These decisions need to be made quickly, with limited room for error, often against a statutory deadline that does not move.

  

  



  **How LocalGov Drupal helps**

LocalGov Drupal is particularly well suited to LGR work. Because it is the same platform across an increasing number of councils, migrating content from one LocalGov Drupal installation to another is significantly more straightforward than migrating from proprietary systems. Shared code means new functionality built for one authority is available to others. And the community of councils and suppliers using the platform means there is real-world experience of exactly this kind of transition to draw on.

Where predecessor councils are on legacy platforms — as was the case in Cumbria — we use content migration tooling that automates much of the transfer process, saving months of manual work and reducing the risk of content being lost or duplicated.

  

  



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Our LGR experience

 

 

 

  ![](/sites/default/files/2024-02/CW%26F-casestudy-thumbnail.png)

 [When seven council websites needed merged into two](/case-study/when-seven-council-websites-needed-merged-two)

 

 

 



 

  



  **How we work on LGR projects**

LGR projects are not standard website builds. They have fixed deadlines, political visibility, and a level of organisational complexity that requires careful coordination across teams who may not yet have established ways of working together.

Our approach draws on [strategy and consultancy](/services/strategy-consultancy) to map the content and structure decisions early, [content design](/services/content-design) to ensure the new site serves residents clearly through the transition, and [technical delivery](/services/technical-delivery) to execute the migration accurately and on time.

We are used to working as part of multi-disciplinary teams alongside your internal web officers, communications teams, and other suppliers. We get up to speed quickly and work to your timeline, not ours.

  

  



  **The broader context**

The English Devolution White Paper, published in December 2024, confirmed that local government reorganisation will accelerate significantly across England. Councils that have not yet begun planning their digital transition need to do so now — the timelines involved in a well-executed migration are longer than most people expect.

We have written a series of articles on the digital implications of LGR and devolution that may be useful starting points.

  

  



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LGR series

 

 

 

  [ ![Iconography of UK, buildings and network nodes](/sites/default/files/2025-10/lgr-series-teaser.png) 

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Opinion

 

 

 

 02 October 2025

 Local Government Devolution: Efficiency Through Technology

 ](/insight/local-government-devolution-efficiency-through-technology) 

 

 [ ![network of systems on blue background with UK outline](/sites/default/files/2025-10/lgr2-teaser.png) 

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Opinion

 

 

 

 10 October 2025

 Exploring digital integration for new strategic authorities and unitary councils

 ](/insight/exploring-digital-integration-new-strategic-authorities-and-unitary-councils) 

 

 [ ![Image of people connected to authority structures](/sites/default/files/2026-01/authority-structures-thumbnail.png) 

Tags

Opinion

 

 

 

 29 January 2026

 Supporting the statutory Devolution Framework through digital clarity

 ](/insight/supporting-statutory-devolution-framework-through-digital-clarity) 

 

 



 

  



  [   ![people at desk with laptops](/sites/default/files/styles/rohallion_420x380/public/2022-08/scott-graham-5fNmWej4tAA-unsplash.jpg?itok=uh1IM3sB)  

     

 

 

 Strategy &amp; consultancy

 Planning and scoping the digital decisions that need to be made before and during reorganisation 

 ](/services/strategy-consultancy) 



 [   ![post it notes on a glass wall](/sites/default/files/styles/rohallion_420x380/public/2022-08/irfan-simsar-wxWulfjN-G0-unsplash.jpg?itok=_A_5oyAn)  

     

 

 

 Content design

 Structuring and migrating content across predecessor authority websites 

 ](/services/content-design) 



 [   ![code on screen](/sites/default/files/styles/rohallion_420x380/public/2022-08/ilya-pavlov-OqtafYT5kTw-unsplash.jpg?itok=WNsDF1R3)  

     

 

 

 Technical delivery

 Building and migrating to LocalGov Drupal under tight LGR deadlines 

 ](/services/technical-delivery)