Council Tax in Lancashire is collected by the district and borough councils, but the revenue is shared between several authorities, with Lancashire County Council taking the largest share to fund services such as social care, education and highways. Other portions go to the district council for local services, the Police and Crime Commissioner, the Fire Authority, and, where applicable, parish councils. Each year, councils with social care responsibilities can increase council tax by up to 4.99% (including up to 2% for the Adult Social Care precept) without a referendum.
We support children and families where there are concerns about safety, wellbeing or care, helping to protect vulnerable children and young people. Our teams assess risk, provide support, and take action where needed to keep children safe and help families thrive.
Services include:
Early Help Service brings together several different types of support services for children, young people, and families, such as family hubs, groups for children, services for parents and babies, youth groups for teenagers, parenting education and intensive family support programmes.
We help families with children from birth up to 19 years old (or 25 for those with special educational needs and disabilities) and our aim is to support every child, young person, and family who needs help should be safe, healthy, and thrive.
Early Help in Lancashire is here to support children, young people, and families as soon as life starts to feel challenging. We step in early with practical, personalised help - before problems grow bigger. Working together, we focus on what’s going well, listen to everyone’s voice, and build strong, positive relationships. Support can be one-to-one or in groups, and we use a simple Early Help Assessment to understand personal needs and create a plan that works. Our goal is to help families feel stronger, prevent issues from escalating, and build lasting connections in the community - so families feel supported at the right time.
We manage Lancashire’s roads, bridges, public transport and flood risk, keeping people safe and connected. Our teams maintain infrastructure and deliver major capital projects across the county.
Services include:
We are a 'Waste Disposal Authority' which means that one of our main responsibilities is to deal with all of the waste collected by Lancashire's waste collection authorities (district councils). We also have a statutory obligation to provide recycling centres for household waste.
To deliver our service we have many contracts for the processing, treatment, composting or disposal of a wide range of waste types. We work closely with the council's waste company, Lancashire Renewables, who run our two waste recovery parks where we convert general rubbish into refuse derived fuels, and we are constantly looking to develop new markets and opportunities for recycling all of the materials collected at the doorstep.
We operate 16 recycling centres across Lancashire, two waste transfer stations and three waste reuse shops as well as actively promoting the general reuse and recycling of Lancashire's rubbish.
Enabling and Business Functions
The Resources directorate provides the professional, strategic and operational support that enables the council to deliver services effectively and responsibly. Our services help shape the council’s future, manage its finances and assets, and ensure strong governance and innovation.
Services include: