Heath (electoral ward)


Heath is the name of an electoral ward in the north of the city of Cardiff, Wales, which covers its namesake community, Heath. The ward elects three county councillors to the County Council of the City and County of Cardiff.

Description and history

The Heath ward boundaries are coterminous with the community. It is bordered to the north by Ty-wern Road and the Cardiff City Line, to the east by the Cardiff to Caerphilly railway line, to the south by the Western by-pass and to the west by the A470 road. The Heath ward includes the University Hospital of Wales and the large adjacent area of greenery, Heath Park.
According to the 2011 census the population of the Heath ward was 12,629.
Since the creation of the Cardiff unitary authority in 1995, Heath has elected councillors from the Labour Party, Liberal Democrats, Conservatives and, since 2012, the Heath and Birchgrove Independents.
The ward was created following The City of Cardiff Order 1982, coming into effect with the city council elections in 1983.

Cardiff Council elections

Liberal Democrat councillor, Fenella Bowden, left her party in November 2010 to sit on the Council as an Independent councillor. At the subsequent 2012 and 2017 elections the ward elected Bowden standing as a Heath and Birchgrove Independent, Lyn Hudson for the Conservatives and Graham Hinchey for the Labour Party.
* = sitting councillor prior to the election
Following the May 2004 elections all three councillors were Liberal Democrat, with Graham Hinchey losing his seat. Hinchey had previously been a Labour councillor for the ward since 1995. After the 1995 elections there were two Labour councillors and one Liberal Democrat. After the 1999 elections there were two Liberal Democrats and one Labour councillor.

Cardiff City Council elections

The Heath ward was created in 1982. Prior to 1995 Heath was an electoral ward to Cardiff City Council. The ward elected three city councillors. All three city councillors were from the Conservative Party, from the 1983 council elections until the creation of the new Cardiff unitary authority.
Councillors included Ron Watkiss, Conservative leader of the council from 1983.