East Midlands
East Midlands | |
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Admin HQ | Nottingham |
Area - Total | 4th in England 15,627 km² |
Population - Total (2001) - Density | 8th in England 4,172,179 267/km² |
NUTS 1: | UKF |
The East Midlands is one of the regions of England and consists of most of the eastern half of the tradional region of the Midlands. Its main cities are Derby, Leicester and Nottingham.
Other towns in the region include Bolsover, Boston, Chesterfield, Corby, Daventry, Kettering, Hinckley, Lincoln, Long Eaton, Loughborough, Lutterworth, Oakham, Mansfield, Matlock, Market Harborough, Melton Mowbray, Newark, Northampton, Rushden, Sutton-in-Ashfield, Uppingham, Wellingborough and Worksop.
It is divided into the following local government areas:
The East Midlands is also a six-member constituency for the European Parliament. Its MEPs are
- Nicholas Clegg (Lib Dem)
- Christopher Heaton-Harris (Conservative Party)
- Roger Helmer (Conservative)
- Bill Newton Dunn (Lib Dem)
- Mel Read (Labour)
- Phillip Whitehead (Labour)
EMDA, the East Midlands Development Agency, holds funds from central government to enable regeneration.
There is an East Midlands Airport between the three main cities, and the region is served by Midland Mainline high-speed trains to London. The M1 motorway also serves the three.
Local media includes:
- The East Midlands region of BBC Television, based in Nottingham which produces several regional television programs, including the news program East Midlands Today. This excludes Northamptonshire.
- Midlands Asian Television, based in Leicester, which caters to the areas large South Asian population.
- BBC Radios Derby, Leicester, Lincolnshire, Northampton and Nottingham. Radio Leicester was the first local radio station in the United Kingdom.
- Many commercial radio stations: Leicester Sound, Trent FM (Nottingham/Derby), and Lincs FM
A looser definition of the East Midlands would include the City of Peterborough and North Lincolnshire and North East Lincolnshire.