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I propose merging back into the original categories. The convention has been for area categories to cover districts rather than settlements. These categories have usually just used the district names without descriptors (e.g. Royal Borough of , District of, Borough of, London Borough of etc.). To be clear they cover a district/borough (and not a settlement) a line of text is usually added to the category page. Any objections/comments on this merge? MRSC • Talk13:47, 24 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I can only comment on the St.Helens article along with the Metropolitan Borough of St.Helens article. The 'Metropolitan Borough of St.Helens' contains a number of different townships and settlements, several of which have articles of their own on Wikipedia. St.Helens is one of these places and gives it's name to the 'borough'. This is the only connection between these places and St.Helens. They are in the same borough. I am of the opinion that the 'Borough' articles be scrapped giving to each individual place/town/township having it's own article, each containing one line of text stating that place's membership of a particular 'Borough'. To merge the two would create problems, as is happening in the Wigan Matropolitan Borough article. All surrounding places will be regarded as being 'in' the place which gives it's name to the borough and that will not be factual. 80.192.242.18719:37, 24 December 2006 (UTC)JemmyH.[reply]
We can't delete the Met Borough articles. They are verifiable and notable things and in place for all over the UK. That's not to say that the sub towns, villages, suburbs etc can't have their own article, but without an explanation of the council, it would not have any coherence. There certainly is not a proposal to merge them together. Anyhow, here the issue is the name of the Categories. We have used the short form all over the UK, as exampled above, but here in Merseyside, they are being renamed to the long form. So, to use your example, St Helens (the town) sits in the Category of St Helens which covers the whole of the Met Borough. MRSC has given some good examples above. Regan12319:52, 24 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Any cat should have the same name as the article. The ones you site are not Metropolitan boroughs. These have a different status to the ones you are talking about. There existance is not well known. There is confusion there are several "people from x" were x is part of the borough of st helens then there is the people from st helens cat which contains anyone from the borough that is not in the other cat. In order to make a distinction and make the heirachy meaningful we need a cat for the borough and one for the town. This applies potentially to buildings from, companies in etc. It therefore makes sense to use the full formal name for these recently created boroughs.--Idris Ginger Beer20:55, 24 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Take a vote somewhere if you want to establish a hierachy and standard. There was one that worked happily until MRSC messed about with it to suit his idea of non existant met boroughs in which he cannot find a hierachy.--Idris Ginger Beer23:44, 24 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Westminster and Hackney are exactly the same as the metropolitan boroughs. In both cases there are smaller settlements and much-larger districts which share a name. In each case, and in the metropolitan boroughs, the districts are diffentiated from each other only by one of several possible status values: City, London borough, Metropolitan borough, etc. MRSC • Talk22:29, 24 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I noticed that we have some sub cats like Category:Birkenhead which are for the towns. If we are keeping these (and I thought local authority was the level we set as the maximum with the short form), should these remain? If we do, then do we need to manually add the People from cats? Regan12314:48, 27 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I don't have anything against sub cats by settlement in principle, but they need to be viable in terms of size (enough articles) and have clear reliable boundaries (which are often hard to get below local government districts). I think these sub-cats should probably go back into the metropolitan boroughs. None are so large as to require further splitting and there are already some sub-cats by feature in the Merseyside scheme. These seem to be the preferred method of sub category elsewhere. MRSC • Talk14:58, 27 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]