It is hoped a year-long pilot devolving Kinross-shire decisions to a local committee will launch later this year.
Perth and Kinross councillors made an in-principle agreement to the radical proposal at a budget meeting in March.
Since then Kinross-shire councillors have worked with council officers to devise a scheme of administration which will go before the full council on October 6.
The scheme of administration sets out how the Kinross-shire Local Committee will operate and what decisions it will and will not make.
The committee would comprise all four Kinross-shire councillors - who will have voting rights - and a representative from each of the six community councils - who will not have voting rights.
The six Kinross-shire community councils are Cleish and Blairadam, Fossoway and District, Glenfarg, Kinross, Milnathort and Portmoak.
Historically Kinross-shire formed a joint county council with Perthshire back in 1929. In 1975 the burgh of Kinross amalgamated with other local burghs to form Perth and Kinross District Council - within Tayside Region - before its modern-day successor Perth and Kinross Council was created in 1996.
The piloted scheme proposes to grant the local committee the power to make decisions on economic development, tourism, community transport, road safety, footpaths and infrastructure projects in Kinross-shire.
The committee would not determine quasi-judicial matters such as planning and licensing applications.
The motion going before Perth and Kinross Council on Wednesday proposes to have Conservative Kinross-shire councillor Mike Barnacle as convener and Conservative Kinross-shire councillor Callum Purves as vice-convener.
Cllr Purves told the Perthshire Advertiser : “We are needing the support of all the council but we would hope to have the first meeting before the end of the year.
“It will give people in Kinross-shire more say on bread and butter issues.”