News

Directors alarmed at need for staff scrutiny of entertainment licences

Posted: 14 October 2004 | Subscribe Online


Thousands of licensing applications for public venues such as pubs and restaurants will have to be looked at by social services staff from next February, directors have warned.

Guidance with the Licensing Act 2003 requires an area child protection committee or a social services department to look at licence applications or changes to existing ones to assess whether children will be protected at the premises in question.

Peter Gilroy, director of social services at Kent Council, said he found it "very difficult to accept that this should fall under social services" as, while the act referred to the protection of children from harm, this was a "general duty not specific to child protection issues".
Article continues below the advertisement



The Association of Directors of Social Services is planning to make representations to the government about the additional workload the new laws represent.

Gilroy said that Kent ACPC would be unable to scrutinise all applications as the local licensing steering group estimated there would be 56,000 in his council's area during the six months from February.

"As the Kent child protection committee concentrates on core business within existing time constraints, scrutinising licensing applications is an impossibility for us in terms of both time and resources," he said.

Gilroy added that his local licensing authorities said the fees raised from charging for applications would barely cover the cost of their administration and would not be used to fund the ACPC or social services departments to scrutinise applications.
Article continues below the advertisement



A spokesperson for the Department for Culture, Media and Sport said that applications for premises that were just converting their licences to bring them in line with the act would not need to be scrutinised.

He said that although social services and ACPCs did not have to put forward an opinion on each application, they would still need to look at each one in order to decide whether to do so or not.

The licensing regime takes full effect from November 2005 although councils can begin processing applications from February.


Spread the word:   bookmark it! diggit! reddit!



Products and Services
  • RSS Feeds
  • Conferences
  • Jobs By Email
  • News
  • Blogss
  • Videos
  • Magazine Subscriptions
  • Podcasts