Community Care logo
Loading

Email newsletter ad

You are in:   News

Departments avoid licensing mountain Social services departments have avoided becoming swamped with licensing applications by interpreting government guidance flexibly, it emerged this week as the deadline for applications loomed.

Thursday 29 September 2005 00:00

Departments avoid licensing mountain Social services departments have avoided becoming swamped with licensing applications by interpreting government guidance flexibly, it emerged this week as the deadline for applications loomed.

Guidance as part of the Licensing Act 2003, which comes into force in November, requires an area child protection committee or a social services department to look at all new licence applications or applications for variations to existing licences to assess whether children will be adequately protected from harm at the premises in question.

Many councils have set the deadline for applications at the end of September, and some police forces are working with social services to filter out applications that present no risk to children.

John Beer, executive director of health and social care at Southampton Council, said some police forces were doing "prima facie" checks and only passing on details of premises that raised concerns.

He questioned whether the guidance's requirement represented a good use of public money and said he had received no extra funding to carry out the work.

More from Community Care