Significant issues remain between the licensing and planning
systems and little progress has been made in addressing the lack
of coordination between the two systems. The Government must work
with all interested parties to establish clear mechanisms for the
licensing and planning systems to work together and communicate
effectively.
A mandatory minimum standard of councillor training needs to be
established for councillors who participate in licensing
committee or sub-committee proceedings to ensure consistent
decisions across licensing committees.
The lack of progress in improving access to licensed premises for
disabled people is unacceptable. The law must be amended to
require that an application for a premises licence should be
accompanied by a disabled access and facilities statement.
The future of the GOV.UK online licensing application platform
must be determined and an alternative established before it is
removed.
These are some of the key findings and recommendations of a new
report from the House of Lords Liaison Committee that follows up
the 2017 report by the Select Committee on the Licensing Act
2003.
, former
Chair of the Select Committee on the Licensing Act 2003, said:
“Our original inquiry concluded that the Licensing Act 2003 was
fundamentally flawed and needed a radical overhaul. It is now
five years since we published our findings and we have not seen
the progress we had hoped.
“We urge the Government to review our conclusions and
recommendations and act now to tackle the issues that remain
unresolved.”
The committee's other findings and recommendations include:
- The 'Agent of Change' principle, which captures the idea that
those introducing a change in the use of land should manage the
impact of that change, should first be adopted in the section 182
Guidance to reflect the current policy in the National Planning
Policy Framework, and then be subject to review and reform. The
Government should consider incorporating it into current planning
reforms in the Levelling-up and Regeneration Bill to prevent
further uncertainty.
- The Government should undertake a formal review of the impact
of minimum unit pricing (MUP) across Scotland and Wales and
consider the Ministerial report on the effect of MUP in Scotland
to assess the benefit of implementing MUP in England. It should
also review the effect of the proposed alcohol duty reforms on
excessive alcohol consumption within three years of its
implementation.
- The recent decision not to extend the Licensing Act airside
should be reviewed within three years to ensure that disruptive
incidents caused by alcohol consumption are being effectively
managed by existing industry initiatives and regulation.
- The Government should proceed with its proposed review of
adding records of refused, suspended and revoked personal
licences to the National Register of Taxi and Private Hire
Vehicles Revocations and Refusals. If this approach doesn’t work,
it should reconsider the original inquiry’s recommendation to
establish a national database of personal licences.