Licensing - LGA Inflate statistics.
The following from Hamish Birchall http://www.livemusicforum.co.uk/
'Around 80% of premises where alcohol is sold are already licensed to put on
live music, and many do so with great success.'
This suspiciously optimistic and reassuring claim was made last month by
Local Government Association licensing spokesperson Chris White in an
article published on the LGA website:
http://www.lga.gov.uk/lga/core/page.do?pageId=2413947
Mr White's re-election as Chair of the Culture, Media and Sport Board at the
LGA is expected to be announced later today. He is also a Lib Dem
councillor in St Albans - a signficant connection, but more of that later.
There is a small problem with his key statistic. It sounds too good to be
true, and it is. Mr White's approach seems to have been: think of a number
and double it. In other words, his 80% figure is complete twaddle and
highly misleading to boot. But we should not be surprised. It is part of
the LGA jobsworth campaign to keep the provision of musical instruments a
potential criminal offence, to resist exemptions for small gigs, and to
promote - with the Musicians' Union lamely in tow - the £89 'minor
variations' process by way of an alternative.
The only half-reliable source for Mr White's estimate is the DCMS
statistical bulletin for alcohol and entertainment licences. The most
up-to-date of these was published in October 2008:
http://www.culture.gov.uk/images/research/AE-Statistics-bulletin-2008.pdf
Indeed, this was the source for a ministerial answer of 1st July 2009 which
puts Mr White's figure closer to 40%:
Lord Colwyn: To ask Her Majesty's Government what proportion of public
houses and restaurants are licensed under the Licensing Act 2003 for
performances of live music. [HL4466]
Lord Carter of Barnes: The latest Alcohol Entertainment and Late Night
Refreshment Licensing Bulletin reports as of 31 March 2008 there were an
estimated 80,500 premises licences with live music provisions (around 41 per
cent of all premises licences). There were also an estimated 10,900 club
premises certificates with live music provisions (around 62 per cent of all
club premises certificates).
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/ld200809/ldhansrd/text/90701w0003.htm#09070168000737
[See Table A, p12]
Lord Carter's answer didn't actually address the specific categories of pubs
and restaurants, and he didn't cite the bulletin's estimated totals for
premises licences (195,500) and club premises certificates (17,500). The
big difference means that averaging the two live music percentages only
results in a small increase to 43% overall with live music provisions.
Even if you exclude venues where alcohol is not sold, the figure would be
closer to 55% - but that approach is itself unreliable because there are
places not licensed for alcohol that are licensed for entertainment.
If the proportion of live music venues were genuinely 80% the government
would be publicising this widely - but of course they are not.
And what of Chris White's St Albans connection? It seems that in his own
backyard about 50% of pubs and restaurants are licensed for live music -
slightly better than the national average, but nowhere near 80%.
Far worse than that, however, are the licence conditions imposed on these
venues, ironically by the Lib Dem run St Albans council. Licence
conditions have never been nationally surveyed by DCMS. Perhaps now we know
why.
A group of live music campaigners based in St Albans, calling itself the
Welwyn Hatfield Live Music Forum, has carried out the first survey of such
conditions by trawling through the council's public licence register. The
results are damning. Of 85 pubs in St Albans with a live music permission,
they found:
. 30 have restrictions on the number of musicians who can perform
. 45 pubs have restriction on the regularity or frequency of musical
performances
. 4 have a restriction on the genres of music which can be performed
. 1 pub has to display a suitable and conspicuous notice advising the
residents of forthcoming live music events.
One even has a restriction on indoors morris dancing - almost certainly an
unlawful condition. Morris dancing and unamplified live music enjoys an
outright exemption under Schedule 1, para 11 of the Licensing Act 2003.
Given that this is the first survey of its kind, it is highly unlikely that
St Albans is unique in these restrictions. The chances are that a range of
similar licence conditions would be found in a significant proportion of
local authorities in England and Wales.
Copies of the full Welwyn Hatfield Live Music Forum report can be obtained
by emailing a request to: welwynhatfieldlivemusicforum@yahoo.co.uk
ENDS
date: Mon, 3 Aug 2009 15:20:03 +0100
author: Roger Gall
|