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UK Licensing Act - another petition.

The Shambles 10 Dec 06 - 01:31 PM
The Shambles 10 Dec 06 - 01:54 PM
ET 10 Dec 06 - 04:48 PM
Bonecruncher 11 Dec 06 - 12:54 AM
Richard Bridge 11 Dec 06 - 02:35 AM
The Shambles 11 Dec 06 - 05:41 AM
GUEST, ... 11 Dec 06 - 05:46 AM
The Shambles 11 Dec 06 - 05:52 AM
BanjoRay 11 Dec 06 - 05:52 AM
GUEST,skipy 11 Dec 06 - 05:52 AM
The Shambles 11 Dec 06 - 06:19 AM
Richard Bridge 11 Dec 06 - 07:27 AM
GUEST 11 Dec 06 - 07:46 AM
ThreeSheds 11 Dec 06 - 07:51 AM
Richard Bridge 11 Dec 06 - 08:15 AM
Scrump 11 Dec 06 - 09:48 AM
Richard Bridge 11 Dec 06 - 11:44 AM
GUEST,skipy 11 Dec 06 - 12:09 PM
The Shambles 12 Dec 06 - 08:18 PM
The Shambles 13 Dec 06 - 06:12 AM
The Shambles 13 Dec 06 - 06:22 AM
The Shambles 13 Dec 06 - 03:57 PM
vectis 13 Dec 06 - 04:20 PM
The Barden of England 13 Dec 06 - 05:29 PM
Rasener 13 Dec 06 - 05:42 PM
The Shambles 13 Dec 06 - 05:50 PM
Rasener 13 Dec 06 - 05:57 PM
Richard Bridge 13 Dec 06 - 06:28 PM
GUEST,Penny Black 14 Dec 06 - 09:18 AM
Richard Bridge 14 Dec 06 - 11:01 AM
The Shambles 14 Dec 06 - 11:27 AM
Richard Bridge 14 Dec 06 - 09:35 PM
The Shambles 15 Dec 06 - 09:46 AM
GUEST,Penny Black 15 Dec 06 - 11:34 AM
GUEST,has Signed 16 Dec 06 - 02:54 PM
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The Shambles 17 Dec 06 - 06:03 PM
The Shambles 18 Dec 06 - 07:33 AM
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The Shambles 18 Dec 06 - 01:47 PM
GUEST,numerically dyslexic 18 Dec 06 - 03:50 PM
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The Barden of England 11 Jan 07 - 11:44 AM
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Jim McLean 08 Feb 07 - 04:53 PM
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GUEST,Dominic Cronin 12 Feb 07 - 04:44 PM
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Subject: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 10 Dec 06 - 01:31 PM

The following was posted on uk.music.folk. See also Affected by the Licensing Act 2003
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Perhaps this would be a good moment to instigate a petition on the
prime minister's web site.

http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/

This feature of the site is currently "in beta", and it's interesting
to see how it's being used. The leading two petitions are way clearly
being co-ordinated by well-organised interest groups, and it would be
difficult (although surely not impossible) to muster that kind of
support.

On the other hand, all the publicity I've seen about the "petitions"
feature makes reference to the success of the petition that the prime
minister should "stand on his head and juggle ice cream". This would
therefore be a very good target to aim for. As I write this, the ice
cream petition has 2095 signatories. Couldn't we get above this?

With this in mind, I've created a petition with the following wording:

We the undersigned petition the Prime Minister to recognise
that music and dance should not be restricted by burdensome
licensing regulations.

The recently introduced changes in licensing law have produced
an environment where music and dance, activities which should
be valued and promoted in a civilised society, are instead
damaged by inappropriate regulation. We call on the Prime
Minister to recognise this situation and take steps to correct
it.


This is currently going being processed by the "team" at Number 10. If
I've understood things correctly, the petition should become available
at http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/licensing once they've done whatever it
is they do.

Please support the petition.

--

Dominic Cronin
Amsterdam


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 10 Dec 06 - 01:54 PM

The full response to the earlier (and well-supported) petition can be see on the following site.

http://www.number-10.gov.uk/output/Page4259.asp

It includes the following undertaking.

We have also given an undertaking that we will review the existing descriptions of entertainment in the Act six to twelve months after the end of the transition period. If the Act has had an unintended, disproportionate negative effect on the provision of live music -or other forms of regulated entertainment-, there are powers already in the Bill to modify the position through secondary legislation.

However we believe that the provisions in the Licensing Act will allow live music and other regulated entertainment to thrive.


Morris dancing and dancing of a similar nature are exempt from the requirement for a licence under the Act.


The Department will also be setting up a forum, comprising representatives of performers, venue operators, local authorities and others whose task it will be to advertise the advantages of the reforms and to maximise the take-up.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: ET
Date: 10 Dec 06 - 04:48 PM

Good idea although the Govt takes little notice of petitions. Today I was in a Sam Smiths pub as part of a C17 reenactment group. A few of us sang some early caroles and one played a medieaval wooden recorder (very skillfully). Many of the folk in the pub stopped yattering and joined in obviously enjoying it. The landlady ran from downstairs saying we were in breach of the breweries rules about no music so we stopped, to the annoyance of all concerned. Agreed this is the Brewery, not the Government but the pub no longer had a music licence and the ban was just as effective.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: Bonecruncher
Date: 11 Dec 06 - 12:54 AM

I understand that Mummer's Plays are also banned unless the premises has a licence specifically for "plays".
Colyn.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: Richard Bridge
Date: 11 Dec 06 - 02:35 AM

Care needs to be taken when phrasing petitions. Music and dance do not always need regulation but sometimes they obviously do. At one extreme lie illegal raves which can keep the population of many square miles awake for days and nights on end, provide a major boost for the local recreational chemical industry, and have thousands doing what bears do in the woods, resulting in a distasteful situation that will remain for a considerable time.    At another point on the envelope lies the huge commercial festival - such as Glastonbury. At another lies outdoor opera - where again the sound can carry for miles and the wealthy patrons believe that local rules need not apply to them. Then of course you have the the contrasts of on the one hand warehouses (adapted or otherwise) thudding to "music of black origin" and the turf wars of rappers, but on the other hand the may dance or genteel tea dance. And naturally at some point you come to "incidental" music in premises that, because they lawfully sell alcohol for consumption on the premises are already substantially regulated, but where some types of music add to disorder (believe me, I live between two pubs - let's face it where people or animals, and sometimes the distinction can be hard to draw, compete for mates there is going to be violence) but some types of music such as unamplified folk music which are going to be inaudible 50 yards away and (apart from people like the loathsome performer on the "musical" saw at last year's Miskin festival) never or virtually never lead to disturbance.

A call for total or almost total deregulation of music and dance lacks any sort of credibility and frankly damages the possibly otherwise attainable causes of "our" lobby.

What could be done is to exempt music performed without electrical amplification, wholly or mainly for the enjoyment of those making it, and to define "incidental" or at least create some presumptions as to the meaning of that word that will give some sensible structure.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 11 Dec 06 - 05:41 AM

A call for total or almost total deregulation of music and dance lacks any sort of credibility and frankly damages the possibly otherwise attainable causes of "our" lobby.

I agree but.

I had no part in this petition or its wording but I do not see that it is calling for total deregulation.

All it appears to be asking is that the Govenment ensure that what they themselves have claimed for their Act - as regards music and dancing - is the case in practice.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: GUEST, ...
Date: 11 Dec 06 - 05:46 AM

Perhaps if we could get a few doctors on board, to write prescriptions for us, we could carry on singing and dancing on the National Health.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 11 Dec 06 - 05:52 AM

Council enforce fee for band playing 'non-religious' Jingle Bells
Daily Mail
- Last updated at 22:00pm on 27th October 2006


Full story here.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=413100&in_page_id=1770


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: BanjoRay
Date: 11 Dec 06 - 05:52 AM

Tye petition is so vaguely worded that it can't possibly achieve anything - the government could do what it liked and still say it was carrying out the wishes of the petition.
Ray


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: GUEST,skipy
Date: 11 Dec 06 - 05:52 AM

See 11
PART 2
EXEMPTIONS
Film exhibitions for the purposes of advertisement, information, education, etc.

5    The provision of entertainment consisting of the exhibition of a film is not to be regarded as the provision of regulated entertainment for the purposes of this Act if its sole or main purpose is to-

(a) demonstrate any product,
(b) advertise any goods or services, or
(c) provide information, education or instruction.
Film exhibitions: museums and art galleries

6    The provision of entertainment consisting of the exhibition of a film is not to be regarded as the provision of regulated entertainment for the purposes of this Act if it consists of or forms part of an exhibit put on show for any purposes of a museum or art gallery.

Music incidental to certain other activities

7    The provision of entertainment consisting of the performance of live music or the playing of recorded music is not to be regarded as the provision of regulated entertainment for the purposes of this Act to the extent that it is incidental to some other activity which is not itself-

(a) a description of entertainment falling within paragraph 2, or
(b) the provision of entertainment facilities.
Use of television or radio receivers

8    The provision of any entertainment or entertainment facilities is not to be regarded as the provision of regulated entertainment for the purposes of this Act to the extent that it consists of the simultaneous reception and playing of a programme included in a programme service within the meaning of the Broadcasting Act 1990 (c. 42).

Religious services, places of worship etc.

9    The provision of any entertainment or entertainment facilities-

(a) for the purposes of, or for purposes incidental to, a religious meeting or service, or
(b) at a place of public religious worship,
is not to be regarded as the provision of regulated entertainment for the purposes of this Act.

Garden fêtes, etc.

10    (1) The provision of any entertainment or entertainment facilities at a garden fête, or at a function or event of a similar character, is not to be regarded as the provision of regulated entertainment for the purposes of this Act.

      (2) But sub-paragraph (1) does not apply if the fête, function or event is promoted with a view to applying the whole or part of its proceeds for purposes of private gain.

      (3) In sub-paragraph (2) "private gain", in relation to the proceeds of a fête, function or event, is to be construed in accordance with section 22 of the Lotteries and Amusements Act 1976 (c. 32).

Morris dancing etc.

11    The provision of any entertainment or entertainment facilities is not to be regarded as the provision of regulated entertainment for the purposes of this Act to the extent that it consists of the provision of-

(a) a performance of morris dancing or any dancing of a similar nature or a performance of unamplified, live music as an integral part of such a performance , or
(b) facilities for enabling persons to take part in entertainment of a description falling within paragraph (a).
Vehicles in motion

12    The provision of any entertainment or entertainment facilities-

(a) on premises consisting of or forming part of a vehicle, and
(b) at a time when the vehicle is not permanently or temporarily parked,
is not to be regarded as the provision of regulated entertainment for the purposes of this Act.
skipy


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 11 Dec 06 - 06:19 AM

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - 11th December 2006

600 YEAR OLD WILTSHIRE TRADITION ENDANGERED BY NEW LICENSING LAWS


For details of the above see

Affected by the Licensing Act 2003


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: Richard Bridge
Date: 11 Dec 06 - 07:27 AM

Yes skipy but one of the problems is that various councils are making "incidental" mean what they want it to mean, in the best tradition of TweedleDee and TweedleDum. I suggested at the time the Act was passing that definition was needed but would the DCMS listen? Do I need to give you the answer?


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: GUEST
Date: 11 Dec 06 - 07:46 AM

Is anybody coming round to the view that we would actually be better off with a Conservative government ?


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: ThreeSheds
Date: 11 Dec 06 - 07:51 AM

No


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: Richard Bridge
Date: 11 Dec 06 - 08:15 AM

No, under a conservative conspiracy only the rich have the time and money to sing or dance (or indeed the inclination).

The rest of us need to save up to buy the makings of Molotov cocktails.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: Scrump
Date: 11 Dec 06 - 09:48 AM

We would be much better off with no government - think of the money we'd save.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: Richard Bridge
Date: 11 Dec 06 - 11:44 AM

No, we all need a government to organise the neessary things that we would not find time to organise but need. Whether we need Hobbes Leviathan is another question.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: GUEST,skipy
Date: 11 Dec 06 - 12:09 PM

Imagination is "nothing but decaying sense" and is the same as Memory).
Hobbes
(Skipy)


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 12 Dec 06 - 08:18 PM

The petition is now ready to be signed - on the following site.

http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/licensing/

When i looked - there were 14 signatures........


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 13 Dec 06 - 06:12 AM

There are now 44.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 13 Dec 06 - 06:22 AM

The following from Hamish Birchall.

Please circulate

A new online live music petition was started yesterday on the Number 10 website by folk musician Dominic Cronin:
http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/licensing/#detail

'We the undersigned petition the Prime Minister to recognise that music and dance should not be restricted by burdensome licensing regulations. The recently introduced changes in licensing law have produced an environment where music and dance, activities which should be valued and promoted in a civilised society, are instead damaged by inappropriate regulation. We call on the Prime Minister to recognise this situation and take steps to correct it.'

The wording is not ideal, but I would urge you to sign.

The government may respond 'licensing is not burdensome, and research shows no damage to live music and dance'. This is spin.

Ministers said the new Act would be 'much better for live music'. But about 40% of bars have lost their previous automatic entitlement to one or two musicians, and yet are free to continue providing recorded music or broadcast entertainment with unlimited amplification. Despite the banter in Parliament, the government is extremely concerned about public opinion on this issue.

It must be damaging that in so many circumstances, organising live music could be a crime. The Act defines premises as 'any place' - it can apply almost anywhere, not just in pubs or bars. The maximum penalty for providing unlicensed live music, where a licence is required, is a £20,000 fine and six months in prison. This is a greater penalty than is available for:

Violent disorder, affray, harassment, bomb hoax, stirring up racial hatred;
Various assaults, including wounding, actual bodily harm, and assaulting a police officer in the execution of his duty;
Burglary, theft, handling stolen goods, deception, forgery, 'taking and driving away';
Arson, criminal damage;
Intimidation of witnesses, wasting police time;
Possessing a controlled drug, supplying a controlled drug and intent;
Dangerous driving, driving with excess alcohol in the blood, breath or urine;
Carrying a loaded firearm in a public place; Bigamy;
and Official Secrets Act offences.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 13 Dec 06 - 03:57 PM

Now there are 243 - is your name there yet?


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: vectis
Date: 13 Dec 06 - 04:20 PM

yes


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Barden of England
Date: 13 Dec 06 - 05:29 PM

Mine is too


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: Rasener
Date: 13 Dec 06 - 05:42 PM

Hey Shambles, didn't realise you lived in Amsterdam. My wife is an Amsterdamse.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 13 Dec 06 - 05:50 PM

I live in Amsterdam?

It is Dominic Cronin (who started this petition) who lives in Amsterdam.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: Rasener
Date: 13 Dec 06 - 05:57 PM

I have seen that.

I am on the list now. Good to see Pete Coe and Sue Coe are on there.

We came over this year and my children enjoyed Amsterdam very much.

Coming back in August 2007.

What a wonderful time I had over there, I Lived there for 13 years.

Les Worrall


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: Richard Bridge
Date: 13 Dec 06 - 06:28 PM

I am sorry, but I cannot sign it. I live between two pubs and the electric music and dance they have (often outwith their licence terms, about which the LA does squat) makes my life and the life of many in the village a misery.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: GUEST,Penny Black
Date: 14 Dec 06 - 09:18 AM

We have signed and can see no down side to signing a petition basically asking for further thought as to the adverse effects of the licencing law... after all this is what we all kept shouting about.

Misuse by LAs and lack of implementation of current laws being abused, to the disturbance of other, really isn't the problem

The problem is that the new licence has caused sessions, dance events etc to be cancelled - when there was no real need and it has taken away the God given right to make music and dance.

We were promised that the license would be re-looked at, and that is all the petition is asking for, let them know there have been problems and WE the people are not happy with it as it stands it's time for a change!

PB
singing as long as the fridge door is open

To help promote and bring the Petition to more eyes, a flckr website has been set up at http://www.flickr.com/groups/keepmusiclive/


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: Richard Bridge
Date: 14 Dec 06 - 11:01 AM

It looks as if the Ship has gone tits up again....


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 14 Dec 06 - 11:27 AM

Thank you Penny - if everyone can just circulate the link - I am sure that we can obtain more than the current 611 names.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: Richard Bridge
Date: 14 Dec 06 - 09:35 PM

Hmm. Still less popular so far than legalising cannabis or stopping the persecution of smokers.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 15 Dec 06 - 09:46 AM

The following from Hamish Birchall.

BBC Radio 4 Today wants to know what law you think should be scrapped:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/today/vote/2006vote/

It asks you to be specific. Most of the Licensing Act 2003 is about regulating the sale of alcohol. You might want the whole Act scrapped - but you may want to focus on the live music provisions, most of which are set out in Schedule 1, which describes 'regulated entertainment':
http://www.opsi.gov.uk/ACTS/acts2003/30017--k.htm#sch1


The main injustice, for me at least, remains the inexplicable inequality of treatment of live and canned entertainment in the context of the crime/disorder/safety/noise rationale of the Act.

Anyone organising even the mildest live music without a licence under the Act could face criminal prosecution - but no such licence is required if providing big screen sport or music in a crowded bar.

---------------------------------------------------------------------
Live music e-petition well into top 50
Signatures are rising at a rate of knots. As I write, the number of signatures is passing 900, and the petition is now at number 35 in the list of over 1,100 petitions on the Number 10 website: http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/licensing/

---------------------------------------------------------------------

Live music penalties - comparison with other offences - correction
A lawyer told me yesterday that some of the offences I listed in my circular urging people to sign the e-petition do in fact carry greater maximum penalties than the maximum penalty under the Licensing Act (a £20,000 fine and six months in prison). I am now seeking clarification from the lawyer who first provided me with that list in response to this question:

'Under the Act, the maximum penalty for anyone found guilty of providing unlicensed live music where a licence is required is £20,000 and six months in prison. Would you mind listing a few other crimes which would be generally perceived as far worse, but for which the penalties are not as severe?'

I will circulate an update on this as soon as I have clarified the position. In the meantime, my apologies for any inaccuracies in that first list and if it was in any way misleading.

However, it does not change the position for the unlicensed provision of live music. Where a licence is required, under the Licensing Act the maximum penalty is a £20,000 fine and six months in prison.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: GUEST,Penny Black
Date: 15 Dec 06 - 11:34 AM

Myspace Petition Link

Getting MySpace users onboard - those who have Myspace sites and agree with signing the petition please feel free to link to the above site.

1,119 as I write!

PB


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: GUEST,has Signed
Date: 16 Dec 06 - 02:54 PM

Refresh at 1419 signatures


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: GUEST,FFF-Live
Date: 17 Dec 06 - 01:07 PM

Signatures: 1537 A long way to go!


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 17 Dec 06 - 06:03 PM

From the petition site.

You must be a British citizen or resident to sign the petition.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 18 Dec 06 - 07:33 AM

1651


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: GUEST,1774
Date: 18 Dec 06 - 12:40 PM

just saw current signatures stand at 1774

for interest, the music references for the year 1774:-

Events

    * Antonio Salieri is appointed court composer to the Emperor Joseph II.
    * Domenico Cimarosa is invited to Rome for the opera season.
    * Charles Burney writes A Plan for a Music School.

Opera

    * Pasquale Anfossi - La finta giardiniera; Olimpiade
    * Christoph Willibald Gluck - Iphigenie en Aulide

Classical music

    * Great Organ Mass by Joseph Haydn
    * Concerto for Viola no 1 in D major by Carl Stamitz

Births

    * January 24 - Karl Moser, composer
    * February 16 - Pierre Rode, violinist, composer, (d. 1830)
    * March 5 - Christoph Ernst Friedrich Weyse, composer
    * April 17 - Václav Jan Křtitel Tomášek, organist and composer
    * October 7 - Ferdinando Orlandi, composer
    * November 14 - Gaspare Spontini, composer
    * November 18 - William Horsley, composer
    * December 20 - Guillaume-Perre-Antoine Gatayes, composer

Deaths

    * January 20 - Florian Leopold Gassmann, composer
    * January 30 - Frantisek Ignac Antonin Tuma and Jean-Pierre Guignon, composers
    * July 7 - Giuseppi Maria Carretti, composer
    * August 25 - Niccolò Jommelli, composer
    * December 2 - Johann Friedrich Agricola, composer
    * date unknown - František Tůma, organist and composer
    * date unknown - Vodicka Vaclav


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 18 Dec 06 - 01:47 PM

1762 is the number that I see.

What petition are you looking at?

It is amazing how many composers are born and die - without me even hearing their names other than on such lists - let alone hearing any of their compositions.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: GUEST,numerically dyslexic
Date: 18 Dec 06 - 03:50 PM

ooooooooopppsss!!!


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 18 Dec 06 - 08:46 PM

It is now 1814.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 19 Dec 06 - 06:23 AM

The following from Hamish Birchall.

David Cronin's online licensing/live music petition has about 1,840 signatures and currently stands at no. 21 in the list of 1,182 petitions on the Number 10 website. Not bad for just under a week.
http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/licensing/

However, it still lags behind a petition calling on the prime minister to stand on his head and juggle ice cream.

Of course, if the prime minister were talented enough to stand on his head and juggle ice cream, and if his performance took place indoors, this would be potentially licensable under the new Licensing Act.

The activity would fall within the meaning an 'indoor sporting event' as defined in Schedule 1, para 16(2): '..."Sporting event" means any contest, exhibition or display of any sport, and "sport" includes... (b) any form of physical recreation which is also engaged in for purposes of competition or display'.

ENDS


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: GUEST,Juggler
Date: 19 Dec 06 - 02:16 PM

over 2000 now -

surely Juggling indoors or outdoors would fall foul of requiring a licence?


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 20 Dec 06 - 08:50 AM

2097.

http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/licensing/


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: GUEST,Penny Black
Date: 22 Dec 06 - 08:43 AM

Myspace site going strong - with a lot of positive responses and sign-ups.

My Space Link

Why not add the Petition Link to any email Greeting you send out this year (to UK Residents)

Merry Christmas everyone!

Penny Black


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 22 Dec 06 - 09:13 AM

2299.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 22 Dec 06 - 08:33 PM

The following was posted on uk.music.folk

The petition is to be found at http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/licensing/

The petition has now officially gone mainstream. By that, I mean that
there are more signatories than the journalists-favourite, the Ice
cream juggling petition (http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/juggle/)

Not only that, but we're in the top twenty (No. 19 at the last count,
with 2324 signatures)

This makes it one of the fastest moving e-petitions since the PM's
site started having them. Let's hope the prime minister recognises
that this represents a groundswell of grass-roots opinion (I don't
actually speak "politician", but you know what I mean)

So where do we go from here? The top few petitions are plainly run by
well-orchestrated campaigns, with signatories in the tens of
thousands. Should we aim for that? The paper petition had that kind of
support, so it's not so crazy.

I've started to put some thoughts on the subject down at

http://www.cronin.co.uk/licensing

If you go there, you'll realise that I need help. Does anyone have a
succinct text that describes the key issues in the space of one web
page?

Basically I'm a bit caught out by the success of the thing, and it
would be a shame to waste the opportunity. Good solid copy would
definitely be welcome. PR, editorial skills, graphics, you name it. If
anyone would like to help, please mail me.

Thanks for the support.

Dominic Cronin
Amsterdam


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 29 Dec 06 - 01:26 AM

The following was posted on uk.music.folk by Graham Dixon.


Well done Dominic 2439 is a marvellous total for such a short time.

However (IMHO) it's not enough to make a difference YET.

We need to count on musicians from other genres to boost the total.

If you have any frieinds/colleagues who play;-
Country/Jazz/Rock/Pop/Soul/Indie/Brass/Barbers-shop/Classical etc etc.
Or if you visit any other music forums

Please ask them to visit http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/licensing/ and sign
this important petition.

The recently introduced changes in licensing law have produced an
environment where music and dance, activities which should be valued
and promoted in a civilised society, are instead damaged by
inappropriate regulation. We call on the Prime Minister to recognise
this situation and take steps to correct it.
We the undersigned petition the Prime Minister to recognise that music
and dance should not be restricted by burdensome licensing regulations.


KEEP MUSIC LIVE


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 01 Jan 07 - 12:03 PM

2543.

Now Christmas and New Year are over perhaps we can all work to ensure that this petition is as well-supported as the previous one was?


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: mandotim
Date: 01 Jan 07 - 01:32 PM

Bernard Wrigley on there...and me!
Tim


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: GUEST,FFF-Live Myspace
Date: 02 Jan 07 - 09:24 AM

FFF-Live on Myspace is going strong with over 250 groups and solo artistes on board and spreading the word.

Mainly Traditional Music but a few other genres getting involved now.

The petition needs a lot more pushing if it is to match the previous one!


FFF=Live Crew


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 03 Jan 07 - 11:30 AM

2618.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 08 Jan 07 - 05:57 AM

2714


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 11 Jan 07 - 06:44 AM

The following from Hamish Birchall.

Please circulate

The live music/licensing e-petition now has nearly 2,800 signatures. It currently stands at no.19 in the list of 1,702 petitions on the Number 10 website: http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/licensing/

This is good, especially in just under a month - and there are five more months in which people can sign. But the petition needs to do much better to make an impression on ministers, and to encourage DCMS to implement music-friendly amendments.

The petition is for everyone, not just musicians. Please consider signing if you haven't already done so. If you have signed, encourage friends to sign. Points to remember about the new legislation:

The unlicensed provision of even one musician is a potential criminal offence (although some places are exempt, including places of public religious worship, royal palaces and moving vehicles). Max penalty: £20,000 fine and six months in prison.

The rationale is to prevent noise, crime and disorder, to ensure public safety, and the protection of children from harm.
But broadcast entertainment, including sport and music, is exempt - no matter where, and no matter how powerfully amplified.

In the transition to the new regime, bars with jukeboxes, CD players etc were automatically granted a licence to play recorded music; but their automatic entitlement to one or two musicians was abolished.
For the first time, private performances raising money for charity are licensable.

School performances open to friends and family are licensable - they count as public performances.

Under the old regime all premises licensed to sell alcohol for consumption on the premises were automatically allowed up to two live musicians (the 'two in a bar rule').

In December, DCMS published research confirming that about 40% of these have lost any automatic entitlement to live music as a result of the new Act:
'Very few establishments that wanted a new licence were denied it, and many who were previously limited to 2-in-a-bar now have the ability to stage music with 2 or more musicians... This contrasts, of course, with the fact that 40% of establishments now have no automatic means of putting on live music (i.e. they would have to give a TEN).'
['Licensing Act 2003, The experience of smaller establishments in applying for live music authorisation', December 2006', paragraphs 6.1.1 and 6.1.2 'Conclusions', p54; Caroline Callahan, Andy Martin, Anna Pierce, Ipsos-MORI]

'TEN' stands for Temporary Event Notice - in effect a temporary entertainment licence. Only 12 are allowed per premises per year. They cost £21 each. See the full MORI reports on this site:
http://www.culture.gov.uk/Reference_library/Research/research_by_dcms/live_music_exec_summary.htm


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: GUEST,Guest
Date: 11 Jan 07 - 09:35 AM

"Is anybody coming round to the view that we would actually be better off with a Conservative government ? "

Oh dear!


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: Scrump
Date: 11 Jan 07 - 09:47 AM

Is that last Guest a Mr Blair by any chance?


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Barden of England
Date: 11 Jan 07 - 11:44 AM

Is anybody coming round to the view that we would actually be better off with a Conservative government ?


I thought we already had one


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 25 Jan 07 - 10:50 AM

3902.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: SylviaN
Date: 27 Jan 07 - 05:11 AM

Now 4429


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: MikkinNotts
Date: 29 Jan 07 - 11:12 AM

The original petition handed in to Number 10 prior to the PEL becoming law had over 110,000 signatures on it and made no difference.
There is a noticeable absence on the list at present of the big names in folk music ie Billy Bragg, the Carthy family and many more. Which leads me to ask, is this petition being given enough of a high level profile?
This new petition has a very long way to go.

29/01/07 - 5,255

Mikk


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: Cath
Date: 29 Jan 07 - 11:46 AM

I don't know whether Holmfirth is an exception but when I walked through the town last Thursday to the Open Mic session at Bistro Number 11 I couldn't help notice a large board outside Carniceria advertising weekly live music gigs, I called at Y Bar and was told about forthcoming gigs, Harrows have weekly events and the Picturedrome has gigs almost every week.
Now I'm not trying to advertise the hostelries of Holmfirth but any change in the licensing regulations seem to have had the opposite effect here and when it comes to the Festival of Folk in May all but one pub will have music going on.
I'm sure some luminary on this newsgroup will have an explanation for why it doesn't seem to be a problem here but it is elsewhere!


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 30 Jan 07 - 06:07 AM

Now I'm not trying to advertise the hostelries of Holmfirth but any change in the licensing regulations seem to have had the opposite effect here and when it comes to the Festival of Folk in May all but one pub will have music going on.

The situation before was that although only 5% of available premises were licensed for live music - that some form of live music could still take place in the remaining 95%.

Across the land now, the evidence seems to suggest that as a result of the change - around 40% of available premises are now not able host any performance of live music at all.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: MikkinNotts
Date: 30 Jan 07 - 10:09 AM

Which is more reason for making this petition even higher profile. I only came across it on Mudcat. None of the main radio folk presenters are on it Mike Harding, Frank Hennessy, Mick Peat, Lester Simpson

I have attached the link to the bottom all all emails I send out now

Mikk


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: Bernard
Date: 30 Jan 07 - 10:33 AM

My name's on it...


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: MikkinNotts
Date: 30 Jan 07 - 10:53 AM

and mine..


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 30 Jan 07 - 11:06 AM

Which is more reason for making this petition even higher profile.

And of course the fact that the live music that is permitted - is only taking place - subject to many conditions.

And although the imposition standard or 'blanket' conditions on live music are supposed to have died with the old legislation - most local authorities appear to require the installation of noise-limiters for every application for live music.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: Bernard
Date: 30 Jan 07 - 11:33 AM

Hah! So often I've played at ceilidhs where the 'traffic light' system is tripped when people are clapping as the top couple dances down the set...!!


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: Blindlemonsteve
Date: 30 Jan 07 - 12:33 PM

Hi All
This licensing law act is a farce, i live in Spain, there probably is some regulation, but no one would ever take any notice of it, i could take my guitar down the local bar, play for as long as i like, and when the local policeman has finished his Brandy and polished his gun, he would probably join in with his harmonica. but if you sold alcohol to kids it would be a problem....isnt that the way it should be.....Thank god i dont live there anymore....


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: bubblyrat
Date: 30 Jan 07 - 12:57 PM

Where is the great British disdain for petty bureaucracy ?? Bugger the government & their stupid,killjoy,rules & regulations. Petitions ?? Forget "em !! Find a suitably bloody-minded landlord, & just get on with playing & singing as usual !! If the police decide to act,and send in the SAS with tear-gas, then it will just add to the public perception of this bunch of wanquers as the worst government we have ever had. If they REALLY can"t find any issues more worthy of their attention,then they deserve to be overthrown, by force if necessary. I LOVE my country DEARLY ,and I cannot STAND to see it in such chaos and disarray .Give me the leader ,& I will follow!!


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: lilly
Date: 30 Jan 07 - 03:18 PM

Pub in my hometown seems to be letting folkies play and sod the bits of paper!! No one has complained, even the local bobby has been in to listen! Just get on with the music.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: Herga Kitty
Date: 31 Jan 07 - 03:29 PM

I signed a while ago, but received an e-mail today forwarded (by another former Flower of May), from Doug Bailey and Dave Hunt which indicated that the Licensing Act petition had made it up to 17th position, with over 4,000 signatures. Of course the petition against road pricing has over 100 times as many signatures.

Kitty


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 01 Feb 07 - 02:52 AM

6581


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 01 Feb 07 - 02:59 AM


The original petition handed in to Number 10 prior to the PEL becoming law had over 110,000 signatures on it and made no difference.


Well it is difficult to prove such a thing - I suggest that without that petition the Act would have been even worse.

See http://www.number-10.gov.uk/output/Page4259.asp for Number Ten Downing Street's
full response to the E Petition.

Which includes the following.

We believe that the Act will make it simpler and more affordable than now to stage live entertainment in the vast majority of cases and increase opportunities for musicians and other artists to perform

We have also given an undertaking that we will review the existing descriptions of entertainment in the Act six to twelve months after the end of the transition period. If the Act has had an unintended, disproportionate negative effect on the provision of live music -or other forms of regulated entertainment-, there are powers already in the Bill to modify the position through secondary legislation. However we believe that the provisions in the Licensing Act will allow live music and other regulated entertainment to thrive.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 02 Feb 07 - 07:53 AM

The following from Hamish Birchall

Please circulate

More than 6,680 people have now signed the licensing/live music e-petition on the Number 10 site:
http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/licensing/

As a result the petition has reached number 13 in the list of over 2,500 on this site. By the end of this month it should be well within the top 10.

But many more signatures are needed to attract national media attention, and to encourage the government to make music-friendly changes to the legislation: the Licensing Act 2003.

Please consider signing if you haven't already done so. If you have signed, encourage friends to sign. Points to remember about the new law:

The unlicensed provision of even one musician is a potential criminal offence (although some places are exempt, including places of public religious worship, royal palaces and moving vehicles). Max penalty: £20,000 fine and six months in prison.

The rationale is to prevent noise, crime and disorder, to ensure public safety, and the protection of children from harm.

But broadcast entertainment, including sport and music, is exempt no matter where, and no matter how powerfully amplified.

In the transition to the new regime in 2005, bars with jukeboxes, CD players etc were automatically granted a licence to play recorded music; but their automatic entitlement to one or two live musicians was abolished.

For the first time, private performances raising money for charity are licensable.

School performances open to friends and family are licensable - they count as public performances.

Under the old regime all premises licensed to sell alcohol for consumption on the premises were automatically allowed up to two live musicians (the 'two in a bar rule').

Last December, DCMS published research confirming that about 40% of these have lost any automatic entitlement to live music as a result of the new Act:
'Very few establishments that wanted a new licence were denied it, and many who were previously limited to 2-in-a-bar now have the ability to stage music with 2 or more musicians... This contrasts, of course, with the fact that 40% of establishments now have no automatic means of putting on live music (i.e. they would have to give a TEN).'
['Licensing Act 2003, The experience of smaller establishments in applying for live music authorisation', December 2006', paragraphs 6.1.1 and 6.1.2 'Conclusions', p54; Caroline Callahan, Andy Martin, Anna Pierce, Ipsos-MORI]

'TEN' stands for Temporary Event Notice - in effect a temporary entertainment licence. Only 12 are allowed per premises per year. They cost £21 each. See the full MORI reports on this site:
http://www.culture.gov.uk/Reference_library/Research/research_by_dcms/live_music_exec_summary.htm


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 02 Feb 07 - 08:02 AM

'My view is that there will be an explosion in live music as a result of removing the discriminatory two-in-a-bar provision'
(Lord McIntosh, House of Lords, 26 November 2002).


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 04 Feb 07 - 05:25 PM

The following was posted on uk.music folk.

When I visited http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/licensing today, the
petition was at 12th place with 7662 signatures. It seems likely to be
in the top ten soon. This is very good news, and I would like to thank
everyone who has signed or made it their business to publicise the
petition. Please keep up the good work.

If you visit http://www.cronin.co.uk/licensing you will find that you can download a flyer explaining the issues and asking for support. If
any of you are able to print this out and display it somewhere useful,
I would very much appreciate it.

I would also like to gather some information about the sessions and
folk clubs which have been closed down as a result of the Licensing
Act. My intention is to list these on the web site, so obviously it's
important to be able to show a reasonably plausible link between the
closure and the act. If you can help with such information, please
send an email to petition@cronin.co.uk (There are some pretty
aggressive spam filters in place, so if you don't get an
acknowledgement within a few days, please try again with less
references to rolexes and viagra.)

Thanks again.

--

Dominic Cronin
Amsterdam


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 06 Feb 07 - 11:46 AM

The petition gets a good write up here.

Todays Times - Article on Music Licensing


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 06 Feb 07 - 11:47 AM

8,307


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 08 Feb 07 - 01:49 PM

9,407


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: Jim McLean
Date: 08 Feb 07 - 04:53 PM

Hi The Shamble,
I read the article in the Times and have no problems with Gordon Brown singing The Ballad of Glencoe (or as I initially called it, The Massacre of Glencoe) but I doubt he's more inclined to sing 'Come awa' England)!


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: ossonflags
Date: 09 Feb 07 - 02:43 PM

See also bev - sun its on there


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 10 Feb 07 - 01:09 PM

10,402


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 12 Feb 07 - 02:00 AM

http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/licensing/

10,944


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: GUEST,Dominic Cronin
Date: 12 Feb 07 - 04:44 PM

Dear all,

Thanks for the support for the petition.

I know some people think it's too inclusive, but let's get one thing straight right now. The law already had ample provision for dealing with nuisance. Any suggestions of that being the intention were simply smoke and mirrors.

Personally, I fully support people's right to have raves, classical concerts, whatever. (Of course, if they infringe on other people's quiet enjoyment of their homes, then the environmental health officers from the council can do their bit.)

Support for the petition is also coming from outside the world of folk music.

http://www.cronin.co.uk/licensing


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 13 Feb 07 - 05:11 AM

The following from Hamish Birchall

Please circulate

Over 11,400 people have signed the live music/licensing petition on the Number 10 website. At the time of writing it stands at number 8 in the list of nearly 3,000 petitions and is likely to climb higher today:
http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/licensing/

The petition was backed by Libby Purves in The Times on 6 February:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk:80/tol/comment/columnists/libby_purves/article1336496.ece

In the last few days the Number 10 petition website has attracted widespread media coverage due to the petition opposing the government's road pricing proposals . See today's online Guardian, for example: http://politics.guardian.co.uk/homeaffairs/story/0,,2011954,00.html

Ministers, and some in the press, have cast doubt on the value of such petitions. But one thing is clear: a successful petition does raise public and media awareness about an issue, making it more difficult for politicians to ignore.

In the next few weeks, the Live Music Forum will present its recommendations for improvement of the Licensing Act to ministers.

Please consider signing the petition if you haven't already done so. If you have signed, encourage friends to sign. Points to remember about the new law:

For the first time, private performances raising money for charity are illegal unless licensed.

School performances open to friends and family are licensable - they count as public performances.

The unlicensed provision of even one musician is a potential criminal offence - although some places are exempt, including places of public religious worship, royal palaces and moving vehicles. Max penalty: £20,000 fine and six months in prison.

The rationale is to prevent noise, crime and disorder, to ensure public safety, and the protection of children from harm.
But broadcast entertainment, including sport and music, is exempt no matter where, and no matter how powerfully amplified.

In the transition to the new regime in 2005, bars with jukeboxes, CD players etc were automatically granted a licence to play recorded music; but their automatic entitlement to one or two live musicians was abolished.

Under the old regime all premises licensed to sell alcohol for consumption on the premises were automatically allowed up to two live musicians (the 'two in a bar rule').

Last December, DCMS published research confirming that about 40% of these have lost any automatic entitlement to live music as a result of the new Act:
'Very few establishments that wanted a new licence were denied it, and many who were previously limited to 2-in-a-bar now have the ability to stage music with 2 or more musicians... This contrasts, of course, with the fact that 40% of establishments now have no automatic means of putting on live music (i.e. they would have to give a TEN).'
['Licensing Act 2003, The experience of smaller establishments in applying for live music authorisation', December 2006', paragraphs 6.1.1 and 6.1.2 'Conclusions', p54; Caroline Callahan, Andy Martin, Anna Pierce, Ipsos-MORI]

'TEN' stands for Temporary Event Notice - in effect a temporary entertainment licence. Only 12 are allowed per premises per year. They cost £21 each. See the full MORI reports on this site:
http://www.culture.gov.uk/Reference_library/Research/research_by_dcms/live_music_exec_summary.htm


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: vectis
Date: 15 Feb 07 - 09:38 AM

I have now tried every day for the last ten days to sign this and so far have not received the e-mail needed to confirm the signature. This could mean that the number of people signing is a lot higher than the numbers on the petition would indicate.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 15 Feb 07 - 10:23 AM

That is now showing at 13,076.

Let us know when they send out your Email.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: Scrump
Date: 15 Feb 07 - 10:34 AM

Re. the confirmatory emails: I got mine but Mrs Scrump didn't get hers, even though she has the same domain name/server as mine. I wonder if the site isn't sending all the emails out, or whether it does a check on the IP address or something? That means people using the same computer to vote might not be able to, and the number of votes could be smaller than it should be.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: vectis
Date: 15 Feb 07 - 11:12 AM

According to their FAQs they only allow one signature from each computer to stop people inputting multiple signatures. This is because it is too easy to get loads of e-mail addys now.
So one of you will have to sign from somewhere else.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: Tootler
Date: 15 Feb 07 - 08:17 PM

I had to try twice. The first time I got no confirmatory email, but the second time, several days later I did.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: Scrump
Date: 16 Feb 07 - 06:39 AM

So it means only one person can vote per household in most cases, then. The system is badly flawed.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: vectis
Date: 16 Feb 07 - 09:00 AM

Just got a confirmatory e-mail on the 12th try. I put in a non-Hotmail address and it went through immediately.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 16 Feb 07 - 11:31 AM

13,876

http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/licensing/

So if it is only one signature per houshold - do we just double the figure?


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: Scrump
Date: 16 Feb 07 - 11:35 AM

Yes, I would think so! Might be worth bearing this stupid rule in mind for future petitions.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: vectis
Date: 16 Feb 07 - 11:46 AM

My house has a LAN fitted and my son has managed to sign the same petition as me from a different computer but via the same router. So it obviously is not the same house that's the problem maybe it is the same computer that is the problem. In which case all you need to do is borrow a laptop and sign via that. Is there a techie out there who knows what the petition site can 'see' and therefore control when you vote.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 19 Feb 07 - 10:07 AM

15,871


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: Scrump
Date: 19 Feb 07 - 10:15 AM

Yes, but I would guess that many people only have one PC in the house. And if you borrow a laptop that might stop its owner using it to sign the petition.

They should check a combination of name, email address and PC IP no. or something, and only disallow the vote if they are all the same as one already received. At the moment, it seems they only check the IP address (I think, anyway), because my wife's email address, and (perhaps obviously!) name, are different from mine. So it must be based on using the same computer only.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 21 Feb 07 - 01:52 AM

Is everyone who signed this petition also going to get an emailed reply from our Prime Minister?


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: Barry Finn
Date: 21 Feb 07 - 01:53 AM

100!


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 21 Feb 07 - 01:55 AM

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/02/18/nblairmail118.xml


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 21 Feb 07 - 04:57 AM

17,633


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: Scrump
Date: 21 Feb 07 - 05:04 AM

Quote from the above Telegraph article:

The Transport Secretary, Douglas Alexander, has accused its organisers of spreading "myths" and pledged to press ahead with plans to pilot the scheme.

I don't understand how they can pilot the scheme, without forcing a subset of motorists to install the GPS equipment in their cars. Who in their right minds would volunteer to take part?

(btw, "myths" = "what will happen if this becomes law" - just like the "myths" people 'spread' about the Licencing Bill, before that became law)


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: Tootler
Date: 21 Feb 07 - 05:39 PM

"According to their FAQs they only allow one signature from each computer to stop people inputting multiple signatures. This is because it is too easy to get loads of e-mail addys now."

Yet myself, my wife and my daughter all successfully signed the road pricing petition on the same computer as we currently only have one computer connected to the internet.

So it seems their checking is a little haphazard to say the least.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 27 Feb 07 - 04:49 AM

26,510


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 03 Mar 07 - 06:45 AM

35,328


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 03 Mar 07 - 06:46 AM

http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/licensing/


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 06 Mar 07 - 06:48 PM

41,696


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 06 Mar 07 - 07:22 PM

The following from Hamish Birchall

More than 40,000 have signed the live music/licensing petition which currently stands at no.4 in the list of over 4,200 petitions on the Number 10 site:
http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/list/open?sort=signers (to view petitions in order of signatures)
a href=http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/licensing/> http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/licensing/(to sign)

The petition was mentioned yesterday in the Commons during a short exchange between the licensing minister, Shaun Woodward, and MPs Malcolm Moss and Anne Milton (shadow culture minister). See Hansard extract below.

Note that Mr Woodward did not answer Malcolm Moss's question about the validity of the '60% of smaller venues licensed for live music' claim recently made by DCMS.

Woodward also rather misleadingly suggests that getting a licence for live music is a simple one-off process. It is a one-off process only for new applications seeking a permanent authorisation. Whether this is simple or not largely depends on whether there are any objections.

For those venues with a premises licence without a live music authorisation (at least 40%), another application ('variation') is required, plus the full premises licence fee, public advertisement costs and possible knock-on costs if objections lead to a public hearing. Annual 'inspection' fees remain, of course, albeit at a reduced level.

Places without a premises licence, but still requiring a live music authorisation, must apply for a Temporary Events Notice (up to 12 permitted per premises per year), £21 a time.

Note also that despite the latest MORI research, the minister is careful to refer to the evidence of the Act's impact as 'anecdotal'. Could he be refering to the latest Musician's Union survey?

~ ~ ~
House of Commons Monday 05 March 2007 - Oral Questions:

Licensing Act

8. Mr. Malcolm Moss (North-East Cambridgeshire) (Con): What assessment she [Tessa Jowell] has made of the effect of the provisions of the Licensing Act 2003 on the performance of live music. [124568]

The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport (Mr. Shaun Woodward): The live music forum will produce its analysis in the next few weeks. Current evidence is anecdotal, but it none the less suggests a broadly neutral impact.

Mr. Moss: According to the MORI research commissioned by the Minister's Department, only 60 per cent. of smaller venues that previously offered live music were given licences under the LicensingAct 2003, many of which have expensive conditions attached. Will the Minister tell the House what proportion of that group implemented the conditions? If he cannot do so, does that not render the statistics worthless, and what is the value of the Department's boast that the Act is good for live music?

Mr. Woodward: As the hon. Gentleman knows—he takes a keen interest in this area, which we welcome—the research published in December looked at 2,000 small establishments. It discovered that in only 3 per cent. of cases the new licensing requirements were a deterrent. From the anecdotal evidence, however, the impact appears to be broadly neutral, although it may be better than that. The hon. Gentleman will know that we are conducting a detailed analysis, which we will publish later. He should remember that the new process means that there is only one application, one fee and no renewals. The additional bonus is that local residents, who were seriously affected in the past by live music, now have a say, which is important.

Anne Milton (Guildford) (Con): I wonder whether the Minister is aware that over 38,000 people have signed the Downing street petition on live music. What comfort can he give that ever-growing body of people? Does he agree with the person who was recently reported in the press as saying that whoever dreamtup Downing street petitions was—and I quote with apologies, Mr. Speaker—"a prat"?

Mr. Woodward: We absolutely agree with the 30,000 people who rightly do not want music and dance to be restricted by burdensome licensing regulations. If the hon. Lady looks at the changes, she will see that there is one application process and one fee, with no renewals. Inconsistent fees, which were often excessive, and the standard book of conditions have been removed, and the fact that 63 per cent. of venues have either obtained a music licence or put on live music via other means shows that the Act is working. In a survey, 55 per cent. of people said that they found the process easy, although I admit that 25 per cent. found it hard. We will work to improve the system—we believe that it has already been improved—and we will take very seriously the evidence submitted in the next few weeks to see whether there are more improvements to be made.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: Bainbo
Date: 07 Mar 07 - 06:57 PM

I have my doubts about how effective these petitions are going to be. At the moment, I notice there are two concurrent petitions calling for the road pricing plan to be scrapped, and another calling for it not to be scrapped; there's one calling for the national anthem to be replaced with "Gold" by Spandau Ballet (5,546 signatures); and among the signatories to one calling for Ashley Hutchings to be knighted are one or two familiar names, but also "Matthew Groves" and "G R Esford Di Saster." Yeah, that one's gonna be taken seriously.

Still, if it raises the issue's profile, I suppose there's no actual harm in signing it. Apart from letting the Government have my name, addres and email. Which they probably have, already.

Yes, I'll sign.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 09 Mar 07 - 08:10 AM

46,351


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 09 Mar 07 - 08:35 AM

The live music forum will produce its analysis in the next few weeks. Current evidence is anecdotal, but it none the less suggests a broadly neutral impact.

No sign then of the 'explosion in live music' expected by the Government's Lord MacIntosh on the Act's introduction......

Now that the Government side now seem happy to see the statistics showing waht they see as 'a broudly neutral impact' - this is perhaps a good time to be reminded of the Government's response to the first petition.

We believe that the Act will make it simpler and more affordable than now to stage live entertainment in the vast majority of cases and increase opportunities for musicians and other artists to perform

We have also given an undertaking that we will review the existing descriptions of entertainment in the Act six to twelve months after the end of the transition period. If the Act has had an unintended, disproportionate negative effect on the provision of live music -or other forms of regulated entertainment-, there are powers already in the Bill to modify the position through secondary legislation. However we believe that the provisions in the Licensing Act will allow live music and other regulated entertainment to thrive.


As was pointed out at the time - it would be difficult not to improve on the then figure of 5% of premises with the old Public Entertainment Licence. But the important thing to remember is that some form of limited live music could then still take place in the remaining 95%.

As a result of the Act and the resulting and much lauded abolition of the 'two in a bar rule' - any form of live music is now made illegal - it would appear from the statistics - in 40% of available premises with a Premises Licence but without entertainment pemission.

Not my idea of a 'broadly neutral impact' or an 'explosion in live music'.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: Herga Kitty
Date: 10 Mar 07 - 05:19 AM

Anyone else hear Lord Redesdale on Saturday Live (BBC Radio 4) this morning, describing how he did the deal with Tessa Jowell to get Morris dancing exempted from the licensing requirement? (Which he rated top of his list of achievements in the House of Lords.)

Kitty


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 10 Mar 07 - 05:45 AM

(Which he rated top of his list of achievements in the House of Lords.)

It was a great disapointment when he sttod up in the Lords to announce that his side would still argue against many of the measures proposed but were going to vote with the Government.

For had he and the Lib Dem peers not supported the Government, the then Bill would not have become the current Act.

That would have been a far more effective way of protecting Morris dancing, sessions and many other things.

Did he explain why he did not take this course? One I feel that he could really have been proud of.

My understanding was that he regretted his actions, felt that he had been out manouvered and had obtained far more concessions than he actually had.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 10 Mar 07 - 06:04 AM

There is also a new Commons Early Day Motion (EDM) for you to ask your MP to sign.

Full details can be found on the following thread.

UK Licensing - Contact your MP


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 10 Mar 07 - 08:16 PM

http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/saturdaylive/2007/03/lord_redesdale.html


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: GUEST,Tom Bliss
Date: 11 Mar 07 - 03:38 AM

People seem to be reading this thread but not the new one about the Early Day Motion, which keeps falling off the bottom of the page.

The government can happily ignore the petition, but the early day motion is a different matter. This development could the the breakthrough if enough MPs sign.

Everyone who signed the petition needs to now contact his or her MP and ask them to sign the Early Day Motion here: CLICK THIS

Notice how few MPs have signed so far.

If you don't know who your MP is, CLICK THIS It's very easy to contact your MP, and they're far more likely to react to a constituent than the PM is to a petition.

If you want some words to help you with your message REWRITE THIS.

"It is important to use your own words, but some of these points may help:

* The most recent DCMS/MORI research found that 40% of smaller venues have lost any automatic entitlement to live music as a result of the new Licensing Act ('Licensing Act 2003 - The Experience of Smaller Establishments in applying for live music authorisation', December 2006').

* There is uncertainty about the status of the 60% of smaller venues said to have live music authorisation. DCMS do not know whether live music licence conditions, where they apply, have been implemented. Unless such conditions are implemented by the venue, having live music remains illegal.

* Under the old regime 100% of bars and restaurants licensed to sell alcohol could automatically provide one or two musicians.

* In the changeover to the new regime, all such venues were automatically granted permission to play recorded music, which also allows the provision of DJs.

* The provision of big screen broadcast sport or music is exempt, anywhere, no matter how powerfully amplified.

* The government has never provided any evidence that live music causes significant social harm, nor any evidence that live music is a greater risk as an entertainment than big screen sport in bars."

Thanks

Tom


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 11 Mar 07 - 04:09 AM

Part of the problem is that signing the petition or not is a matter for the individual. The EDM is another matter.

Many (Labour) MPs - even if asked by their constituents to do so - will be unwilling to be seen to support anything that is critical of the current Government.

I have written to ask mine to sign - but it is mostly unlikly that he will be prepared to sign it. Especially now that he is a junior minister in that Government.


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: GUEST,Tom Bliss
Date: 11 Mar 07 - 04:22 AM

True, but MPs like to be seen to respond to local requests. If enough people ask...


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 11 Mar 07 - 05:50 AM

This was the response to the last one. At least all those MPs who signed that one should be prepared to sign the new one.

Commons Early Day Motion 331


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 13 Mar 07 - 01:58 AM

50,302

http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/licensing/


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 15 Mar 07 - 12:19 PM

53,013


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 19 Mar 07 - 04:14 AM

55,268


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 22 Mar 07 - 05:28 AM

58,167


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 23 Mar 07 - 08:14 AM

Nope, no sign of a change from mine, but after hearing today that Miskin Folk Festival is cancelled, due to heavy handed use of the new law by the local authority, he is about to receive a very angry communication from this constituent.

Don T.


The following thread is (now) about the late cancellation of this festival.

Miskin 2007


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 25 Mar 07 - 03:44 PM

59,981


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 29 Mar 07 - 05:52 AM

61,687

http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/licensing/


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 01 Apr 07 - 07:25 PM

63,164


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 07 Apr 07 - 08:26 PM

65,734


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 13 Apr 07 - 09:22 AM

67,606


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: The Shambles
Date: 19 Apr 07 - 03:42 AM

Deadline to sign up by: 11 June 2007

– Signatures: 69,153


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Subject: RE: UK Licensing Act - another petition.
From: GUEST,Geoff Wright
Date: 19 Apr 07 - 07:13 AM

If you think the Licensing Act has affected Music and the Arts, you haven't seen anything yet.
A new stealth tax of Olympian proportions is just over the horizon, but already, all Arts funding has been axed for the forseeable future. Which do you want - more Arts or New Labour Games organised (sic) by the Ministry for Supercasinos and Late Night Opening?.

They aren't interested in musicians' votes, so make sure yours counts!


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