On 10 July 2003 the
Licensing Act 2003 for England and Wales was granted
royal assent and replaced the previous licensing laws for England and Wales, regulated under several different
Acts, with a single unified system covering a range of "regulated activities". Rules as to when establishments may open, for how long and under which criteria are now not laid down in statute but are individual to the premises and are contained in the conditions on each Premises Licence. The powers of the 2003 Act came fully into force on 24 November 2005. The "licensable activities" as: • the retail sale of alcohol, • the supply of alcohol in clubs, • the provision of late night refreshment, and • the provision of regulated entertainment. In turn, "regulated entertainment" is defined as: • a performance of a play, • an exhibition of a film, • an indoor sporting event, • a boxing or wrestling entertainment (both indoors and outdoors), • a performance of live music, • any playing of recorded music, • a performance of dance, and • entertainment of a similar description to that falling in the previous three categories listed above. There are many exemption categories and qualifications to the above definitions, particularly in respect of Regulated Entertainment and Late Night Refreshment. As a result of changes by the
Live Music Act 2012, for example, live music in on-licensed premises is no longer a licensable activity between 8:00am and 11:00pm in front of audiences of up to 200 people. Similarly performances of plays and of dance are not licensable in front of audiences of up to 500 people and indoor sporting events up to 1,000 people. These changes, brought in from 2013, alongside the Live Music Act in 2012, display a readiness by the
Coalition Government to deregulate the prescriptive and sometimes confusing definitions of Regulated Entertainment stated above (although the Live Music Act was a Private Members' Bill sponsored by Lord Clement-Jones and drafted by Poppleston Allen Solicitors, which was subsequently supported by the government). "Late night refreshment" is defined as: • the supply of hot food or drink (that is, food or drink that is either served at, or has been heated on the premises to, a point above ambient temperature) to the public for consumption, both on or off the premises, between 11:00pm and 5:00am.
Permitted hours Some long-standing traditions (indeed, legal requirements) have disappeared as a consequence. First, "permitted hours" gained a new meaning. Until the 2003 Act came into force on 24 November 2005, permitted hours were a standard legal constraint: for example, serving alcohol after 11:00pm meant that a licensing extension had to exist—either permanent (as for nightclubs, for example) or by special application from the licensee concerned for a particular occasion. There was also a customary general derogation permitting a modest extension on particular dates, such as New Year's Eve and some other public holidays. Licensees did not need to apply for these and could take advantage of them if they wished without any formality. Now, permitted hours are theoretically continuous: it is possible for a Premises Licence that allows 24-hour opening to be held, and indeed some do exist. Most licensed premises do not go this far, but many applied for licences in 2005 that allowed them longer opening hours than before. However, as in the past, there is no obligation for licensees to use all the time permitted to them. Premises that still close (for commercial reasons) at 11:00pm during most of the week may well have licences permitting them to remain open longer, perhaps for several hours. Staying open after 11:00pm on the spur of the moment is therefore legal at such premises if the licensee decides to do so. The service of alcohol must still cease when the licence closing time arrives. Only the holder of the comparatively rare true "24-hour" licence has complete freedom in this respect.
Drinking-up time The consumption of alcohol itself is not considered a "licensable activity" under the new Licensing Act. Therefore, "drinking-up time" (DUT) has no legal meaning and has disappeared. For many years ten minutes (and later extended to twenty minutes) was the legal dispensation that allowed the consumption of alcohol to continue after the official closing time, which in recent times meant that customers could still drink what they had already bought until 11:20pm, subject to the licensee's discretion. After that time consumption had to stop, also. With the end of standard permitted hours, this concession became irrelevant, and there is no mention of DUT in the 2003 Act. Instead, applicants for Premises Licences may specify the maximum period (their "Opening Hours") for which they wish to allow their customers to stay after the time at which the sale of alcohol ends ("the terminal hour") within their operating schedule. Some licences do not specify opening hours at all, which allows an unspecified drinking up time, determined only by the licensee's discretion. In contrast, some licensees call for "last orders" twenty minutes (or more) before the end of the opening hours specified on their Premises Licence.
Serving after 11:00pm Part of the changes since 2005 allows pubs to serve alcohol past 11:00pm; this particular part of the legislation was, and remains, very controversial owing to the perceived increase in potential for
binge drinking and the effects the change will have on social dynamics. However the new law's defenders have claimed that the relatively early 11:00pm closing time itself contributed to binge drinking as patrons hurried to drink before closing time. The
Labour Party also claimed that the fixed closing time contributed to social disorder as all drunken pub patrons were forced into the street at the same time. Both the
Conservative Party and
Liberal Democrats unsuccessfully called for a delay in the implementation of this law.
Licensing policies Each licensing authority must adopt a licensing policy, which gives guidance on when licences will be granted and the conditions and permitted hours likely to be imposed on a Premises Licence in various circumstances.
Licensing objectives The licensing authority, in considering any application for a licence or for a variation, must have regard to "the licensing objectives":
Licensing authorities The licensing authorities are local councils. In two-tier parts of England and Wales, these are the
district or borough councils and elsewhere unitary authorities are the licensing authorities. In Scotland each council has a Licensing Board to act as licensing authority. For a Premises Licence, the licensing authority is the council for the place where the premises is located; where they straddle a boundary, the applicant may choose either one. For a Personal Licence, it is the licensing authority in whose area the applicant lives. The licensing authority is also responsible for the issue of a Personal Licence.
Personal Licence The Personal Licence allows an individual to sell alcohol or authorise its sale by others. A Personal Licence applicant must, prior to making an application, pass an exam, known as the Award for Personal Licence Holders (APLH) The APLH exam is a 40-question, multiple-choice paper, in which the applicant must achieve a score of 28 out of 40, or 70 percent. The applicant must also obtain "Basic Disclosure", which details any unspent convictions. Upon application and if the applicant has no unspent relevant convictions, the licensing authority must grant a Personal Licence, now with no expiry date attached. If relevant convictions are disclosed, the licensing authority must send a copy of the application to the local police, which may object within 14 days. A hearing may then follow. The applicant must make his or her application to the licensing authority where they ordinarily reside. Any changes to the Personal Licence thereafter (for example, name or address) must be notified to that original licensing authority, even if the Personal Licence Holder ("PLH") has subsequently moved out of the area. Failure to do so is a criminal offence. A PLH, if charged with a relevant criminal offence, must tell the court at the first appearance that they are a holder of a Personal Licence. Failure to do so is a criminal offence. If the PLH is convicted of the original offence, the court may suspend or forfeit the personal licence. A Personal Licence is valid: • in England and Wales, indefinitely. The act originally required a holder to renew his or her Personal Licence every 10 years. Owing to the vast number of licences first issued under the new regime in 2005, and the burden it would have on licensing authorities, the government made all Personal Licences run indefinitely by enactment of section 69 of the
Deregulation Act 2015; • in Scotland, also 10 years but after 5 years the licence holder must satisfy the local licensing board that he or she has passed a refresher course; • in Northern Ireland, also 10 years and under substantially stricter conditions as the licensing authorities in England, Wales, and Scotland. A Personal Licence granted in one jurisdiction is not valid in another. All businesses and organisations selling or supplying alcohol, except members' clubs and certain community premises, must have a Designated Premises Supervisor (DPS). The DPS, who is listed on a Premises Licence, is expected to be responsible for the day-to-day running of the premises, but this is not required by the Act. The DPS is required to hold a Personal Licence where the retail sale of alcohol is a permitted activity on the licence.
Local variations Local authorities have decided whether or not to exercise their power to introduce specific local restrictions on outdoor drinking. For example
Reading Borough Council is among authorities to have emulated the conditions of
Transport for London that ban drinking in certain locations and the carrying of open alcohol in parts of
Reading town centre. The open alcohol-container ban and ban on alcohol consumption outright set a lower threshold than being
drunk or drunk and disorderly in a public place. ==Concerns==