Newsletter registration

Don’t refuse to mediate! Engage
Smile for the Camera?
ADHD diagnosis and disability
The coroner's duty to notify the DPP
Racist comments from one employee to another

Court of Protection case update: July 2025
Maximising ROI in renewable energy: Legal, technical, and financial strategies for net-zero success
Personal circumstances, public safety, and the planning balance
The Environment (Principles, Governance and Biodiversity Targets (Wales) Bill: the key provisions
Errors of law, materiality and remedies

What next for rent reviews?
Commonhold reform – the beginning of the end?
The CAT’s approach to Subsidy Decision Reviews: Fast, cheap and simple?
Millbrook Healthcare Limited v Devon County Council – Its impact on local government procurement
Early insights into the English Devolution and Community Empowerment Bill
The section 58 defence in the Highways Act 1980
Risk assessments in care proceedings: L-G and Re T
Turbulence ahead
PFI – a new era?
Costs in discrimination claims brought by litigants in person
The Building Safety Act and retrospective service charge protection
Right to Buy (RTB) leases — be warned about service charges
Awaab’s Law – implementation of Phase 1
Seven key insights: Lord Justice Birss considers AI in civil justice
Imperative requirements in homelessness: nuts and bolts on a bumpy roadmap to suitable accommodation
Neurodiversity in the Family Justice System Panel Discussion
Employment Law Webinar Series - May to July - 42 Bedford Row
Home Truths - Dissecting Section 16J: Criminal Confusion in the Renters’ Rights Bill - 42 Bedford Row
Home Truths: Grounds for Possession under the Renters' Rights Bill - 42 Bedford Row
Airport Subsidy Challenged in the CAT
IPA guidance 2025: Managing PFI distress and preparing for expiry
What might the public inquiry on child sexual exploitation look like
Data (Use and Access) Act – Updating Data Protection Law and more
High Court Dismisses Challenge to New Super Prison
AI, copyright and LLMs
Automatic suspensions and the public interest
FOI and communication
Too much?
Deploying ‘ADR’ in Planning & Compensation contexts
Removal from the village green register
The attendance of experts in family proceedings
Local authority enforcement powers and domestic beekeeping
Too little? When intervention is not required
Closures of educational sites
Public law case update Q1 2025
Must read

Families refusing access to support
Must read

Families refusing access to support
Borough council consults on 'preferred option' of late night levy
Woking Borough Council has launched a consultation on proposals for its preferred option of a late night levy.
- Details
The local authority said it favoured a levy following initial consultation with its licensing committee, its corporate management group, the Police and Crime Commissioner, the chief of police, the police and interested parties.
The consultation reveals that Woking’s intention, amongst other things, is to:
- Introduce the levy to all licenses that allow the sale of alcohol, on and off premises, after midnight on any day;
- Grant an exemption to the levy if a licence only allows alcohol sales beyond the levy threshold on New Year’s Eve;
- Set at 30% the maximum combined discount that it will grant from the levy for active membership of certain benchmark schemes such as Pubwatch, Clubwatch, Shopwatch, Offwatch and Best Bar None;
- Where a Pubwatch, Clubwatch, Shopwatch, Offwatch or similar recognised scheme is actively running in the borough, award holders of premises licenses that are members of such a scheme a 10% discount from the levy for each scheme (up to the maximum 30%). This is provided their premises has been represented at 60%, or greater, of meetings of each scheme claimed held in the year proceeding the date when the levy is due;
- Award, where a Best Bar None scheme or similar (but not Pubwatch) is actively running in the borough, holders of premises licenses that are members of such a scheme a 20% discount from the levy (provided this does not take the premises over the maximum 30%). This is also provided their premises has achieved Gold Accreditation in the scheme operating in the year proceeding the due date of the levy;
- Grant exemptions for certain types of venue including hotels, rural pubs, theatres, cinemas and members clubs;
- Exclude premises with overnight accommodation where alcohol sold between midnight and 6 am is only sold to residents for consumption on the premises;
- Retain 30% of the levy in a community fund to which bids can be made from relevant bodies. The remaining 70% will go to Surrey Police.
Woking’s consultation also contains questions on an Early Morning Restriction Order “to gain a balanced view of opinions”.
A fresh consultation would have to be undertaken, should the current consultation lead to a change of view and an EMRO becoming the favoured option.
The consultation runs for 12 weeks until 23 August 2013. More information can be found here.
22-10-2025 4:00 pm
05-11-2025 4:00 pm
22-10-2025 4:00 pm
05-11-2025 4:00 pm