The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Fresh calls for licence reprieve to help pubs

- ROSS GARDINER

More voices are being added to calls for authoritie­s in Perthshire to change their alcohol licensing standpoint until bars can reopen.

Management at Alyth Hotel recently asked Perth and Kinross licensing bosses to postpone premises’ licence bills worth hundreds of pounds.

Now, Ryan Mollison, who runs The Anglers Inn in Guildtown, is calling for a drastic rethink of the approach to the annual charge while pubs remain closed.

Ryan took on the watering hole in July 2019 and managed half a year of solid trading before being thrown into turmoil.

Having lost months of value from last year’s licence, Ryan has barely been able to pull a pint since renewing.

His family business has received support through the council and suppliers, but has had to cut staff after seeing bookings dry up.

Ryan feared that if he let his paperwork lapse, he would face a bureaucrat­ic hold-up to serve alcohol again and face significan­tly higher fees by reapplying from square one.

The licensing board is a separate legal entity to the council, and officers confirmed that by the end of September its income had dropped by two-thirds on the previous year.

Ryan said: “We’re waiting to reopen but we’re planning for Easter weekend at the earliest.

“When we were told we couldn’t serve alcohol indoors, it was a big loss.

“The licence cost just under £200 but it will be nearer £500 to reapply from scratch.

“We’ve lost two months of this licence already. I think it should be paid in monthly instalment­s, where if you can’t serve alcohol, you don’t pay.

“We’ve had some great support but when you face little things like this, it’s just difficult.”

Licensing board officers wrote to Ryan, who has been offered fee postponeme­nts from the bodies which license his bar’s music and TV, to say that abatements had been considered but ruled out in October.

Council bosses admitted that if they subsidised alcohol licences, they would be cornered into providing the same reprieve for holders of all types of licence.

Board convener Kathleen Baird said: “Interestin­gly, more than 500 businesses have paid their licence fee already.

“Most have paid in full but we are giving people the opportunit­y to pay in instalment­s. Very few have taken this up.

“Normally, all the licence fees are charged in October. Most have been paid, a few licences have been surrendere­d and a few are outstandin­g.

“We aren’t hounding people for payments, but they will need to be paid. I’m delighted so many firms have had the confidence to pay now.

“It must be absolutely terrible just now and I really hope they can reopen soon.”

Perth and Kinross Council said it is keeping the position for 2021-22 under review.

John Swinney, SNP MSP for Perthshire North, also called for publicans to be supported.

“Pubs are amongst the businesses that have been most affected by the Covid-19 pandemic,” he said.

“It would therefore be appropriat­e for the licensing board to consider an approach to licence fee collection that reflects the current difficulti­es facing publicans.

“I have raised this matter on behalf of several constituen­ts with Perth and Kinross Council’s chief executive, but this decision is ultimately one for the licensing board.”

“We’ve lost two months of this licence already

 ??  ?? PUB CLOSED: Ryan Mollison of The Anglers Inn in Guildtown is calling for a rethink on licensing charges. Picture by Steve Macdougall.
PUB CLOSED: Ryan Mollison of The Anglers Inn in Guildtown is calling for a rethink on licensing charges. Picture by Steve Macdougall.

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