The Independent

‘Busybody’s charter’ lets councils ban legal activities

- ADAM BARNETT

Councils are usingnewpo­wers to ban and punish legal activities including rough sleeping, busking and “loitering in groups”, as campaigner­s warn of a curbing of civil liberties.

More than 70 local authoritie­s have used Public Spaces Protection Orders, which ban activities that have a “detrimenta­l effect on the quality of life” of residents, since they were introduced by the Government in 2014.

Research by the libertaria­n Manifesto Club found that 130 PSPOs have been used by 79 councils, out of the 346 able to use these powers. These include 34 bans on drinking alcohol, 12 on legal highs or intoxicati­ng substances, 13 “no-dog zones” or areas where dogs must be kept on leads, and 12 bans on loitering or congregati­ng in groups near bus stops or near parked cars.

Kettering Council imposed a curfew on under-18s banning them from going out alone between 11pm and 6am, and joined eight other councils in banning swearing in public.

Six authoritie­s banned begging or “aggressive begging” while Luton andWolverh­ampton councils imposed bans in certain areas on camping vehicles and caravans.

Four councils banned performing music in public, including busking or other forms of street entertainm­ent, while 10 authoritie­s banned shouting or loud noise.

“In many of these PSPOs, the activity being banned is not, in itself, harmful,”

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