One third of English pubs allowed to extend their opening hours
Sunday, November 27, 2005pubs, clubs or shops selling alcohol came into effect, allowing around 60,000 establishments in England and Wales to extend their opening hours beyond the 23.00 limit in force until then, and dating back to the First World War. About 1000 premises, among which 359 are pubs or clubs, have applied and been granted a round the clock authorization, allowing them to stay open for 24 hours.
At midnight on November 24, a new licensing law concerning the opening hours of English and WelshTessa Jowell, Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, expressed hope that this extension in opening times will lower the crave for massive drinking, prompted by the early closing of establishments. The British Beer and Pub Association, in a press release from 25 November, 2005, states "The change is about treating adults like grown-ups, and giving them more choice for a social life after eleven o’clock.".
Concern has been raised throughout the media and diverse health organisations about a possible rise in violence and alcoholism due to this new law, but the first night seems to have gone well, although authorities claim that the effects can only be really measured in six months time, when more establishments have been granted extended hours and the public has become used to the new hours.
Sources
edit- "New licensing law" — Directgov.co.uk, November 23, 2005
- Mali Ilse Paquin. "De l'alcool 24 heures par jour" — Cyberpresse, November 25, 2005
- British Beer and Pub Association. "Licensing Act brings modest and sensible change, says BBPA" — British Beer and Pub Association (press release), November 25, 2005
- "Pubs in new 24-hour opening era" — BBC News, November 24, 2005
- "A third of pubs to extend opening hours" — Daily Mail, November 23, 2005
- Hugh Muir and Maren Peters. "A new dawn for drinkers at stroke of midnight" — The Guardian, November 24, 2005
- "Fin d'une époque pour les pubs britanniques" — Tageblatt, November 24, 2005