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LBRO - Retail giants and councils pioneer partnerships

Retail giants and councils pioneer new regulatory partnerships

12/09/08

Some of Britain's biggest businesses and most innovative councils are to pioneer a new type of regulatory partnership designed to ensure that key trading laws are applied consistently across the UK.

Retail giants B&Q, Boots, John Lewis, Tesco, Sainsbury's and Waitrose are gearing up to test the new Primary Authority partnerships with council regulators in Bracknell Forest, City of London, Dundee, Eastleigh, Hampshire, Hertfordshire, Highland, Nottinghamshire, Wakefield, West Yorkshire and Westminster.

The statutory Primary Authority scheme run by the Local Better Regulation Office (LBRO) will be available to all businesses that operate across many local authorities from April 2009, with the test phase running from October 2008 to March 2009.

Government estimates suggest the scheme could eventually save business up to £48 million a year.

Shriti Vadera, Minister for Business, said:

"The Primary Authority scheme is a big step forward that will save time and money for businesses and local authorities across the country.

"It will provide clear and consistent support for businesses, better protection for consumers, and a strong framework for local authorities to improve inspection and enforcement."


Graham Wynn, Assistant Director for Consumer Affairs at the British Retail Consortium, said:

"The BRC has strongly supported the development of an effective system of Primary Authorities. This will require a practical and flexible approach. The test phase should help to ensure that the system can be fine tuned and be ready to be rolled out nationwide next April. It is essential LBRO scores an early win on getting the right structure in place."

Clive Grace, the LBRO Chair, said:

"The local regulation of business is critical to Britain's prosperity and to the protection of consumers, workers, and the environment. The Primary Authority scheme will be a major improvement in the local regulation of business. It puts current voluntary arrangements, which businesses find useful but too limited, onto a statutory footing.

"Inconsistent advice from different councils can damage prosperity, cause frustration and add to business costs. The new scheme will help ensure consistency, and improve companies' confidence about getting robust and reliable advice from council regulators. Their new partnerships with councils are a key part of Better Local Regulation, improving compliance and reducing red tape.

"The Primary Authority scheme will benefit not only the giant retailers but any business trading across council boundaries or on the web. It will also stimulate changes in culture and approach among council regulators, as they become more attuned to the impact of their work on the way their local businesses and economies operate, and the kind of help business needs to be able to get on with the job of creating prosperity." 

Currently businesses can run the risk of prosecution even if they follow official advice if local inspectors disagree about how to interpret regulations. A lack of consistency in local regulation can also result in discrepancies in protection for consumers, workers and the environment.

Under the Primary Authority scheme any business that trades across council boundaries can ask to register one local authority as its source of specialist advice about compliance with trading standards and environmental health regulations.

The partnerships will mean better co-ordination of local inspection and enforcement activity. Before local regulators start proceedings against a participating company, they will need to agree with its Primary Authority a course of enforcement action that is consistent with previously given advice. LBRO will help resolve any differences of opinion.

In the run up to April 2009, LBRO will be working with key businesses and councils to develop the draft agreements and inspection plans, and test the referral of enforcement queries.

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© 2012 LBRO