New rules for alfresco dining

alfresco

Cheshire East Council is launching a revised system for licensing outdoor eating and drinking areas.

The authority is responding to the recent increase in popularity of alfresco seating and is keen to ensure all owners of such premises comply with standards set by the Council.

The new rules are intended to ensure alfresco areas are safe and accessible and do not obstruct pedestrians, wheelchair users and people with pushchairs.

The revised licensing policy covers all outdoor seating areas on the public pavement and will come into affect from July 1st , 2011.

Businesses will be able operate refreshment areas outside their premises providing they comply with the conditions of the policy and are successful in obtaining a licence.

Cheshire East Councillor Rod Menlove, Cabinet member with responsibility for environmental services, said: "We recognise the popularity of alfresco areas in Cheshire East and the vibrancy they add to our towns. We want to encourage the use of alfresco dining while reminding those who have such seating areas of the standards they are expected to meet.

"Ensuring that such areas are accessible will be a benefit to us all, particularly people with a visual impairment or limited mobility."

Madelyn Bridge, chief executive of Age UK in Cheshire East, fully supports the policy.

She said: "There is no doubt that alfresco dining and socialising brings vitality to our communities and actually makes people feel safer on the streets. All we ask is for those enjoying open spaces to consider less-able residents and ensure there is enough unobstructed pavement to pass without fear of tripping."

The conditions of an alfresco licence are:

  • The alfresco area should be located immediately in front of the premises, should not be wider than the front of the premises. The maximum depth of the area is three metres.
  • Ample space should be left for pedestrians and emergency vehicles to pass safely. Generally this should be 1.8m on pavements and 2.3m on pavements with a bus stop.
  • The area must be clearly marked and be contained within portable barriers. The barrier must not be less than 800mm high and either continuous to the ground or incorporate a lower rail or tap board.
  • No money should be exchanged outside the premises, customers must go inside the business to make payments.
  • Food should only be prepared inside the premises, it must not be prepared outside.
  • The area must be kept clean and tidy at all time and furniture cleared from the area outside trading hours.
  • Alfresco areas can operate between the hours of 7am and 11pm, subject to other licensing restrictions.
  • All seating, tables and barriers must be removed from the pavement and stored away outside the hours of operation.
  • Businesses wishing to set up an alfresco area must have public liability insurance to the value of £5 million per incident.
  • Any A-boards, banners or signs must be in accordance with Cheshire East Council's Clear Way Forward Policy.

The cost for an initial licence is £150 for premises wishing to provide an alfresco seating area for up to four people and the annual renewal fee is £100. For premises wishing to provide an alfresco seating area for more than four people the cost for an initial licence is £550 and the annual renewal is £330.

Councillor Menlove added: "The pricing structure means the authority only recovers the cost it incurs through the application process. We want to ensure a fair deal for owners and managers and so smaller venues pay less for their licence than their larger counterparts.

"I would advise anyone applying for a licence to seek advice from Cheshire East Council to discuss the policy in more detail on 0300 123 5020."

Leaflets will be delivered to all Cheshire East's café, restaurant, bar, pub and takeaway owners or managers, outlining the licensing system.

Tags:
Cheshire East Council, Rod Menlove
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Comments

Here's what readers have had to say so far. Why not add your thoughts below.

Malcolm McClean
Monday 16th May 2011 at 1:10 pm
I must have read that wrong. I thought the East Cheshire representative said they wanted to encourage it. They are just introducing a new tax on small businesses and making jobs for themselves... and the idea that you can't pay for a cup of coffee without going inside to do so? What other country in the world operates that system? Even after the cuts there would seem to be still too many people working in the public sector trying to find something to do.
Jon Williams
Monday 16th May 2011 at 1:29 pm
Does this mean that any of the wooden seating area's outside a couple of premises in London Road will have to come down ?

■ The area must be clearly marked and be contained within portable barriers. The barrier must not be less than 800mm high and either continuous to the ground or incorporate a lower rail or tap board.
■ No money should be exchanged outside the premises, customers must go inside the business to make payments.
■ Food should only be prepared inside the premises, it must not be prepared outside.
■ The area must be kept clean and tidy at all time and furniture cleared from the area outside trading hours.
■ Alfresco areas can operate between the hours of 7am and 11pm, subject to other licensing restrictions.
■ All seating, tables and barriers must be removed from the pavement and stored away outside the hours of operation.
Lisa Reeves
Monday 16th May 2011 at 2:42 pm
Hi Jon, this new policy only applies if the seating area is on public pavement.

In Alderley Edge many of the restaurants and shops own the area out the front, eg Gusto, so if the seating is on their own land then it doesn't apply.
Jon Williams
Monday 16th May 2011 at 5:47 pm
Bubble room. next to the Post Office ?
Mark Russell
Tuesday 17th May 2011 at 10:28 am
Absoluty obsurd. Yet again the council stopping perfectly sound businesses from making a fair buck.

■ Food should only be prepared inside the premises, it must not be prepared outside.

What about the restaurant on London road in between the butchers (im sorry the name escapes me) who when the weather is nice has a little bbq on the go and cooks for his outside guests in front of them. Im asumming its the owner who cooks on it, he talks to all the passers by, makes a cracking atmosphere, a good advert for the village etc etc. Who is that hurting?? Nobody, thats who. Another silly rule amung thousands dreamt up by people in council offices with nothing better to do with their time. I would have thought we'd got rid of these idiots with all the cut backs?

■ No money should be exchanged outside the premises, customers must go inside the business to make payments.

Again, why? Is it a secret that we pay for things with money in Cheshire East???????

Is anybody allowed to attempt to make any money in this area any more or is this council determined to run this area into the ground and just have every other premises a costa coffee and then a tesco's? Im all for allowing access on pavements for the elderly and blind etc but what the hell has it got to with the council where we pay for what we have had for our evening meal? Next they will be telling us what colour plastic recepticul to put our different types of cardboard into! oops..... too late
Graeme Simister
Thursday 19th May 2011 at 4:05 pm
As long as wheel chairs and guide dogs with their respective owners can get past without stepping in to the road, who cares where people pay, or the food is prepared. If it is not hygenic people will not eat there.

If we wre discussing A-signs then the proprietors should learn grammar and to spell, not set a bad example to the young. Apostrosphes seem to appear before every s, e.g. coffee's, and Panini is already plural and does not require an s. Come on cafe owners, get it right.