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Pubs and venues to be protected from noise complaints

Publar and music spaces will be protected from noise complaints under the amendments planned in license rules.

Within the scope of reforms, developers who want to build close to spaces are told to sound -proof buildings, while the permissions are quickly monitored for new businesses or expanded in places determined.

The government hopes that changes will make it easier to open new bars in unused shops and to drink open air, to eat and encourage live performances in the air.

The government said that the changes would bring “vitality” to the struggling city centers, while the Conservative Labor Party tax policy is responsible for the “injury of the hospitality industry”.

A few popular pubs and music venues come after a possible closing on the noise complaints and leads to campaigns in some cities.

Last December, Moth Club, an independent music and comedy venue in East London, launched a challenging petition to build a new circle block on the side, fears that could be closed on fears.

“We can’t make money before we make noise,” He told the manager to BBC at that time.

In Manchester, the venue was caught day and night A three -year legal war with the Council Noise complaints made by a neighbor in 2021.

Finally, he was allowed to continue working as a nightclub with noise limiting restrictions.

The government also hopes that a planned reform of country licenses regulations will facilitate the opening of new ones and reversal the decline in the pub industry.

The British beer and PUB Association estimated that the number of pubs in the UK has been constantly decreasing every year since 2000, and in the UK, Wales and Scotland, 378 pubs in 2025 would have more than 5,600 direct work loss.

On Tuesday, Brewdog, the pub chain, was the last to announce the cuts. 10 bar at the closing of England “increased costs, increasing regulation and economic pressures”.

Chancellor Rachel Reeves, the government consulted changes, “bars and bars in the heart of British life,” he said.

“For a long time, chunky, drowning with outdoor rules. Not only for the summer, but for the whole year, we combine them to eat pavement, in the air and protect street parties.”

Shadow Business Secretary Andrew Griffith said: “Although any bureaucracy for hospitality is welcomed, this is pure hypocrisy and inconsistency from labor.”

He was accused of doubling the work rates for workmanship, and accused the hospitality industry with the full drowning of the business tax and employment bureaucracy.

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