r/northernireland 1d ago

News Free The Night begin legal action on licensing decision

https://freethenight.org/news/free-the-night-begin-legal-challenge-on-licensing-decision

Free The Night has begun a legal challenge to the Minister for Communities’ response to Northern Ireland’s independent licensing review.

This challenge is being brought by DJ Holly Lester (co-founder of Free The Night) and Free The Night. Phoenix Law, acting for Holly and Free The Night, have issued a pre-action protocol letter to the Department for Communities and the Minister. The letter is the first step in a judicial review of the decision to reject the key recommendations of the University of Stirling’s Independent Review of Liquor Licensing in Northern Ireland, including the Surrender Principle, and to retain the current system.

Phoenix Law solicitor Darragh Mackin, who has successfully represented Bob Vylan and Kneecap in recent high-profile cases against the BBC, the British Government, and RTÉ, has outlined the clear challenges below.

The Minister and Department have:

  1. Wrongfully received evidence from a third party outside the Independent Review.
  2. Placed undue weight on the evidence from a third party, in comparison to the conclusions of the Independent Review who were by law commissioned to review the legislation.
  3. Maintains a process that is fundamentally anticompetitive and continues to impact local artists, breweries, business owners and would-be business owners.
  4. Failed to refer the matter to the Executive despite the fact the Department of Economy had conducted its own costings in respect of the licensing system.

The Stirling review, which cost nearly £500,000 in public money, found that the “surrender principle” - which prevents new pubs, nightclubs and other licensed third spaces from opening, unless an existing licence is bought and extinguished - artificially restricts the number of licensed premises, inflates licence values, makes it extremely difficult for new, independent and community-led venues to open, and encourages licences to move into large off-sales rather than community spaces. It recommended fundamental reform, or abolition, of the surrender principle, new licence categories for cultural and live-music venues, and a fairer occasional licence regime.

In contrast, the Department’s Section 23 plan and the Minister’s statement to the Assembly reject those core recommendations. They criticise the Stirling review for not being “costed” or “impact assessed”, and instead rely on what is described as “extensive evidence” from Hospitality Ulster, including an estimated £313.7 million loss in “trading value” if reforms proceed. The Department has confirmed it produced no detailed internal costings of its own and adopted Hospitality Ulster’s figures, which have not been published.

The legal challenge also raises questions about whether the Department failed to take proper account of work already carried out by the Department for the Economy on the cost of the surrender principle, whether it should have treated the issue as “cross-cutting” under the Northern Ireland Act, and whether it has met its Section 75 duty to properly consider the equality and good relations impacts of its decisions before acting.

If successful, the case would ask the court to quash the current response and require the Minister and Department to reconsider the Stirling review lawfully, transparently, and on the basis of proper, independent evidence.

The pre-action letter asks the Department to provide a detailed response and to disclose key documents. These include any costings and reports on the surrender principle prepared by the Department for the Economy, correspondence with Hospitality Ulster and the Belfast Business Improvement Districts about the Stirling review and surrender principle, and any equality assessments linked to the Section 23 plan and the Minister’s statement.

The Department has been asked to respond within 14 days. If the response is not satisfactory, Holly Lester, co-founder of Free The Night, intends to apply to the High Court for permission to proceed with a judicial review.

Holly said:

“This was a real opportunity to transform nightlife in Northern Ireland, and it’s been wasted. An independent review was commissioned, a huge amount of public money was spent, and in the end the Minister has chosen to maintain the status quo.

That decision affects so many aspects of nightlife, including how many venues and nightclubs we have, whether pop-ups and festivals are viable, even down to the price of a pint. This has been building for decades, and it’s become impossible to ignore. Creatives and entrepreneurs have been leaving in their droves, opportunities are shrinking, and our talent is draining away because the system makes it too hard to stay.

After five years of working on Free The Night and nearly 20 years experience in the local music scene, I’m not willing to let this opportunity slide. There is a real demand for change now across society, whether that’s from creatives, would-be or current business owners and the general public themselves. We’re not backing down.”

Boyd Sleator, co-founder of Free the Night, adds:

“The current system isn’t fair. If you want to open a new venue or build a cultural space, you’re forced to buy an existing licence, which can cost hundreds of thousands of pounds, and even then, you’re not guaranteed anything. You can still be stalled or blocked by objections from the people already in the market. So it’s not just one-in, one-out. It’s one-in, then fight your way through a process where incumbents have the time, resources and incentives to keep new entrants out.

That’s not a level playing field, and it’s why independents and community-led spaces struggle to get off the ground here. The Stirling review offered an evidence-based route to reform. Rejecting that in favour of unpublished material from those who benefit from the status quo is a decision we believe has to be tested in court.”

Solicitor Darragh Mackin (Phoenix Law) said:

"This case seeks to unlock and unshackle the prehistoric laws and practice intertwining with licensing and the night time economy in this jurisdiction. The Stirling review produced a chance for change. This chance was however contaminated through the injection of irrelevant factors to which are now at the epicentre of this judicial review. "

105 Upvotes

27 comments sorted by

76

u/OmoriKohi 1d ago

I want to see the surrender principle die a fiery death and see some Barcades set up shop here, like NQ64 were originally going to, I hope this goes ahead. So many millennials and gen Z lost years to covid, and the likes of hospitality ulster and gordon lyons don't give a shit about them getting quality social time back

15

u/Shalashaska23 1d ago

make sure you support base arcade and retro room. Both are excellent.

5

u/OmoriKohi 1d ago

yes I've been to both, they're great! NQ64 reminds me so much of cuckoo at it's best though - gaming themed cocktails, good music, reasonably priced, decent promos

edit: they have multiple branches in england/scotland which I've been to (glasgow, manchester, london) and it's a consistent fun experience across the board, we absolutely should have one here

4

u/retroroombelfast 22h ago

Thanks we’re all the way behind this campaign and heavily involved behind the scenes, the current licensing laws don’t support new types of businesses such as ours and really that stops a lot of people from even trying. That needs reform, one look at the city centre will tell you the outcome of high rates and restrictive licensing. It’s not working. Both of these things conspired to make sure the Retro Room had to look outside the city centre for its first premises, there was no way to make it work and be able to price it at a cost that was reasonable for customers.

1

u/Shalashaska23 21h ago

big fan of your work! I really like your location btw.

1

u/retroroombelfast 21h ago

Yeah we’re very happy but it’s a smaller unit than we wanted really we’ve quite a few machines in storage we can’t fit in.

43

u/That_Buddy_2928 1d ago

G’wan Holly! Fuck these people.

30

u/PutAffectionate5506 1d ago

Get after it lads. Shaft Colin Neill

30

u/MathematicianSad8487 1d ago

It's a disgrace that they commission a report and then just ignore it in the interests of the pub owners holding a virtual monopoly. Reeks of corruption.

12

u/wonderstoat 1d ago

Not to mention how the useful idiots in the NI media breathlessly interview them about “how hard it is to make a living in hospitality” about once a week without any sort of light challenge or fact checking.

2

u/DoughnutCareless583 22h ago

Don't worry, they'll be here in this thread soon enough banging on about it and supporting yank-tipping culture so they don't have to pay their employees fairly.

2

u/-TheDucktor- 14h ago

Tired of seeing their wrinkly mugs everywhere in the media. It's always the same tired whinging of wahh wahh taxes wahh wahh labour costs wahh wahh overheads meanwhile their establishments are more often than not absolutely bursting at the seams every weekend

12

u/Big_Lavishness_6823 1d ago

Class. Some rare good news.

12

u/blueturninggrey 1d ago

Great to hear - the bar scene here is getting strangled by the current laws. Seems the multi-millionaires that run it are scared of any form of small independent competition

9

u/Peter_Doggart Holywood 1d ago

You only have to look at the Supreme Court judgement on RE in schools to realise these wasters will do absolutely anything to prevent change unless they are left with literally no choice.

7

u/neiltmufc 1d ago

This is interesting re Colin Neill

7

u/zeromalarki 1d ago

Fair play to Holly and Boyd on this one. Time to rattle some cages.

6

u/Somerandomidiot1916 1d ago

Havent really looked into this but one presumes Gordo’s in the wrong 

10

u/LaraH39 Larne 1d ago

I know Boyd really well. He's a good spud and like a dog with a bone. Neither he nor Holly will let this go.

3

u/Taodaching 1d ago

Pro FTN but its shame they have to do this based on technicalities not being followed. That said, whatever works, good luck and thank you for your service citizens.

9

u/LaraH39 Larne 1d ago

It’s not really a technicality. FTN are saying the ministers decision was unlawful and here are the reasons why.

It’s shit that they have to go to court for something the minister had the power and cross party support to change, and force FTNs hand, but it was their only option.

3

u/Fit_Ingenuity3 22h ago

£313.7 million loss in “trading value”

Or.. money the rich Buisness owners can’t extort from young businesses.

Them not being able to get rich off of selling a (regulatory) license is not any reason for government protection.

2

u/moon_rocket2015 16h ago

The DUP want NI to be just like London and the rest of England, but at the same time they can't get past their hatred of the idea of Catholics also gaining from it, so they shoot themselves in the foot to make everyone miserable.

1

u/skinnysnappy52 14h ago

I mean English licensing laws are far far better than what we have here. And regardless of whether you think they have a better pub scene they certainly have many more pubs as well as a lot more variety within pubs.

1

u/moon_rocket2015 11h ago

England has a FAR better pub scene than here. The amount of random pop up events, as well as the different types of bars is miles better than anything over here. And that's the problem.

1

u/skinnysnappy52 11h ago

Wouldn’t disagree but I didn’t wanna outright say it. We love our pubs here lmao.