The Chief Officer
Elections and Regulatory submitted a report for Members
consideration of an application to grant a premises licence made by
Reksio Limited, for Reksio Mini Market, 5 Middleton District
Centre, Ring Road Middleton, Middleton, Leeds, LS10 4AX.
Attending the meeting were:
- Tony Clarke –
JMC Licensing – Applicant’s Representative
- Mohammed Ahmad
– Director of Reksio Ltd – Applicant
The Legal officer explained the procedure for
the hearing. As there were only two Members on the Sub-Committee,
the applicant agreed to proceed with the hearing on this basis.
The Licensing Officer presented the
application informing the Members of the following points:
-
The application was for the grant of a premises
licence made by Reksio Limited, for Reksio Mini Market, 5 Middleton
District Centre, Ring Road Middleton, Middleton, Leeds, LS10
4AX.
-
The licence was for a newsagent also selling
European foodstuffs, situated in a mixed-use retail section of a
block of retail units. This was the first licence application made
by the premises.
-
In summary, the application was for Sale by retail
of alcohol (for consumption off the premises) every day 07:00 -
23:00.
-
Responsible Authorities and Ward Members had been
notified of the application. Negotiations and amendments to the
operating schedule had been made, including the provision of CCTV
to address issues of anti-social behaviour and youths
congregating.
-
Two public objection comments had been received,
which remained outstanding. The objectors held fears of
retribution, personal details had been redacted, the objectors
remained anonymous and had thus not attended the
hearing.
-
A copy of the application form was available at
appendix A, a map of the locality at appendix B, agreements with
WYP at appendix C, agreements with Councillor Dixon at appendix D,
redacted objection comments at appendix E and a list of local
licensed premises at appendix F.
The applicant’s representative provided
the Sub-Committee with the following information:
- The applicant had
owned the premises since October 2023, the premises and previously
been a paper shop.
- The applicant had
signed a 15 year lease and had refurbished the shop at a
substantial cost, showing his long term commitment to the shop and
the community.
- With the
applicant’s representative having conducted a site visit to
the shop a day prior to the hearing, the shop was outlined to be
ordered and clean and there were no issues with youths congregating
noted.
- Waste bins had been
provided outside the shop, one which the applicant paid for at a
cost of £1,000 per annum and another bin was approximately 30
yards from the premises within the parade of shops.
- 3 temporary event
notice (TEN) licences had been granted for the store to sell
alcohol, with no issues reported.
- The applicant noted
that if contact details for the objectors had been available, they
were happy to liaise with them to address their concerns.
- The two objection
comments were noted to be similar with regards to their content and
it was queried that they may be the same person.
- The comments
regarding litter stemming from the premises were considered not
applicable to the shop.
- There were two
external and two internal CCTV cameras installed and all CCTV
conditions were to be followed.
- With 22 conditions
agreed with WYP and an additional 3 with Councillor Dixon, it was
noted these were to be followed and will satisfy the concerns
raised by objectors.
- The application was
considered to be reasonable and appropriate to the premises scale
and location and was not proposing to sell alcohol late into the
night.
Responding to questions from Members the
Sub-Committee were informed of the following by the applicant
team:
- Members raised
concerns that anti-social behaviour occurred at the parade of
shops, and it was hoped the shop would not attract or facilitate
this. The negotiations with WYP displayed a positive start.
- As the hours applied
for would allow the sale of alcohol from 7:00, it was noted this
was early and had the potential to be a magnet for street drinkers.
In response it was outlined that the applicant sought to keep his
opening times and licensed hours in sync, as if the licensed hours
were later, the alcohol that was stocked would have to be blocked
off and could lead to conflict with customers.
- It was noted that
Section 182 guidance outlined the sale of alcohol in line with a
premises opening time was best practise unless good reasons were
identified. The Legal Officer noted this as 10.15 of the guidance,
‘Shops, stores and supermarkets should normally be free to
provide sales of alcohol for consumption off the premises at any
times when the retail outlet is open for shopping unless there are
good reasons, based on the licensing objectives, for restricting
those hours.’
- The local ASDA store
was noted to have a later start time for their alcohol licence than
their opening time. In response it was noted that ASDA had
designated security and was better suited to containing conflict
with customers and the application had been submitted in line with
the guidance.
- Members noted that
conflict arising from people not being able to purchase alcohol
early in the morning was not the situation or clientele they would
like the shop to attract.
- Members suggested, to
positively impact the community and address litter concerns, the
applicant could engage with Ward Members and local litter picking
groups.
- It was confirmed that
the applicant worked at previous shops holding alcohol licences,
but this was the first license he had applied for in the capacity
of a shop owner. He also intended to purchase a close by barber
shop, which showed commitment to staying in the area and developing
community assets.
- The applicant and his
wife held personal licenses and had been provided with the
appropriate compliance literature.
- The premises differed
from other local shops as it supplied Eastern European foods,
specifically, Polish, Romanian and Slavic. It was noted that the
alcohol proposed for stock will be comprised of some Eastern Europe
favoured choices and that customers had requested the sale of
alcohol to suit their convenience.
- It was estimated that
food products would make up around 80% of the shops stock and up to
50% of sales may be alcohol.
- Middleton was in the
top 1 percentile for deprivation in the UK, with poverty associated
with increased prevalence of alcoholism and it was proposed that
the licensed hours be revised to start from 09:00 to discourage
alcohol consumption early in the day. In response it was noted no
issues had occurred during the TENs, procedure will be followed,
drunk people will not be served, an incident book will be
available, and the licensing objectives will be upheld.
- Members noted
alcoholics tend to prefer small shops and anyone behaving in an
aggressive manner should be removed from the premises. Conflict was
not likely to arise from people who were not dependant on
alcohol.
- Although some
difficulties may arise with a later start time to the licence, the
applicant agreed he would be content with a 08:00 start time. It
was noted sufficient measures were in place to support the
licensing objectives and limit any confrontation that may
occur.
In summing up the applicant outlined the
following:
- The objectors had not
expanded on their concerns, had not attended the hearing and had
not supplied evidence to support their claims. The objections had
the potential to be submitted by competing local businesses.
- The four licensing
objectives had been covered. The shop was considered safe and drunk
people were not to be served alcohol.
- The hours applied for
were not unreasonable and the preference was to match the opening
times.
- The applicant was
commended for taking on and improving a shop that had fallen into a
bad condition and proposals to purchase another shop in the parade
showed commitment to the community and location. The shop was to be
a family run business for the local community.
- The objection
comments were vague, and the applicant had agreed to a substantial
number of conditions proposed by WYP and Ward Members.
RESOLVED – To grant the
application, subject to the alteration of the hours
permitted for the sale of alcohol, which would be 08:00 to 23:00
Monday to Sunday.