STL Consultation: How to Respond

How do I respond to the Scottish Government Consultation?

We understand that you will have lots of demands on your time but this is a critical issue for you, your business and our industry.

We therefore strongly encourage you to participate in the consultation and contact your local representatives so we can try and influence this for the betterment of Scottish tourism.

Read the Background to the Consultation HERE

Read the ASSC Briefing Document HERE

Watch the ASSC Webinar Recording HERE

If you have questions about the consultation, or how to respond, join us on 10th August at 11am.

There are 3 easy steps on how you can respond…

  1. Respond to the Scottish Government’s consultation

Consultation Questions – Use the following link:

https://consult.gov.scot/housing-and-social-justice/short-term-lets-draft-licensing-order-and-bria/consultation/subpage.2016-07-07.1474135251/

 

For Paper 2: Draft Licensing order – please state your issues and how to resolve them:

Please provide any comments and any suggestions you have to resolve this

[Here you might wish to add information about the impact to your business, (see the key areas of contention) and add in why you might prefer ASSC’s registration scheme as a suggestion]

State you are a professional operator and if you are a member of the ASSC or any other industry organisation.

For Paper 3: Draft Business and Regulatory Impact Assessment (BRIA) – please state your issues and how to resolve them:

Please provide any comments and any suggestions you have to resolve this

[Here you might wish to add information about the impact to your business, (see the key areas of contention) and add in why you might prefer ASSC’s registration scheme as a suggestion]

Respond by Friday 13th August 2021 

 

  1. Contact your regional and constituency MSPs in the first instance and then local authority councillors

  1. Email a copy of your correspondence above to:communications@assc.co.uk

Thank you!

 

Short-Term Lets Working Group a Sham

The ASSC submitted the following statement to the Short-Term Let Working Group today. Unfortunately the More Homes Division, who chair the Working Group, do not propose to append this to the minutes as requested. 

Short-Term Lets Working Group Meeting 4

4th August 2021

The ASSC believes the Working Group (WG) to be a sham.

To suggest to Ministers that the WG has delivered anything meaningful to the guidance, legislation or indeed BRIA is disingenuous at best and duplicitous at worse. The WG and tourist bodies have been treated with utter contempt.

The Licensing Order was withdrawn in February because it was not fit for purpose, with cross party support. It is still not fit for purpose. Indeed it is worse than the original.

The main issue behind this legislation is arguably the question of available housing stock in specific areas of Edinburgh. That has already been addressed by the Planning Act 2019, and associated legislation already passed by the Planning Control Zone legislation.

The ASSC proposed registration with mandatory health and safety for all short-term lets in October 2017. The ASSC clearly stated at the same time that it would fully support a licensing scheme in any localised and identified pressure zones. For any civil servant, or indeed Minister to suggest otherwise is not an accurate representation of the facts.

The More Homes Division, via the STL Delivery Group and its predecessors, has unilaterally ignored and supressed all proportionate and targeted policy recommendation suggestions put forward by the ASSC since 2017, to the detriment of good policy making and responsible governance.

To suggest that this is about basic health and safety is a smokescreen.

If it is indeed about H&S, and about a level playing field, as UKH has asked for, then all accommodation providers including hotels and guest houses covered by Licensing Act 2005 should be licenced by this new legislation, for they are currently ‘unregulated’ just as the More Homes Division claims our sector is.

ASSC’s questions to policy makers are:

  1. Do you believe that the WG fulfilled its remit to respond to industry concerns?
  2. Do you believe that mandatory registration has been properly considered?
  3. Do you believe that the ‘revised’ Licensing Order is fit for purpose?
  4. Do you believe this legislation is proportionate?
  5. Do you believe that the BRIA is robust?
  6. Do you believe that the costs are proportionate?
  7. Does it meet with the SG commitment to Better Regulation?
  8. Is now the best time to burden small and micro businesses with licensing during the pandemic? 

The tourism industry:

  • Supports the ASSC’s position on mandatory registration;
  • Believes the regulations are flawed, disproportionate and would be bad law if enacted;
  • That the timing of the regulations is completely wrong;
  • The regulations will hamper the recovery of the industry from Covid-19;
  • The Working Group has not fulfilled its remit and have not listened to industry; and
  • That it is wrong to use tourism accommodation as a means to solve wider housing issues.

I would be grateful if colleagues would look at the detail of the proposals in light of this, and support our registration plans with mandatory H&S, and back small tourism businesses for a sustainable recovery.

Key points for operators, and the Scottish Government, to fully appreciate are that, after 18 months of chaos and grief, the licensing and planning proposals make it impossible to plan effectively due to the massive uncertainties:

  • Uncertainty as to operators’ legal position
  • Uncertainty as to the administrative burden
  • Uncertainty as to the costs of the licence
  • Uncertainty as to ability to access and afford qualified contractors to ensure compliance
  • Uncertainty as to whether they will get a license or require and gain planning permission and consequent impact on their business
  • Uncertainty as to taking bookings
  • Uncertainty as to refund policy
  • Uncertainty as to inspection methodology
  • Uncertainty as to impact on mortgage and insurance liabilities
  • And on and on.

Little assistance, if any, is given by the Guidance. In fact it makes it worse because, as our legal support has identified, the tone is such that we are all considered potential criminals and non-compliance experts!

This policy has NOT looked at the detail and the unintended consequences.

This legislation is built on an Airbnb problem in Edinburgh. It is not reflective of an ASSC problem in Scotland. Professional operators are flagrantly and disgracefully being used as collateral damage in all of this. Ministers and MSPs are being misled, misinformed and dishonestly advised and the result will materially damage tourism in Scotland.

Has the More Homes division contemplated the legal implications? Advice that the ASSC has received suggests that these proposals are legally precarious.

SG talks of honesty and truthfulness. The ASSC believes that this process is diametrically opposed to that ambition.

In responses to constituents MSPs have mentioned scaremongering, misinformation, and misrepresentation. The SG talks about the need for facts, truth and honesty and transparency. The SG, and my colleagues here should know that the ASSC deals with only facts, truth and honesty. The ASSC is, as colleagues here should know, fully committed to sustainable tourism in Scotland. Our organisation is more than 40 years old; we’ve been providing quality tourist accommodation for decades but this regulation threatens the lives and livelihoods of our members.

We do not have to proceed with such badly conceived and ill-judged regulation. We have an opportunity to reconsider and re-advise Ministers and the SG to deliver a targeted, proportionate and deliverable scheme. As the ASSC have argued for years, we want smart and effective regulation – just not bad regulation which will damage Scotland’s tourist economy.

Unless we have assurances that this will change, the ASSC will publicly resign from the WG.

Further, any further constructive involvement with the More Homes division will become impossible.

Time is of the essence as these regulations are expected to go before MSPs following recess. Can I ask the More Homes Division whether these matters will be addressed?

Read more.

Tourism Organisations Resign from “not fit for purpose” Scottish Government Working Group on Short-Term Lets

Several of Scotland’s leading tourism organisations have resigned from the Scottish Government’s Working Group on Short-Term Lets, claiming that it has failed to fulfil its remit and branding it not fit for purpose.

Representatives of the Association of Scotland’s Self-Caterers, the Scottish B&B Association, Airbnb and the UK Short Term Accommodation Association have quit the group en masse citing its inability to address concerns the industry has raised over proposed new measures.

Industry figures have also accused the Scottish Government of deliberately “shifting the goalposts” on its policy intentions and acting with disregard towards the sector, which has suffered immense hardship throughout the COVID-19 pandemic.

Earlier this year, the Scottish Government withdrew its licensing proposals ahead of the election as they were widely recognised as not being fit for purpose, and they committed to respond to stakeholder concerns through the Working Group.

However, the tourism bodies have highlighted the lack of significant changes in the legislation impacting traditional self-catering and B&Bs, as well as homesharers, despite representatives of both sectors acting in good faith, as grounds for quitting the group. In fact, additional provisions have been added to the legislation, with some guest houses now being caught up in the plans.

Further, they have also accused the government, which is now on its third consultation on short-term lets in four years, of acting with “cavalier disregard and indifference” towards the sector’s concerns about the impending restrictive licencing scheme and of ignoring their proposals for a more workable, proportionate and cost-effective mandatory programme of registration.

Nearly half of self-catering operators are expected to leave the sector should the plans come into force, thereby jeopardising the recovery of Scottish tourism from the pandemic.

All the organisations involved in the walk-out have been responsible, willing, and positive parties to the discussions, providing key industry insight and evidence-based analysis, but have been met with obtuse responses and a reluctance to engage, the latest of which represents the final straw for the industry.

Association of Scotland’s Self-Caterers Chief Executive, Fiona Campbell, said:

“Despite our best efforts, and those of our colleagues across Scottish tourism, this Working Group has been revealed as nothing but a sham and therefore we have decided to leave it.

“Throughout the entire process, while we have acted in good faith, this government has continually shifted the goalposts and acted with cavalier disregard and indifference towards our sincere concerns and innovative ideas.

“Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, and long-before that, the Scottish tourism industry has been an example for others to follow – it is therefore extremely disappointing that our government has not held itself to the same standards and failed to back small business at this crucial time.”

Chairman of the Bed & Breakfast Association, David Weston, said:

Leaving the Working Group is not a decision that my colleagues and I have taken lightly but there seems little point in remaining.

“We have been frustrated at every turn and it will be Scottish B&Bs that suffer if we continue to take part in what has become nothing but a charade.

“Our members expect us to act in their best interests, and in the interests of the broader tourism sector, and it has been made abundantly clear that neither the Working Group nor the Scottish Government are interested in that type of dialogue.”