Crosswords7 mins ago
Would It Work
We seem to have an epidemic of drunks being arrested, and police being stretched to the limit, and very little being done to combat the problem. A lot of these drunks are put up in cells over night, fed and watered the next morning, and given a fixed fine of £80, and sent on their merry way. Why not the £80 fine, along with a nights accommodation / food & drink, admin charge, wasting police time, total £175 + £80 = £255. Do you think it would help a little. Bearing in mind that some do want to get arrested so they have somewhere to sleep.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.For those who chose to get arrested for somewhere to sleep, the level of fine is unlikely to be a deterent. Same goes for people who have become so drubk that they need arresting for thier behaviour.
What might help is a higher minimum price for alcohol in supermarkets and across all licensed premises. It would help the trade too and make drinking out a more of a responsible and enjoyable activity.
What might help is a higher minimum price for alcohol in supermarkets and across all licensed premises. It would help the trade too and make drinking out a more of a responsible and enjoyable activity.
Busy bars and clubs always have minders on the door - they should stop drunks getting in and eject those who become drunk.
Nowhere should be too busy to do the job properly. Drunks are dangerous, not necessarily through aggressive behaviour but the lack of coordination can cause tables to topple, glass to break and tempers to flare. It is the staffs responsibility to make sure this doesn't happen.
Nowhere should be too busy to do the job properly. Drunks are dangerous, not necessarily through aggressive behaviour but the lack of coordination can cause tables to topple, glass to break and tempers to flare. It is the staffs responsibility to make sure this doesn't happen.
Licensing (Scotland) act:
289. It is an offence under section 112 to obtain or attempt to obtain, on relevant premises, alcohol for consumption on those premises by a person who is drunk. 290. It is an offence to sell or attempt to sell alcohol to a person who is drunk, or to allow alcohol to be sold to such a person, on relevant premises
289. It is an offence under section 112 to obtain or attempt to obtain, on relevant premises, alcohol for consumption on those premises by a person who is drunk. 290. It is an offence to sell or attempt to sell alcohol to a person who is drunk, or to allow alcohol to be sold to such a person, on relevant premises
It applies to Scotland, too
http:// www.leg islatio n.gov.u k/ukpga /2003/1 7/secti on/141? timelin e=true
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hc436 I hear what you say, and understand, but that's my whole point, none of what you say is happening, and the problem is being left to the police and the tax payer, Pub/ bars are struggling for profits, so to put someone who is throwing money over the bar, like there's no tomorrow out the door, is not going to happen to often.
No single/lone sector of society is to blame. Drinking is an almost crucially central part of UK society - just follow conversations, the mention of something connected to drinking peppers them like seeds in raspberry jam. Ask for directions in an urban area and the chances are that at least once every 300m a business landmark will be mentioned, a pub. People lament the closure of pubs as if someone close has died, the cost of living is (among the British) measured and compared country to country first and foremost in the price of drink. You are in this post holding up to question the very fabric of being British.