Fears over trading standards partnership plans

A PLAN to start charging companies for advice from Trading Standards may lead to more of them operating outside the law, business leaders have warned.

The county council wants to charge businesses for detailed advice on regulations and the law in order to make the service pay for itself.

Under the proposals, general guidance would remain free, but the council would be able to sign up to a partnership with companies to provide an enhanced advice service.

Other organisations would be able to get advice and help on an infrequent basis for £40 per hour. The charges are eventually expected to bring in up to £50,000 a year.

But Oxfordshire Chamber of Commerce chairman Nigel Wild said he had concerns small businesses might avoid getting advice in future, and could end up unwittingly breaking the law.

He said: “I think it’s a bit cheeky. Trading standards is a service, we pay for it through our uniform business rates and they want to make us pay for it again.

“I would think that small businesses will probably stop getting the advice, because every penny counts at the moment.

“They will take a chance and the next thing they will have is trading standards taking them to court.”

Charging for services like trading standards became possible under national legislation introduced in 2008 to allow regulatory services to provide enhanced support.

Under a “primary authority partnership”, councils can recover some or all costs for services provided. The council’s trading standards team already has one such partnership with Sainsbury’s.

Cabinet member for safer and stronger communities Judith Heathcoat said: “This is about charging for very detailed advice and bespoke advice to specific companies who require it on a regular basis and for matters that are very particular to that company.

“General advice will remain free, as will any advice for new businesses. We are very keen to make sure there is absolutely no impediment to new business starts-ups at a time when we need enterprising people to be helping move the Oxfordshire economy forward.

“This is not about raising huge sums of money, it is about the taxpayer being recompensed for very detailed advice that the trading standards team is sometimes asked to provide.

“Legislation allows us to do this and others elsewhere in the country have already taken advantage of that ability.”

Comments(2)

Myron Blatz says...
1:22am Mon 18 Mar 13

So Trading Standards has now become a commercial enterprise? At that rate (ouch!) it can only be a matter of time before County Councillors also start charging tax and council tax payers for help, advice and support to justify their own existence for their four-year stints at County Hall - presumably charged on a sliding-scale, based upon the more accurate and honest the answer, the higher the fee they will charge? Things are bad enough as it is, with the painting of 'double yellows' now seemingly more costly than if County Council was using Picasso!

mi76 says...
7:13pm Mon 18 Mar 13

It is up to businesses to comply with the law - therefore if they have to pay its a cost of doing business.

This is unlikely to lead to advice not being provided to small local businesses - its about those business that require in depth support which they are currently getting for free.

Perhaps Trading Standards should be able to spend their time doing what they were set up to do - enforce the law. Not spending resources helping companies that could pay solicitors for legal advice.

Unless you have lots of staff to offer both advice and enforcement you have to make tough choices.

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