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Business stokes Red Tape bonfire

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Thousands of businesses and members of the public have taken up the Red Tape Challenge, with over 6,000 ideas and suggestions in the first week of the new website, which is part of the Plan for Growth.

Comments have called for changes to, and the end of, many of the rules and regulations that affect the retail sector, from Sunday Trading to bike safety.

Retail sector champion, Dr Kevin Hawkins, welcomed this initial response but urged more retailers, suppliers, trade associations and consumers to get involved and suggest easier, less bureaucratic ways to tackle the issues raised. He said: “The response so far has been outstanding, but make no mistake this is an opportunity that is too good to miss. For the first time the Government wants to hear from those at the sharp end of the complex, sometimes overwhelming, amount of regulation. Tell us about those rules that really waste your time and money or better still suggest ways of tackling the issues that will make life better for you and your customers.

“And with the burden of responsibility on Ministers to make a case to keep regulations, it’s your voice that will shape the decisions on the way we do business in the UK.”

Over 6,000 comments have been made during the first week of the new website www.redtapechallenge.cabinetoffice.gov.uk including discussion around:

  • simplifying the complex range of age restrictions on buying products, making it easier for businesses and consumers to understand;
  • the use of metric and imperial measures and simplifying weights and measures regulation;
  • amendment of the egg marketing regulations so that small scale producers can sell their eggs to local retailers without eggs having to be stamped, promoting growth and local produce; and
  • repeal of Trading with Enemy Orders.

The website also gives the opportunity to comment on a wide range of cross-cutting regulations that affect retailers and consumers, including employment law and health and safety. In future months the website will also deal with other issues that have an impact on the retail sector such as labelling and planning.

The opportunity to comment on regulations affecting the retail sector runs until 4 May. The following day will see the launch of regulations for the hospitality, food and drink sector.

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Commenting on the report ‘Rating Regulation’ published today by the Regulatory Policy Committee (RPC), Dr Adam Marshall, Director of Policy and External Affairs, says “The government has made a number of promises to business on reducing regulation. Yet too many companies still tell us that the burden of compliance is moving inexorably higher, month after month and year after year. Business values the RPC’s efforts to change the culture in Whitehall.

"Ultimately, however, it’s up to the Prime Minister and the Chancellor of the Exchequer to ensure that their cabinet colleagues are not creating new barriers to business growth through the regulatory system. If a proposal fails the RPC’s assessment, it should never find its way onto the statute book. So it is unacceptable that nearly a third of all regulatory proposals are not fit for purpose, and outrageous that government departments are inflating the supposed benefits of their plans so that they can regulate more in future."

Why aren't we surprised that the red tape bonfire has fizzled out? Could it be that we head exactly the same from the last goverment? Or could it be that there are still too many civil servants who see new rules as their life task?