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Leeds’ licensing and public health teams worked together to develop an alcohol licensing data matrix. This matrix demonstrates where a locality is at risk of health harms from licensing activity by ranking localities against each other through comparing different data sets.
Reporting the case study on the LGA website, it was commented that:
Within Leeds, there are some areas which have high levels of deprivation, as well as high levels of alcohol related harm and alcohol related anti-social behaviour (ASB). In some cases, this was leading to street drinking and domestic abuse. The council was particularly concerned about the impact this was having on local residents and wanted to take action through the licensing process to support residents. However, council officers were finding it difficult to access crime data, due to low reporting of crime in areas of high deprivation. As such, it was difficult to justify introducing a cumulative impact assessment, which is an evidence based tool that councils can use to limit the density of alcohol licensed premises where they are negatively affecting the licensing objectives under the Licensing Act 2003 (one of which is the prevention of crime and disorder).
To address this, Leeds’ licensing and public health teams worked together to develop an alcohol licensing data matrix. This matrix demonstrates where a locality is at risk of health harms from licensing activity by ranking localities against each other through comparing different data sets. The data sets are:
The information provided by the matrix allows licensing subcommittees to consider the application in the context of the local areas and the problems being experienced by the population. This has helped committee members to make reasoned decisions based on quantitative data, as well as other anecdotal evidence which may be received through the licensing process. This is particularly helpful when the committee decides to refuse an application.
The matrix has also assisted the council with their cumulative impact assessments, which have been referenced in their 2023 statement of licensing policy. For example, in the Armley area of Leeds, the matrix was instrumental in establishing an off licence only CIA to tackle a significant problem of off licence saturation and street drinking in the area. Without the matrix, the council would have had to rely on crime statistics alone, which is problematic as the Armley area tends to have lower than average reporting of crime incidents, and therefore the licensing authority would be less able to tackle this issue. The matrix has also assisted licensing officers with representations they may wish to make against a particular licence application.
Crucially, the matrix is easy to use and displays the data in a simple format. This means it is a helpful tool for officers within the council, elected members, and external partners such as the police. It has also been used by colleagues in the public health team to help target which GP surgeries should offer liver treatment services.