John, I have refuted every question you’ve asked, maybe not the way you would have liked, by leaving certain key factors out, but answers none the less. You in turn obfuscate, “oversubscription”, “merits”, “deliberations”, none of which has any bearing on the granting or denying of a licence.
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The IPL can be referred to in order to assist the council in their deliberations about who gets and who does not.
This is absolute shi**, the council can only deny a licence on the grounds of “no significant unmet demand” and to do that they have to prove it. Having a list of people who are interested is no proof of “no significant unmet demand”
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The IPL comes into play because those on it expressed an interest BEFORE those not on it and this could be used as one factor in deciding applications.
This is sh*te also; the only thing the council can act upon is a live application, and the only way they can deny it is by having proof of "no significant unmet demand". They cannot deny a licence because someone was interested 15 years ago and might still be interested. The C.E.C would be denying a licence on the bases of who was applying and not whether or not demand was significant at the time.
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The council stopped adding to the list when it became apparent that it was unlikely that the list would be referred to in their lifetime.
Crap again; the council had a waiting list which was then turned into a list Interested Parties List. The waiting list was a list of live applications waiting to be granted. This meant that any licence applied for and not decided upon within 6 months would have to be granted on default - the council having gone over the statutory time period in which to decide the licence.
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The question was "If a survey indicates that 20 additional licences would meet an unmet demand, and there are 40 applicants for licences. Do they all get a licence or how is it decided who gets and who doesn't?"
Or don't you know the answer?
If you apply before the SUD is completed and a “significant demand” is recognised the council would have to grant your licence.
If you applied before someone on the list the council would have to grant your licence first. This would mean the C.E.C granting more licences than the “significant demand” figure recognised, to get to those on the IPL.
All licences would then have to be granted as the council would be granting more licences than the SUD came up with.
In short; the council cannot go to the IPL in isolation, nor can the deny a licence for any other reason than “no significant unmet demand”
A foot full of lead springs to mind.
"Oversubscriptions, deliberations" John you are a monkey