Council to suspend criminal checks for Lammas Fair vendors

Watch more of our videos on Shots! 
and live on Freeview channel 276
Visit Shots! now
AccessNI criminal checks for L street vendors will not be required at this year's Lammas Fair

Causeway Coast and Glens Borough Council has agreed to bypass certain criminal record checks for vendors at this year’s Lammas Fair.

At an Environmental Services Committee meeting on Tuesday, May 14, members endorsed the suspension AccessNI criminal record checks as a requirement for street trading applications at the Ballycastle fair.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Director of Environmental Services, Aidan McPeake, said the council agreed to suspend the checks last year because there are “very strictly grounds to refuse an application and the reason must be related to trading activities rather than for non-trading offences like a driving offence”.

The Lammas Fair in Ballycastle attracts thousands every yearThe Lammas Fair in Ballycastle attracts thousands every year
The Lammas Fair in Ballycastle attracts thousands every year

He added: “We have no grounds to refuse a licence for anything raised within an AccessNI check, so it defeats the purpose of doing it.”

“The policy of requiring [AccessNI] criminal access checks caused considerable delays and difficulties when processing street trading applications for previous fairs and no applicants were recommended for refusal based on information contained in the criminal record checks in 2022.

“The checks were brought in at the request of members, but any instance where we tried to invoke it it was very difficult to stand over. In one case it was taken to the magistrates’ [court] and it was turned over, so it was brought in but hadn’t any teeth.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“We are finalising street trading policy now which will amend it, but until then we need members to suspend the checks as a requirement”.

UUP Councillor Darryl Wilson said the requirement was “always a wee bit baffling”.

Read More
Signs to be erected in Portstewart to commemorate the seaside town being named b...

Cllr Wilson said: “It there are issues with trading that maybe would put a question mark over their ability to pitch up a tent and trade, but someone who has a record and has served their debt to society doesn’t need an AccessNI check to rent a shop and sell items.”

“I don’t think we should be any different, and we don’t want to hamstring the event and see swaths of stalls with nobody at them because of the checks.”