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Battling traders win fee reprieve
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Softly, softly approach after
opposition

Angry: John Atkins outside his flower stall |
MOUNTING opposition has forced the Town Hall to temporarily
suspend the introduction of a £900 licence fee which street
traders will need if they sell their wares on the pavement.
The Town Hall says it will be giving new laws which came into
effect on Friday an indefinite bedding-in period. Under the laws
anyone trading on a street or forecourt has to pay for a licence.
The proposals have attracted stiff opposition from street traders,
who say the cost will put them out of business.
Many have received letters from the council threatening prosecution
and the seizure of goods if they do not pay up.
But figures obtained this week reveal that, out of around 60 traders
checked by the council, only 14 had applied for a licence.
The money raised from the new fee will go towards the cost of
enforcing the legislation.
A Town Hall press official said the council had been in
regular contact with all those affected since September last year.
He added: We are aware that any new system can cause problems
for people and will not yet enforce it, but will continue to advise
traders during this transitional period.
In February, the New Journal reported how the new fee was being
opposed by traders like 85-year-old William Moore, who warned
that he would no longer be able to continue selling flowers at
his stall outside the Club Koko nightclub, formerly Camden Palace,
in Camden Town.
John Atkins, who has had a flower stall in South End Green, Hampstead,
for 20 years, said that he had refused to pay the fee and
would continue to do so.
He added: I already pay business rates so it is unfair to
penalise us on top of that. They should charge us either one or
the other.
They will be putting me out of business and taking away
my dignity. I have a legitimate business here but I will probably
have to live off state benefits.
It seems like the council are out to get small businesses.
Lyndsey Mitchell, who has run a popular fruit and flower stall
outside Hampstead Heath railway station for 15 years, said the
new fee would force her to close down.
She said: I already pay rent to British Rail, business rates
and money for a private rubbish collection.
I cant afford to spend another £900 it
makes the business a waste of time.
Whether they hold off for the moment doesnt matter.
They will still be forcing us to pay in the end.
Ive hung on for years and it will be a really hard
decision but I think, come summer, that we will have to close.
The council should be helping small traders but they are
doing nothing for us.
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