Venue and Facilities
Venue and Facilities
Venue and Facilities
3. The venue will be the working environment for the Inspector, the local
authority staff, and other parties. It is therefore important that it meets the
relevant health and safety requirements for a place of work in terms of
temperature, ease of access, ancillary facilities etc. It is also a place to which the
general public will be admitted and adequate provision should be made for
comfortable seating and access to toilets.
4. Although it would be helpful for the venue to be near the appeal or order site
– e.g. to allow more local residents to attend – this will have to be weighed
against other matters such as car parking provision, access by public transport,
facilities at the venue itself (retiring room, photocopiers, telephones, etc.) and
the availability of cafes or restaurants. It may be that a venue in a nearby town
(e.g. where local residents would usually go for routine shopping trips) would be
more appropriate than the village hall. The venue for an examination should
normally be centrally located within the area that the document being examined
relates to. This note sets out the different requirements for a venue including
those raised by legislation.
6. LOCATION
6.1 The venue should:
• be conveniently located for the majority of those wishing to attend;
• be well served by public transport;
• have adequate parking facilities close by, with a space reserved for the
Inspector unless notified that this will not be required;
• have provision for disabled parking.
• be well signposted and directly and easily accessible to all, without
passing through other rooms or office areas.
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6.2 In particular, there is a duty on all public bodies, under the Equality Act
2010 and the Public Sector Equality Duty to ensure facilities provided are
accessible to people with disabilities, if necessary by making appropriate
adjustments Please see (Annex 2 provides further information). Certain venues
may be considered inappropriate by particular groups of people e.g. a religious
building or licensed premises and should therefore normally be avoided.
7. ACCESS ADVICE
7.1 Local Authorities and, in some cases, the promoter of a scheme are
responsible for ensuring venues for events are accessible but this does not
absolve Inspectors of accountability.
7.2 Accessibility problems can affect other members of the public, e.g. carers or
guardians with pushchairs or young children, and disabled people, and could
include:
• no disabled parking;
• no wheelchair ramps;
• doors too narrow or too heavy to open or that open outwards;
• tiered seating with no access to ground floor;
• meeting room on an upper level with no lift;
• no hearing loop or effective PA system;
• corridors or passages obstructed or poorly lit;
• other facilities which are inadequate e.g. toilets;
8. THE ROOM
8.1 The room should be large enough to accommodate comfortably the number
of people expected to attend, but large halls are not appropriate for an event
where few people are likely to attend. Similarly, small rooms are inappropriate
for events where there is a lot of public interest.
8.2 The room should be unaffected by noise and other disturbance from
activities in other parts of the building or the surrounding area e.g. playgroups,
sports and games or building works.
8.4 The Inspector and members of the public are likely to be unfamiliar with the
building. Exits/fire exits should be clearly marked and health and safety
regulations should be observed. The Inspector must be advised of the
evacuation procedures in the event of a fire or other emergency prior to the
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start of the proceedings so that they can be announced during the opening
session. It would be preferable for rooms to be accessible by those wanting to
attend without their having to pass through doors where they must specifically
ask to be let in or out. The parties and members of the public should be allowed
access a reasonable time before the event opens, and certainly should not be
denied access until either the Council ’s representatives or the Inspector arrive.
8.5 If an event lasts for more than 1 day the room should be capable of being
made secure overnight to avoid having to move heavy documents in and out
daily. If this is not possible, secure storage of documents should be provided as
close to the room as possible.
8.6 The room must be adequately heated and ventilated and there should be
enough natural or artificial light to enable documents to be read easily. Fresh
water and glasses should be provided for the Inspector, advocates and
witnesses.
8.7 The room must have wide access doors, and be on the ground floor if there
is no lift available that would be accessible to a disabled person. An induction
hearing loop should be installed and operational. A sign language interpreter
should be arranged if necessary.
9.1 The Inspector may need access to documents online, or only have a
disk/USB drive containing all the documents submitted to the appeal, with only a
hard copy of the plans. The Inspector will need to access these documents at the
event and refer to them during discussions.
10.2 It is not essential to provide a retiring room for single day appeal hearings.
However, where possible, it is helpful if the Inspector can be shown to
somewhere quiet where they can wait (before the hearing opens) away from the
parties.
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10.3 For examinations and larger inquiries suitable accommodation should also
be provided for a Programme Officer and inquiry library, which should also be
close to the venue.
10.4 At lengthy or complex cases it is also helpful to provide an area outside the
inquiry / examination room where the parties can have private discussions.
11.2 The main parties should be seated facing each other at right angles to the
Inspector and provided with separate suitably sized tables.
11.4 The witness table should be placed so that the witness can be addressed
conveniently by advocates and the Inspector and be seen by the public.
Witnesses should not sit with their backs to the public or the Inspector. A
position at 45º to the side of the Inspector is generally suitable.
11.5 Display boards should be positioned so that they are clearly visible and
accessible to members of the public and where they can be inspected without
disturbing the inquiry.
11.6 Seating should be laid out to enable the public to observe and hear the
proceedings without difficulty and to come and go without causing disturbance.
Seating for members of the public directly behind the advocates or witnesses
should be avoided.
11.7 A table and chairs should be provided for the press. The press table should
be clearly marked and positioned to enable reporters to observe the proceedings
and come and go without causing disturbance.
11.9 Care should be taken to ensure that there is enough space and provision
for disabled people. For example, a person with hearing impairment who can lip-
read should be able to sit near the front with a clear facial view of the
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participants. The same care should be taken with the layout of a Hearing Room
below.
13. PHOTOCOPYING
13.1 Provision should be made for documents to be copied quickly during the
course of the event.
14.1 On 30th March 2016 the Welsh Language Commissioner introduced new
Welsh Language Standards. These are a set of requirements that aim to improve
the bilingual services that the people of Wales can expect to receive from their
Government. The Standards clearly set out what our responsibilities are in terms
of providing bilingual services, ensuring the Welsh language is not treated any
less favourably than the English language. The Standards are an important
opportunity to improve customer service and provide better policy outcomes for
the people of Wales. The Standards are legally binding and must be adhered to
by all.
14.2 Members of the public are welcome to speak in Welsh at events organised
by the Planning Inspectorate in Wales. Publicity (including formal notices) will
make clear that contributions from the public will be welcome in both Welsh and
English. The local authority will provide Welsh translation facilities for all parties
to the appeal.
14.3 We will ask that anyone who wishes to speak Welsh lets the Inspectorate
know beforehand so that the local authority can arrange for a translation service
to be provided for the event. This request will be made in the formal notices and
letters. Requests may be made on the day although these may delay the start of
the event.
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16. CLOAKROOMS AND TOILETS
16.1 Toilet facilities should be adequate and clearly signposted. Provision should
be made for outdoor clothes to be stored discreetly. Toilet facilities should be
accessible to disabled people. Toilet facilities should be easily accessible
throughout the duration of the event without the need for the public to have to
pass through doors where they would have to ask to be let in or out.
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ANNEX 1 – SUGGESTED LAYOUT OF AN INQUIRY ROOM
INSPECTOR
TABLE FOR
PLANS, MAPS,
MAIN HISTORIC MAIN
PARTY DOCUMENTS PARTY
ETC (as
necessary)
PUBLIC SEATING
TABLE FOR
REFERENCE
DOCUMENTS
ENTRANCE TO ROOM
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ANNEX 2 - THE EQUALITY DUTY
The Public Sector Equality Duty which came into force on 6 April 2011 states
that all public bodies must, while carrying out their functions, have due regard to
the following:
(c) Foster good relations between people who share a protected characteristic
and people who do not share it.
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