Industry News       English French Dutch Spanish German Russian Italian Portuguese Portuguese Danish Greek Romanian Ukrainean Chinese Polish Korean
Logo Slogan_Spanish


CASTLE MALTING NEWS en colaboración con www.e-malt.com Spanish
11 October, 2006



Brewing news UK: Latest Home Office figures show that a third of pubs failed test-purchase stings over the summer

According to figures in M&C Report, the test-purchase sting operation, which was carried out over six weeks to mid-June, 2006, showed that 29% of licensed venues visited during sting operations served alcohol to underage customers, The Morning Advertiser posted October 10.

Pubs and bars owned by a mix of managed groups and leased pub companies were visited during the tests, including sites owned by Barracuda Group, Enterprise Inns, Greene King, Mitchells & Butlers, Punch Taverns, Regent Inns, Scottish & Newcastle Pub Enterprises (SNPE) and Wolverhampton & Dudley Breweries (WDB).

The figures are to be discussed this week at a Home Office meeting between government officials and industry leaders.

The summit, on October 11, will be hosted by Shaun Woodward, the licensing minister, and Vernon Coaker, under-secretary of state at the Home Office for policing, security and community safety.

In total over 6,700 venues were visited during the operation.

Figures obtained by M&C Report showed that SNPE was the worst offender, failing over 40% of purchases, followed by Enterprise, Greene King and WDB, which were all over 30%.

Barracuda was the “least-worst” offender, failing just over 10% of test purchases, although sources suggest that one unnamed managed pub operator achieved a perfect score.

One source close to the situation said: “The leased operators came off worse. This is because it is much easier to get a manager to comply with strict company procedure than it is a licensee.

“But this is something that the industry is taking very seriously.”

The breakdown of market segments showed that restaurants were the worst performers, failing 32%, with pubs failing 31%, bars failing 30% and clubs failing 12%.

The test purchases were the fourth such operation under the Home Office's Alcohol Misuse Enforcement Campaign (AMEC), which was first launched in 2004.

The first three AMECs registered 45% failures, 32% failures and 29% failures respectively.

While industry sources admitted that the failure rates must be addressed, some also pointed out that if a venue was visited 10 times in one evening and it managed to vet an underage purchaser nine times, but failed on the tenth, it still counted as a failure.

Therefore the actual ratio of attempts to failures is much lower.





Regresar



E-malt.com, la fuente de información global para los profesionales de la industria cervecera y de malteado. Los boletines quincenales de E-malt.com incluyen las últimas noticias de la industria, estadísticas en gráficos y tablas, precios mundiales de cebada y malta, y otra información relevante. Haga clic aquí para obtener acceso completo a E-malt.com. Si usted es un cliente de Castle Malting, puede obtener acceso gratuito al sitio web y publicaciones de E-malt.com. Contáctenos para obtener más información en marketing@castlemalting.com.














Utilizamos cookies para asegurarnos de brindarle la mejor experiencia en nuestro sitio web. Si continúa utilizando este sitio, asumiremos que está satisfecho con él.     Ok     No      Privacy Policy   





(libra 0.9020 sec.)