Adventure activities licensing service




















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Licence Adventure activities licence England, Wales and Scotland. You need a licence for each outdoor activity centre or activity base you run. Explore the topic Business and industry. Is this page useful? Once complete we will report the findings to the HSE Board for consideration at their meeting on 20 June.

In the meantime, the AALA team thank you for your patience and remind stakeholders that regardless of the outcome, there will be no immediate changes to the licensing scheme. There is still much to be considered, and it will take time for any changes to come into effect.

Licence holders should continue to engage with AALS and ensure they have a valid licence for activities in scope of the regulations. You will be notified well in advance of any changes and if necessary any transition arrangements to ensure that things continue to run smoothly.

The Institute, along with a wide range of other bodies in the sector, has worked to ensure that the HSE have been able to provide an informed range of options for the sector to consider.

This statement outlines why the IOL board feel that option 3 is the most appropriate for the outdoor learning sector. In the past 6 months the UKAIG has worked closely with the HSE to develop 3 options for the outdoor sector to consider, regarding the future of adventure activity licensing across the UK. The largest element of this work has been to outline a sector led and managed scheme for inspection and accreditation consistent with the HSE criteria for such schemes.

This has enabled the HSE to offer 3 options for the future of licensing to the sector in its latest consultation which closes on 9th March Those options are:. It is clear that the sector has benefited hugely from the introduction of Licensing.

The current inspections and the inspectorate are highly valued across the sector. A survey of the sector by The Institute in resulted in two very clear messages; that there was very little appetite for the removal of Licensing without any replacement and secondly that any changes to Licensing should result in a UK wide scheme, reflecting the reality of how young people are accessing adventurous activities across the UK.

It is also clear that the current Licensing regime is not financially sustainable and has very little governance input from the sector it is designed for. In addition, the very limited scope of the inspection scheme as defined in the Act and restrictions on its development as a result of it being embedded in legislation, has led to the emergence of a number of non-statutory schemes.

A direct consequence of this is that many providers have multiple inspections for different schemes and both the sector and its users have a complex and confusing array of badges to contend with.

The Institute is seeking to increase the value placed on outdoor learning across the UK. In considering the role of inspections in outdoor learning service provision it is appropriate that the inspections and the standards that drive them be developed and managed by the sector.

The HSE board met in December and considered 3 options for the future and the approach to a sector wide consultation on those options.



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