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Flyposting
Find out what flyposting is, how we tackle it, and how to report it.
What flyposting is
Flyposting is when someone puts up advertisements, posters, banners or stickers in a public place without consent. It is illegal.
Some examples of flyposting are:
sticking posters onto boarded up shops advertising a gig
attaching a poster to a lamppost advertising a business
putting stickers onto road signs showing political statements
What we do when we find flyposting
If we suspect you are responsible for flyposting, we will first issue you with a Community Protection Warning (CPW). This is in line with our Environmental Enforcement Framework and the Anti-Social Behaviour, Crime and Policing Act 2014.
We can issue a CPW to individuals, promoters, businesses or organisations.
The CPW will have a timescale for you to remove the flyposting and we'll ask you to make sure it doesn’t happen again.
If you don't remove the flyposting, we'll serve you a Community Protection Notice (CPN). A CPN will give you a specific date by which you legally have to remove the flyposting.
CPWs and CPNs include a timescale of 7, 14 or 28 days. This depends on:
the size and amount of advertisements, posters, banners or stickers
the height of the placement
whether the removal requires specialist equipment
We do not apply this enforcement approach to charity and community based activities. We decide what qualifies as a charity or community based actvity on a case-by-case basis.