Bulky waste
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Made 24 August 1999 - Coming into force 1 December 1999
These byelaws may be cited as the Brighton and Hove Council byelaws on the Employment of Children 1999 and shall come into force on 1st December 1999.
a) will not be or is not likely to be harmful to the safety, welfare, health or development of children
b) is not such as to be harmful to their attendance at school, their participation in work experience in accordance with section 560 of the Education Act 1996, or their capacity to benefit from the instruction received or, as the case may be, the experience gained.
a) in a cinema, theatre, discotheque, dance hall or night club, except in connection with a performance given entirely by children
b) to sell or deliver alcohol, except in sealed containers
c) to deliver milk
d) to deliver fuel oils
e) in a commercial kitchen
f) to collect or sort refuse
g) in any work which is more than three metres above ground level or, in the case of internal work, more than three metres above floor level
h) in employment involving harmful exposure to physical, biological or chemical agents
i) to collect money or to sell or canvass door to door, except under the supervision of an adult
j) in work involving exposure to adult material or in situations which are for this reason otherwise unsuitable for children
k) in telephone sales
l) in any slaughterhouse or in that part of any butcher's shop or other premises connected with the killing of livestock, butchery, or the preparation of carcasses or meat for sale
m) as an attendant or assistant in a fairground or amusement arcade or in any other premises used for the purpose of public amusement by means of automatic machines, games of chance or skill or similar devices
n) in any billiard or bingo hall or other place licensed for games or in any registered club
o) in the personal case of residents of any residential care home or nursing home unless under the supervision of a responsible adult
p) in any or in connection with any racecourse or track or other place where any such sport is carried out
a) agricultural or horticultural work
b) delivery of newspapers, journals and other printed material, and collecting payment of same, subject to the provisions of byelaw 3(i)
c) shop work, including shelf stacking, subject to the provision of byelaw 3(g)
d) hairdressing salons, subject to the provision of byelaw 3(h)
e) office work
f) car washing by hand in a private residential setting
g) in a café or restaurant, subject to the provisions of byelaw 3(e) and 3(b)
h) in riding stables
i) domestic work in hotels and other establishments offering accommodation
a) his/her own name and address;
b) the name, address and date of birth of the child
c) the hours and days on which the child is to be employed, the occupation in which the child is to be employed, details of the task involved and, if different from (a) above, the place of employment
d) a statement of the child's fitness to work, and of approval for the child to be employed, completed by the child's parent
e) details of the school at which the child is a registered pupil
f) a statement to the effect that an appropriate risk assessment has been carried out by the employer
a) the proposed employment is lawful
b) the child's health, safety, welfare or ability to take full advantage of his/her education would not be jeopardised
c) the child is fit to undertake the work for which he/she is to be employed, it will issue the child with an employment permit
a) the name, address and date of birth of the child
b) the hours and days on which the child is to be employed, the occupation in which the child is to be employed, details of the task involved and the place of employment
a) that the child is being unlawfully employed
b) that his/her health, safety, welfare or ability to take advantage of his/her education are suffering or likely to suffer as a result of the employment
a) he/she is employed to do so by his/her parent, in connection with his/her parents' retail business and under his/her parents' direct supervision, which cannot be delegated to any other person or persons; and
b) he/she has been granted a licence to do so ("a street trader's licence") by the authority and is acting in compliance with the terms of that licence.
a) be valid for not more than 12 months and shall expire on 31 December
b) prohibit the holder from touting or importuning to the annoyance or obstruction of any member of the public in any street or public place
c) require that the child notify the authority within one week of any change of address
a) is found guilty of any offence connected with the street trading
b) commits any breach of these byelaws or the terms of his/her street trader's licence
c) uses the licence as a means for begging, immorality or any other improper purpose
d) fails to notify the authority within one week of any change of address
THE COMMON SEAL of Brighton and Hove Council was affixed to these byelaws on 24th August 1999
In the presence of:
Signed
These byelaws are hereby confirmed by the Secretary of State for Health on 11th November 1999, 3052 and shall come into operation on 1st December 1999.
Signed
A Senior Civil Servant, on behalf of the Secretary of State for Health
These byelaws regulate the types of occupation in which children under school leaving age may be employed (byelaws 3-5), and other conditions of their employment. They provide for checks on a child's fitness for employment (byelaws 9 and 10) and for the issue of employment permits, setting out the occupation in which a child may be employed and his hours of work (byelaws 8-15).
Employers are obliged to notify local authorities of their child employees (byelaw 8). Additional requirements are imposed on the employment of children in street trading, for which a local authority licence is required (byelaws 16-19).
These byelaws are not a comprehensive statement of the law relating to the employment of children and should be read in conjunction with other legislation relating to prohibited occupations, hours of work and street trading in particular.
By virtue of section 560 Education Act, 1996, enactments relating to the prohibition or regulation of the employment of children do not apply to children undertaking work experience with the meaning of the Act. "Enactment" for this purpose includes byelaws having effect under an enactment, so nothing in these byelaws applies to a child's work experience.
No child shall be employed:
a) before the close of school hours on any day on which he/she is required to attend school
b) before seven o'clock in the morning or after seven o'clock in the evening on any da
c) for more than two hours on any day on which he/she is required to attend schoo
d) for more than eight hours or, if he/she is under the age of fifteen years, for more than five hours in any day -
i) on which he/she is not required to attend school
ii) which is not a Sunday
e) for more than thirty-five hours or, if he/she is under the age of fifteen years, for more than twenty-five hours in any week in which he/she is not required to attend school
f) for more than four hours in any day without a rest break of one hour
g) at any time in a year unless at that time he/she has had, or could still have, during a period in the year in which he/she is not required to attend school, at least two consecutive weeks without employment
Children aged 13 are limited to employment in the occupations listed at byelaw 5. Children aged 14 or over are not limited in this way, but may only undertake light work (byelaw 4). Byelaw 3 lists various occupations which are prohibited for children, even if they would constitute light work. Many more occupations or specific tasks are prohibited by other legislation, including:
It should be noted that this is not an exhaustive list.
The Children (Performances) Regulations 1968 provide that no child taking part in a performance for which a licence is required by section 37 of the Children and Young Persons' Act 1963 may be employed in any other occupation on the day or days of that performance or the following day.
Byelaws 16 to 19 permit the employment of children by their parents in street trading, provided that they have been issued with a licence by the local authority. Children who are licensed for street trading will be subject to the byelaws limiting their hours and other conditions of employment by virtue of being employed.
Street trading is also regulated under section 20 of the Children and Young Persons' Act 1933, which provides that no child may engage in street trading unless authorised to do so by local authority byelaws. Such authorisation may only be given for children aged 14 or over who are employed by their parents.
Section 21 of the Children and Young Persons' Act 1933, as amended provides, inter alia, that: