Chester rough sleeping ban scrapped after backlash By Phil McCann

Cheshire Political Reporter, BBC News Published duration 17 March 2016

image copyright PA image caption Rough sleepers in Chester would have faced fines of up to £1,000

Plans to outlaw rough sleeping and ban busking without a licence in Chester have been abandoned by councillors.

Cheshire West and Chester Council's cabinet agreed to amend its proposed Public Space Protection Order (PSPO) following heavy criticism.

Homeless people and musicians rallied against the plan, which could have seen £1,000 fines levied for non-compliance.

Drinking alcohol, urinating and using legal highs, however, will all still be banned in public spaces.

PSPOs were introduced under the Anti-Social Behaviour, Crime and Policing Act in 2014.

Government guidance said PSPOs were intended to deal with issues in certain areas that are "detrimental to the local community's quality of life, by imposing conditions on the use of that area which apply to everyone".

Activities to be "controlled and restricted" by Chester's Public Space Protection Order

Using so-called 'legal highs'

Drinking alcohol outside licensed premises

Urinating (except in public toilets)

Activities removed from Chester's proposed Public Space Protection Order

Rough sleeping

Unauthorised busking

Begging

Feeding birds

The leader of the council's opposition Conservative group, Mike Jones, claimed the Labour-led council had made a "u-turn" because some of the plans amounted to "an attack on the homeless, and an attack on buskers".

Labour's Nicole Meardon denied the council was trying to "criminalise" homeless people.

She told a meeting of the council's cabinet: "There wasn't a u-turn - this is about consultation.