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Standards committee meaning

What does Standards committee mean?
In local government practice, a standards committee is the council body that oversees councillor conduct and the members’ code: it handles complaints, recommends or imposes proportionate sanctions, grants dispensations, and advises on ethics, training and registers of interests, gifts and hospitality. England: The statutory standards committee created by the Local Government Act 2000 s.53 was abolished by the Localism Act 2011. Authorities must still promote and maintain high standards (s.28), adopt a code, and appoint at least one independent person. Many councils constitute a “standards committee” under the Local Government Act 1972 to discharge these functions. Wales: Section 53 LGA 2000 remains in force. Every relevant authority must have a standards committee with a majority of independent (lay) members and an independent chair, liaising with the Public Services Ombudsman for Wales and the Adjudication Panel for Wales. Scotland: Ethical standards are governed by the Ethical Standards in Public Life etc. (Scotland) Act 2000. There is no statutory council standards committee; complaints are investigated by the Commissioner and determined by the Standards Commission, though councils may create similar committees. Northern Ireland: Under the Local Government Act (NI) 2014, enforcement rests with the NI Local Government Commissioner for Standards; there is no duty to...
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CHECKLISTS
UK non-broadcast/print advertising legal clearance checklist: CAP Code, DMCCA 2024 and CMA guidance (pricing, claims, endorsements, children, sector rules, AI, reviews)

This Checklist highlights the principal points to review when signing off advertising copy. It is designed to assist advertisers and their legal advisers in ensuring print ads adhere to statutory and self-regulatory requirements, including the UK Code of Non-broadcast Advertising and Direct & Promotional Marketing (CAP Code), Committee of Advertising Practice (CAP) help notes, and the unfair commercial practices provisions of the Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act 2024 (DMCCA 2024). For broader guidance on advertising controls, see Practice Note: Advertising law and regulation. A third column is available to capture remarks or observations as you progress through the Checklist... Checklist Further information Notes (if any) Introductory considerations Have you reviewed the CAP Code and CAP’s Formal Guidance, along with relevant guidance from trading standards bodies and the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA)? Non-broadcast advertising is governed by legislation as well as the CAP Code. For more detail, see Practice Note: Advertising law and regulation... Have you taken account of relevant consumer legislation? When...

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NEWS
Construction law and policy update—12 December 2024: building safety, Welsh building control, Scottish cladding commencement, dispute boards survey, arbitration ruling, environmental and EPB consultations, infrastructure plan and skills initiatives

In this issue: Building safety Building regulations Alternative dispute resolution Arbitration Environmental issues Projects Construction industry news Daily and weekly news alerts Construction trackers Building safety CLC announces restructure of ICSG The CLC has set out a reorganisation of the Industry Competence Steering Group (ICSG) to enhance competence and safety standards across the built environment sector. Under this strategic change, the ICSG will become a formal working group within the Building Safety Regulator’s Industry Competence Committee. The refreshed framework features sector-led groups, key topic groups and working groups, informed by contributions from more than 60 professional and trade bodies and 1,500 individuals, reinforcing the drive for improved standards. See: LNB News 09/12/2024 61. Housing (Cladding Remediation) (Scotland) Act 2024 (Commencement) Regulations 2024 SSI 2024/370 These regulations designate 6 January 2025 as the appointed day on which all provisions of the Housing (Cladding Remediation) (Scotland) Act 2024 not already commenced will come into...

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NEWS
Commercial law weekly: ASA rulings, Meta data dominance claim, waiver/rectification and liability caps, product safety reform, failure to prevent fraud guidance, bill of lading damages, fuel price monitoring

In this issue: Advertising, marketing and sponsorship Consumer protection Contracts Data protection Sale and supply of goods Supplier management LexTalk®Commercial: a Lexis®Nexis community Daily and weekly news alerts New and updated content Dates for your diary Trackers ASA rulings—6 November 2024 The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) received two complaints about CurrencyWave and Eurostar. Complainants said CurrencyWave’s ad wrongly implied Financial Conduct Authority regulation and used inaccurate price comparisons. For Eurostar, concerns were that Instagram and Facebook ads overstated the availability of £39 fares and omitted key information. The ASA upheld both. See: LNB News 06/11/2024 51. ASA publishes its Vaping Project Review on vaping ads targeted at under-18s The ASA has issued its Vaping Project Review, detailing outcomes from investigations, tech-assisted monitoring, enforcement, stakeholder engagement and advisory work on ads aimed at under-18s since June 2023. It found influencers, companies, agencies and vaping brands posting paid and organic content, plus brand...

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NEWS
UK Public Law Weekly Update: Brexit, Judicial Review, Human Rights, Procurement, Subsidy Control and FOI—Key Cases and Legislative Changes, Week Ending 26 February 2026

In this issue: Brexit headlines Constitutional and administrative law Equality and human rights Judicial review Public procurement Subsidy control and State aid Information law Other Public Law news Daily and weekly news alerts New and updated content Dates for your diary Trackers Useful information Brexit headlines Court of Appeal restricts education-based residence right under UK-EU Withdrawal Agreement—R (Ayoola) v Home Secretary In R (Ayoola) v SSHD [2025] EWCA Civ 1519, the Court of Appeal held that Articles 24(2) and 25(2) of the Withdrawal Agreement do not confer fresh residence entitlements; they merely safeguard education‑linked derivative residence rights that existed before withdrawal from the EU. Specifically, children of EU nationals had residence rights under Article 12 of Regulation 1612/68 (later Article 10 of Regulation 492/2011). Their third‑country national parents held residence rights only where their presence was required for the child. CJEU case law acknowledged and reinforced those derivative entitlements. Nonetheless,...

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PRACTICE NOTES
UK Film and Television Law Glossary: Terms C–D—copyright, collecting societies, broadcasting, distribution

Film and TV glossary A–B Film and TV glossary E–H Film and TV glossary I–L Film and TV glossary M–P Film and TV glossary R–S Film and TV glossary T–W CAP Code for non-broadcast media The UK Code of Non-broadcast Advertising and Direct & Promotional Marketing (the CAP Code) serves as the principal framework governing non-broadcast adverts, promotional sales activity and direct marketing messages. It is drafted by the Committee on Advertising Practice (CAP), a self-regulatory body whose membership comprises organisations representing advertising, sales promotion, direct marketing and media industries. The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) polices the CAP Code and may require the withdrawal or amendment of any advertisement that contravenes these standards. Refer to Practice Note: Advertising law and regulation. Channel 4 Channel 4 operates as a ‘publisher-broadcaster’: it produces no programmes internally, commissioning content from production companies across the UK. Cinematograph film Under the Copyright Act 1956 (CA 1956), films gained protection as...

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PRACTICE NOTES
UK Prudential Regulation Authority powers under FSMA 2000: rulemaking, warning notices, FCA veto, investigations and reporting, resolution planning, auditors and actuaries, and investment firm designation

BREXIT: At 11pm (GMT) on 31 December 2020 (‘IP completion day’), the transition/implementation phase that followed the UK’s exit from the EU came formally to a close. From IP completion day onwards, principal transitional measures cease and notable alterations start to apply across the UK’s wider legal framework. This note offers clear guidance on areas affected by these developments. Before you proceed with your research, please consult: Brexit and financial services: materials on the post‑Brexit UK/EU regulatory regime. The PRA's powers The Financial Services Act 2012 (FSA 2012) obtained Royal Assent on 19 December 2012. Largely effective from 1 April 2013, it overhauled the UK’s regulatory architecture so that the Bank regained core aspects of its supervisory and oversight functions regarding prudential and capital standards for deposit-takers, larger, systemically important financial services firms, and insurance undertakings. The Bank carried out micro‑prudential supervision and rule‑making through its then subsidiary body, the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA), and also via one of its committees, the Financial Policy Committee (FPC), which...

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PRACTICE NOTES
Informal (ad hoc) creditors’ committees in UK restructurings: role, membership, LMEs, confidentiality and guidance

Informal creditors' committees In numerous restructurings, creditors often convene informal (ad hoc or unofficial) committees instead of formal ones (see Practice Note: Formal creditors' committee in a restructuring), which can significantly support discussions between the debtor company and its creditors. Since the 2007/8 credit crunch, the emergence of alternative finance providers, such as hedge funds and other investors, has amplified the influence of these informal groups. Typically assembled by bondholders, noteholders or unsecured creditors, they are playing a bigger part in the current surge of informal liability management exercises (LMEs) (see Practice Note: FAQs on Liability Management Exercises). There are no statutory provisions or best practice standards governing how such committees are set up, and their make-up and operation are even more flexible than for formal committees. Informal committees possess no defined powers, and their members owe no fiduciary obligations to fellow members or to other creditors. Members are not, by default, entitled to recover their expenses unless the finance documentation provides for it, or it is agreed as...

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PRECEDENTS
Lexcel accreditation for law firms: end‑to‑end checklist and timetable for initial and annual maintenance assessments

A: Pre-assessment Complete the self-assessment (Law Society’s website). Appoint a logistics lead and an accountable person/committee. Identify required Lexcel policies/procedures, allocate owners, brief them, and set deadlines with reminders. Choose an assessment body (Centre for Assessment Ltd, Inspiring Business Performance Ltd (IBP), or Recognising Excellence), apply and obtain an assessor. Agree the date, draft and finalise an all staff list, secure Law Society approval, notify staff (dates, interviews, process, holiday cut‑offs), book meeting room(s); update the assessor. Receive the assessment plan (interviewees, timetable, extra documents), amend schedules, brief fee earners/support staff, run open matter reports, gather further items requested, and email all required documents. B: Assessment day Receive the client file request; collate files and supporting materials, provide IT access, host the assessor, manage the timetable, and note feedback. C: Post-assessment Receive the final report within one to two weeks; log key points and an action plan; diary rectification deadlines (21 days minor,...

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PRECEDENTS
Model standards arrangements: complaints, investigations, hearings and sanctions for councillors and parish members under the Localism Act 2011 (England) [Archived]

ARCHIVED ARCHIVED: This Precedent has been archived and is no longer maintained. 1 Context These ‘Arrangements’ explain how you may submit a complaint that an elected or co‑opted member of this authority [ or of a parish council within its area ] has not complied with the authority’s Code of Conduct, and outline how the authority will manage allegations concerning a failure to comply with the authority’s Code of Conduct. Under section 28(6) and (7) of the Localism Act 2011, the Council must have in place ‘arrangements’ by which allegations that a member or co‑opted member of the authority [ or of a parish council within the authority’s area ], or of a Committee or Sub‑Committee of the authority, has failed to comply with that authority’s Code of Conduct can be investigated and decisions reached on such allegations...

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