Tuesday, November 15, 2011

CLA Backs Attempt to Scrap the Cash

The theft of metal from farms and rural businesses has grown to epidemic proportions according to South West landowners who have now thrown their weight behind a Private Member’s Bill which will attempt to block the sale of stolen metal.

“Scrap metal is currently big business – and its no longer restricted to the theft of lead from the Church roof, now its overhead cables, copper of all kinds – which affect the telecommunications and electricity supply industries - and even barbed wire and other fencing has been stripped out for the value of the scrap,” said CLA South West Director, John Mortimer.

Lancashire MP, Graham Jones, will today (Tuesday 16 November) bring his “Metal Theft (Protection) Bill” before the House of Commons next week – and the CLA says it offers a solution to the problem.

Mr Jones says that the reason this type of crime is flourishing is because the regulatory framework surrounding metal recycling is so weak and that - in combination with the soaring international price of metal –effectively creates an incentive to steal.

“Farm yards and rural businesses have always been a prime target for thefts and landowners are currently suffering an epidemic of metal theft. Mr Jones’s proposed changes to the Scrap Metal Dealers Act 1964 and his other proposals are essential if this blight is to be ended quickly and effectively,” said Mr Mortimer.

Mr Jones’s Metal (Protection) Bill proposes six changes:
• Amend the Scrap Metal Dealers Act 1964 and replace the current registration scheme with a robust licensing regime, with scrap metal dealers paying a licence fee to fund the regulation of the licence.
• Allow property obtained through theft to be regarded as criminal assets; that would allow the provisions in the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 to apply.
• Grant police authorities the power to search and investigate all premises owned and operated by a scrap metal dealer, and to close scrap metal dealers where criminally obtained materials are discovered.
• Restrict the trade in scrap metals to cashless payments, and introduce a requirement that scrap metal must not be sold or processed until payments have been cleared. Photo identification and CCTV should be mandatory to identify sellers of scrap and their vehicles.
• Magistrates should have powers to add licence restrictions and prevent closed yards from re-opening.
• Amend The Theft Act and related Acts so that suspects caught should be charged and if found guilty, sentenced in such a way that is proportionate to the consequences of the crime, not the scrap metal value.

“The true cost of the theft is more than simply the value of the items taken due to lost production time, repairing damage caused, livestock straying due to gates left open or fencing taken down so we support this effort to bring about a change in the law,” said Mr Mortimer.

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