A licence for a radio??!!

My work (dental surgery) have has to have a prs licence to play the radio dependent on how many chairs were in the waiting room and other rooms so more chairs means higher cost and if u want to play mp3 or CDs then u have to pay more as well! However there has just been a EU ruling last month dentists are exempt as people coming in to them are there for treatment and not to listen to music so u never know common sense may prevail!
 
My work (dental surgery) have has to have a prs licence to play the radio dependent on how many chairs were in the waiting room and other rooms so more chairs means higher cost and if u want to play mp3 or CDs then u have to pay more as well! However there has just been a EU ruling last month dentists are exempt as people coming in to them are there for treatment and not to listen to music so u never know common sense may prevail!

See now this confuses me a bit. There is PRS and PPL. Sounded like that it ws just the PRS was exempting dentists?

And how on earth could a dog groomer, who doesn't keep clients in wait rooms, who doesn't have clients in their shops to listen to music. Furthermore, WE can hardly hear it over the dryers either! I guess that for the few minutes that the noisy dryers are off, and the dogs get to listen -- that's worthy of shelling out a few hundred for a license? Now my license is thru PPL - so clealy common sense isn't prevailing there.
 
Be very carefull where you say that... they come in for back dated money!
They come round industrial estates checking... i can get away with it because i work on my own!

Yes, they can come for back dated money!

But I'm not sure whether the working on your own thing holds water. I was underr the impression that it playing in a business premises at all still counted as broadcasting. I had to prove that I wasn't playing it for the benefit of clients (no waiting room with seats, standing room only, which is completely a seperate room from my work area where the music plays). I don't remember them ever asking how many people worked within my shop.
 
Yes, they can come for back dated money!

But I'm not sure whether the working on your own thing holds water. I was underr the impression that it playing in a business premises at all still counted as broadcasting. I had to prove that I wasn't playing it for the benefit of clients (no waiting room with seats, standing room only, which is completely a seperate room from my work area where the music plays). I don't remember them ever asking how many people worked within my shop.

I don t have customer s waiting or anything like that... this is purely a workshop. i hope to employ someone later this year so i will have to sort it for then. most people hate this bill because iys one they don t see coming!
 
See now this confuses me a bit. There is PRS and PPL. Sounded like that it ws just the PRS was exempting dentists?

And how on earth could a dog groomer, who doesn't keep clients in wait rooms, who doesn't have clients in their shops to listen to music. Furthermore, WE can hardly hear it over the dryers either! I guess that for the few minutes that the noisy dryers are off, and the dogs get to listen -- that's worthy of shelling out a few hundred for a license? Now my license is thru PPL - so clealy common sense isn't prevailing there.

Link to BBC news report
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-17379436

I am curious why it is a few hundred for your licence as we have one for radio only and whilst I can't remember the exact price, it never been near or over £100 per year.
 
Our PRS licence was around £30 for the radio in the office and for our dressage to music competitions.

Where do you get yours from?

Can i just say - this is the first time ive used this forum and thanx for everyones helpful comments, theres only 1 that wasnt helpful.
 
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