We have had the weekly change in legal definitions. Last week in the UK, a zoo was legally a collection of non-domestic animals open to the public for 8 or more days in any calendar year. Any such establishment needed to be licensed under the Zoo Licencing Act. This definition has now changed to the following:
'Zoos, including safari parks, must close under the Regulations. A zoo is a business whose main activity is keeping animals not normally domesticated in England for exhibition to the public. Other businesses that keep and exhibit those types of animals, for example nature reserves, may open. They should ensure that areas where these types of animals are exhibited are restricted where possible. All possible steps should be taken to reduce risk of visitors gathering at particular animal or other attractions in the establishment. As with other visitor attractions, indoor areas must remain closed'.
Of course there are NO
other businesses that keep and exhibit them, as
ALL are classed as zoos under the Zoo Licencing Act, and have to be inspected and licensed under it.
This specifically contradicts what we were told in writing by the BIAZA office, namely that some of their full Zoo Licence holding members, the English Wildfowl Trust centres, had specific-site-permissions which allowed them to open the 'nature reserve' parts of their sites, but that they were prohibited from opening the 'zoo parts'. This now appears to have been wrong.
Coronavirus (COVID-19): advice on accessing green spaces safely
So - from Wednesday you can to Slimbridge - as you would not be interested in their Flamingos, and would walk straight past them, without lingering - but you cant go to Hamerton because you would be interested in our Flamingos, and would stop to look at them.
How the hell do we explain that one to our visitors...? OR, to our creditors, who we could be starting to pay...