{"id":1553,"date":"2023-11-29T07:55:10","date_gmt":"2023-11-29T07:55:10","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/theplaceagency.com\/?p=1553"},"modified":"2023-11-29T22:24:11","modified_gmt":"2023-11-29T22:24:11","slug":"the-rising-challenges-of-pope-permits-and-the-struggle-to-deliver-community-events-in-victoria","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/theplaceagency.com\/the-rising-challenges-of-pope-permits-and-the-struggle-to-deliver-community-events-in-victoria\/","title":{"rendered":"POPE Permits and the Struggle to Deliver Community Events in Victoria"},"content":{"rendered":"

For over a decade, The Place Agency has proudly worked with local community groups, traders\u2019 associations, and private businesses to deliver free community events that help foster community spirit and bring our local places together.<\/strong><\/p>\n

From small pop-ups, and local markets all the way to major festivals with attendances well into the thousands and tens of thousands, we’ve been fortunate to have delivered events in over a dozen council areas across Victoria.<\/p>\n

While there have always been challenges and obstacles to overcome when it comes to navigating the intricate web of local council regulations and processes, recent changes to permitting processes by the Victorian Building Authority to incorporate new requirements for temporary structures have changed the game completely.<\/p>\n

Yes – we’re talking about POPE Permits (Place of Public Entertainment Permits)<\/p>\n

For those in the industry, POPE permits have moved from being a small line item in our standard permit application process to being the sole topic of meetings, entire binder folders worth of documents, and the source of nightmares for the event managers tasked with meeting these ever-increasing and convoluted requirements.<\/p>\n

To give context to the size of this shift and its impact on our industry, we recently delivered a small market event for a community group on private land that was free to enter for the local community. Pop-up market stalls lined the laneway, selling everything from jewellery to handbags and custom bed sheets.<\/p>\n

The event had a total budget of just $14,000 <\/strong>and was designed to help reactivate an area of Victoria heavily impacted by COVID.<\/p>\n

The cost of achieving the POPE permit alone for this tiny event was $2,600<\/strong>\u2014nearly 20% of the entire budget<\/strong>.<\/p>\n

Another example was a significant food festival delivered in a local park, free to entry for the local community, with a budget of $180,000. <\/strong><\/p>\n

The permitting for this event cost our client over $17,000<\/strong> in fees to the Council, POPE applications, and ongoing engineering inspections.<\/p>\n

Pre-COVID, that exact cost was only $6,000, <\/strong>a\u00a0180%<\/strong> increase.<\/p>\n

Until 2019, that money would have been spent on enhancing the experience for the local community.<\/p>\n

However, engineering and the introduction of the VBA as an interested party in events, unfortunately, sits at the heart of where things are going so wrong for events in Victoria.<\/p>\n

A POPE Permit falls under the Building Act and the Building Regulations 2018 from the Victorian Building Authority. The act, amongst other things, essentially identifies temporary structures used for events to fall within the remit of a Certified Building Surveyor (engineer).<\/p>\n

When delivering a POPE Permit, you could expect to provide a;<\/p>\n