Quizzes & Puzzles5 mins ago
Is flying St George flag illegal?
I have a house with lovely views overlooking river trees etc.. One of my neighbours outbuildings backs onto my garden and they have recently errected a St George Flag on a pole so that it is visible from any window I look out of. Nothing against the flag or people wanting to fly one bit just didn't want it in the middle on my scenic view! They have refused to move it to a less conspicuous place and now I'm not sure what to do. I have been told that it is illegal to fly the flag. Is this true and if so what can I do to get it moved?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by rhoscun21. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Your only hope is that it breaches some regulation of your Local Authority, so firstly speak to your local Planning Department to see if it needs consent. If it does and it has been erected without consent then your Enforcement Officer is the man to get it removed. If it does not then I'm afraid that you are stuck with it as there is no legal right to a view.
A. Under Schedule 1 Class H of the Town and Country Planning (Control of Advertisements) (England) Regulations 2007, national flags, the flags of the Commonwealth, European Union, the United Nations, English counties and certain saints can be flown without the express consent of local authorities as long as they satisfy the standard conditions for the display of advertisements generally and the conditions and limitations set out within Class H itself.
For saints' flags, the conditions are that they can only be flown in the county with which the saint is associated. If any of these flags are to be flown no further planning permission is needed for the flagpole, however it may be required if other flags are to be flown.
For saints' flags, the conditions are that they can only be flown in the county with which the saint is associated. If any of these flags are to be flown no further planning permission is needed for the flagpole, however it may be required if other flags are to be flown.
-- answer removed --
-- answer removed --
-- answer removed --
http://www.culture.gov.uk/flagflying/faqs.htm
Additionally I believe you don't need planning permission if the flag pole is less than 5.5 m tall.
Personally I'd sneak out there one night and run the EU flag up his pole - he'll probably have a seisure next morning ;c)
Additionally I believe you don't need planning permission if the flag pole is less than 5.5 m tall.
Personally I'd sneak out there one night and run the EU flag up his pole - he'll probably have a seisure next morning ;c)
Doesn't matter if Rhoscun isn't English - neither was St George - was he not Turkish?
In the North of Ireland there are problems with flags flying from quite a lot of lamp-posts - on both sides of the religious divide (as they like to say!!) - they still look tacky no matter what flag it is - it's only done to antagonise 'the other side'........normally put up by mindless morons in the middle of the night....
In the North of Ireland there are problems with flags flying from quite a lot of lamp-posts - on both sides of the religious divide (as they like to say!!) - they still look tacky no matter what flag it is - it's only done to antagonise 'the other side'........normally put up by mindless morons in the middle of the night....
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.