An issue has arisen over a licensed caravan park where the owner has leased out plots which have then had homes built on them. These homes are basically static caravan units, either single or two joined together, with a roof and a low wall built round the base. They are owner-occupied, not holiday lets or similar, mostly occupied year round as the owner's home.
The problem is that the individual owners have built porches, patios, decks and sheds and carports around them so that the gap between each has been substantially reduced. The Council are treating this as a breach of the site's licensing conditions and are trying to find a way of resolving it without resorting to enforcement action, so far without success.
The standard breached is the one about spacing. Council's license conditions require a six metre space between caravans on this type of site, but so far no-one can settle whether these should be counted as caravans on a site or as separate private dwellings. In addition there is some doubt whether the spacing condition is to prevent fire spread, making that condition subject to Section 71 of the Act (Scotland), or if this was a condition to ensure a decent amenity space i.e. was it intended to be a fire safety measure or not. It looks like its a fire safety condition. If this is the case how can the Fire Service enforce this in a private dwelling, or do we go after the site owner?