
1 
These Regulations may be cited as the Standard and Collective Community Charges (Scotland) Regulations 1988 and shall come into force on 20th April 1988.
2 
In these Regulations—
 “the Act” means the Abolition of Domestic Rates Etc. (Scotland) Act 1987;
 “voluntary organisation” means a body the activities of which are carried on otherwise than for profit; and any reference to a section of the Act includes a reference to that section as read with paragraph 11 of Schedule 5 to the Act.
3 
The following classes of premises are prescribed for the purposes of section 10(2) of the Act (premises falling within section 10(2)(a) to (c) in respect of which the standard community charge is not payable) namely:—
(a) a dwellinghouse which is or forms part of a building in respect of which a local authority have made an order under section 13 of the Building (Scotland) Act 1959();
(b) a dwellinghouse which is a house in respect of which a local authority have made a closing order under section 114 of the Housing (Scotland) Act 1987();
(c) a dwellinghouse which is or forms part of a building in respect of which a local authority have made a demolition order under section 115 of that Act of 1987; and
(d) a dwellinghouse which is incapable of, and is not, being lived in because it is being repaired, improved or reconstructed.
4 
The class of premises prescribed for the purposes of paragraphs (a) and (b) of section 11(2) of the Act (premises which are not subject to non-domestic rates or which are part residential subjects in respect of which the collective community charge is payable) is premises managed by a voluntary organisation for the temporary accommodation of persons who have left their homes as a result of physical violence or mental cruelty or threats of such violence or cruelty from persons to whom they are married or with whom they are or were co-habiting.
5 
For the purposes of section 11(10)(b) of the Act (additional factors to which registration officer is to have regard in determining the collective community charge multiplier in respect of any premises) the following factors are prescribed:—
(a) the maximum number of persons for whom the premises are capable of providing residential accommodation;
(b) the number of persons who, at any time during the 3 months immediately prior to the registration officer determining a collective community charge multiplier in respect of the premises, were solely or mainly resident in the premises; and
(c) the extent to which the number of persons solely or mainly resident in the premises during the period when the current collective community charge multiplier has been in force is greater or less than the number of persons to which the registration officer had regard when he determined that multiplier.
Ian Lang
Minister of State, Scottish Office
New St Andrew’s House,
Edinburgh
28th March 1988