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MONEY FOR NOTHING
Tattooists in Derby are set to see
an increase in their licence registration fees by double
the amount proposed for many other businesses. Derby City
Council are to consider the latest proposals for the
annual licence registration fees for businesses. The fees
for pet shops, riding establishments, late night
refreshment licences, administration of public burials
and dangerous wild animals and dog breeding licences are
expected to rise by 5%.
But people who run tattoo parlours and body piercing
studios, acupuncturists and beauticians who provide
electrolysis treatment, are set to face a 10% increase
from January 2001. John Tomlinson, environmental health
manager at the council, said, Although we could
have put it up by five per cent, the gap between
ourselves and other local authorities was quite
large. He said that the benefits of the
registration scheme should outweigh the additional cost.
He added, The registration scheme is all about
public protection and protection to the employees.
Fees for acupuncture, tattooing, piercing and
electrolysis are expected to rise from £45.50 a year to
£50. Tony Blackshaw, tattoo artist at 1st Tattoo
Sensations, in Nottingham Road, Chaddesden, said,
Derby is already quite expensive. At the end of the
day, it is just a registration charge. Income from
present fees nets the council £10,763 a year. The
proposed increased charges will bring an extra income of
£808.
A
generation ago they were considered part of a louche
underworld frequented by criminals and bikers. Now, the
nation's tattooists, whose customers range from royalty
to film stars, have ultimate proof of their mainstream
status, a union card. The first trade union for Britain's
1,500 tattooists and body-piercers was announced
yesterday after the GMB said it was setting up a branch
to represent their interests.
Body art, once the preserve of a minority of aficionados
and drunken sailors or husbands-to-be on a stag night,
has boomed in the past decade. An estimated two million
Britons now have a tattoo or a piercing with celebrities
such as David Beckham, Britney Spears and even Zara
Phillips, daughter of the Princess Royal, proudly
sporting their adorned bodies. But as the industry has
expanded from a few hundred studios nationwide to more
than 500 in London alone, so too has the potential for
untrained operators to set themselves up in a trade that
remains largely unregulated.
Naresh, a tattoo artist for 16 years in north London, who
will be the GMB's branch representative, said, "The
art has changed beyond recognition. It used to be that
people would come into a studio, point to a picture and
that is what they would get. Now, we get people from
barristers to surgeons coming knowing exactly what they
want. It is possible to set up with little or no
training. As a union we can give tattooists and body
piercers the collective voice they have never had to set
minimum standards and create the sort of qualifications
that we think will work."
The union branch, to be known as the Tattoo and Piercing
Industry (TPI), is the latest in a series established by
the GMB, which has 650,000 members, for marginal or
previously unrepresented trades. In the past two years it
has set up branches for sex workers, London's licensed
mini-cab drivers and roadies for pop bands. Body piercers
and tattooists, whose arts derives from the Tahitian word
"tataou", meaning tapping the skin, are
regulated by two items of legislation, one which prevents
anyone aged under the age of 18 from having a tattoo and
general health and hygiene rules which are enforced by
local authorities.
The sudden increase in body piercings has given rise
among health professionals that poor hygiene and
techniques are responsible for the growing prevalence of
injuries and infection. A survey by the Royal College of
Nursing of GPs in Rochdale found that 95% had dealt with
medical complications resulting from a body piercing.
More than three quarters of the problems involved
infections. Tattooists are also concerned that untrained
operators are flouting hygiene rules which, in extreme
cases, can lead to the transmission through dirty needles
of diseases such as hepatitis B and C and HIV. (Source:
The Independent)
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