(1) The Law Society may allow work done in the following classes:
(a) availability during duty period;
(b) advice and assistance given to a person arrested and held in custody in connection with an arrestable offence or being interviewed in connection with a serious service offence or to a volunteer in connection with any such offence;
(c) advice and assistance given to a person arrested and held in custody or to a volunteer except in connection with an arrestable offence;
(d) travelling and waiting;
(e) advising and assisting over the telephone;
(f) routine telephone calls.
(2) The Law Society shall consider the claim, any further particulars, information or documents submitted by the solicitor under regulation 4 and any other relevant information, and allow:
(a) such work as appears to it to have been actually and reasonably done by a duty solicitor or an own solicitor, classifying it according to the classes specified in paragraph (1); and
(b) such time in respect of each class of work allowed by it (other than advising over the telephone and dealing with routine telephone calls) as it considers reasonable.
(3) Subject to paragraph (5), the Law Society shall allow fees for the work allowed by it under this regulation in accordance with Schedule 2.
(4) Subject to paragraph (5), the Law Society may allow a reasonable sum in respect of:
(a) hotel expenses actually and reasonably incurred by a duty solicitor where attendance in accordance with a rota is allowed under paragraph (1)(a);
(b) travelling expenses actually and reasonably incurred by a duty solicitor or an own solicitor where travelling and waiting is allowed under paragraph (1)(d);
(c) any disbursements actually and reasonably incurred by a duty solicitor or an own solicitor.
(5) The fees allowed under Schedule 2, except any fee allowed in respect of work done under paragraph (1)(a), together with any expenses allowed under paragraph 4(b) and (c), shall not exceed:
(a) the upper limit where the advice and assistance was given to a person or a volunteer in the circumstances specified in paragraph (1)(b), unless the Law Society is satisfied that the interests of justice required advice and assistance to be given as a matter of urgency;
(b) the limit imposed by section 3(2) of the 1974 Act where the advice and assistance was given in any other case.