Moved by Earl Attlee That a Humble Address be presented to Her
Majesty praying that the Drivers’ Hours and Tachographs (Temporary
Exceptions) (No. 4) Regulations 2021 (SI 2021/1207), laid before
the House on 29 October, be annulled because they fail to address
the underlying cause of the shortage of HGV drivers. Relevant
document: 18th Report from the Secondary Legislation Scrutiny
Committee (special attention drawn to the instrument) Earl Attlee
(Con) My...Request free trial
Moved by
That a Humble Address be presented to Her Majesty praying that
the Drivers’ Hours and Tachographs (Temporary Exceptions) (No. 4)
Regulations 2021 (SI 2021/1207), laid before the House on 29
October, be annulled because they fail to address the underlying
cause of the shortage of HGV drivers.
Relevant document: 18th Report from the Secondary Legislation
Scrutiny Committee (special attention drawn to the
instrument)
(Con)
My Lords, in moving that the House annuls the Drivers’ Hours and
Tachographs (Temporary Exceptions) (No. 4) Regulations 2021, I
make it clear that I do not intend to test the opinion of the
House. I remind the House that I have an interest, as I hold a
C+E HGV driving licence and am a qualified HGV driving
instructor, albeit somewhat out of date.
The House will be fully aware that we have faced a very serious
shortage of HGV drivers, which has led in turn to petrol stations
running out of fuel. There are obvious shortages of certain lines
in our supermarkets and elsewhere, but these have been carefully
managed by the industry to minimise the inconvenience to
consumers. The good news is that, thanks to the efforts of my
noble friend the Minister, the Commercial Motor magazine reports
that the shortage is no longer deemed to be critical. Apparently,
ONS statistics reveal that the number of HGV delivery drivers has
increased from 233,000 in Q2 to 261,000 in Q3. It is reported
that there are an extra 22,000 drivers aged between 45 and 65.
There has also been an increase of 4,000 drivers over the age of
65 and past normal retirement age. We should congratulate my
noble friend the Minister, who had the sense to write to every
single HGV driver in the land—including me—asking them to come
back to HGV driving.
In addition to the very slight relaxation to drivers’ hours
provided by this and several other similar regulations, my noble
friend has also altered some driving test requirements to free up
more examiners for HGV testing. We have already debated these
changes. I have no technical problem with the changes to drivers’
hours. My Motion refers to the serious underlying causes of the
shortage, to which I will draw your Lordships attention. That is
why I have tabled my Motion.
The first problem is now well known and concerns the lack of
decent facilities for HGV drivers. This is part of what I said
some time ago:
“This amendment concerns the provision of suitable rest
facilities for drivers of commercial vehicles so that they can
comply with the law and industry can attract and retain suitable
drivers. The road transport and the bus industries are currently
experiencing a shortage of drivers. Part of the cause may be the
poor image and working conditions of the industry. In the past
there were many establishments, collectively known as transport
cafés, distributed along the trunk road network. Nowadays few
survive and most have been turned into Little Chefs or Happy
Eaters. Unfortunately, heavy commercial vehicle drivers are not
welcome because their vehicles are large and their spend is
modest in comparison with that of most car drivers.”—[Official
Report, 26/7/00; col. 524.]
I went on to talk about the need for a shower at the end of a
day’s driving. I made that speech 21 years ago in your Lordships’
House, so the problem is not a new one. By chance, I recently saw
a cartoon in the November 1987 edition of Truck & Driver
magazine. The caption was, “Well try finding a cafe round here
that’s not been turned into a Little Chef”. It is a planning
problem that has been around for a very long time.
In order to be granted a vocational driving licence, the
applicant needs to pass a medical examination. This is vital to
protect the public from the consequences of a driver being taken
ill while driving. Noble Lords will recall the tragedy in Glasgow
a few years ago, when six pedestrians were killed. Even before
Covid-19 struck, GPs—including mine—have been very reluctant to
undertake these medical examinations. For my penultimate
examination, I had to go from my home near Petersfield to
Maidstone in Kent to get an examination. It is obviously far from
ideal for the examination to be undertaken by anyone other than
the applicant’s GP, because he or she has the patient’s notes
going back, often to birth. This was a factor in the Glasgow
tragedy, and the tragedy was entirely avoidable if the GP had
been involved.
A further issue can arise if the HGV driver experiences a medical
problem. For instance, a few years ago, I needed to undergo an
angiogram procedure. As a result of that procedure, my consultant
cardiologist was able to assure me that I was fit and safe to
drive an HGV. But the DVLA’s medical panel then took several
months to reinstate my HGV entitlement. Apart from interfering
with my leisure activities, it had no adverse effect on me.
However, it may cause a commercial driver either to retrain or
return to another trade. It is exceptionally unfair and there
seems to be little that an ordinary HGV driver can do about it.
Of course, I did not exercise any influence because, first, it
would be improper, and also I wanted to see how it would work out
for an ordinary HGV driver. I am told that the advice among
drivers is not to tell the DVLA about medical conditions and just
not to drive an HGV against the doctor’s advice. The poor
performance of the medical panel is my noble friend’s ministerial
responsibility.
A further difficulty concerns the investigation of serious road
traffic collisions. These are extremely distressing for all
concerned but, so far as I can see, the police are very slow to
exonerate a driver when he or she appears to be blameless. This
can result in unfair dismissal and difficulty in securing
employment and motor insurance—yet another disincentive to being
a professional HGV driver.
A commercial driver, in addition to having an HGV licence, must
have a driver certificate of professional competence. Maintaining
it requires 35 days of training every five years. I do not have a
DCPC as I am exempt, and nor do another 70,000 group C+E drivers
and yet another 70,000 group C licence holders. We do not have a
shortage of HGV drivers at all, but a shortage of HGV drivers
with a DCPC. The problem is that the training provided is not
well regarded in the industry and many drivers let their DCPC run
down and stop driving commercially. This has a serious adverse
effect on part-time and occasional driving because it is not
worth having a DCPC for that purpose.
We have left the EU. My noble friend the Minister could easily
temporarily relax the requirement for a DCPC while she considers
what is to replace it. That would still, in time, give her the
corps of professional drivers that she rightly worked so hard to
achieve, while the shortage of HGV drivers would be diminished in
the short term.
I have banged on for many years about the licensing of goods
vehicle operators. The system is still far from effective at
eliminating rogue operators from the industry. These operators
abuse drivers, force them to flagrantly breach drivers’ hours and
give the industry a bad name.
HGV drivers are often despised, despite performing what we now
recognise as a vital role in our economy. They are persecuted by
traffic wardens when seeking to make a delivery and hounded by
the DVSA over relatively trivial infringements of the drivers’
hours rules, while rogue operators are allowed to continue
operating. They must frequently make very early starts to get our
supplies delivered when and where we want them, which is simply
not attractive to people coming into the industry. They also
often have to defecate and urinate in the open due to lack of
facilities. The staff at regional distribution centres have for
decades been allowed to treat them badly for turning up a few
minutes adrift from the planned schedule. The work is so
unattractive that there are very few female HGV drivers.
My noble friend the Minister has correctly pointed out that many
of the reasons why HGV driving is unattractive are down to the
industry, and to an extent she is right. However, the two leading
trade associations are not doing a first-class job for the
industry as far as I can see, and some matters are not for the
industry but for central government. I look forward to the
Minister’s response. I beg to move.
(LD)
My Lords, I thank the noble Earl for ensuring that we have this
important and very interesting debate. The reports of the
Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee have been very
wide-ranging in the points that they have raised relating to the
series of legislation that has come through on drivers’
hours.
The first relaxation of hours was in December 2020 until 31 March
2021 and went from 90 hours per fortnight to 99, and from nine to
11 hours per day for a maximum of two days a week. I say to noble
Lords: 11 hours a day of driving? The Minister is looking at me
as if I have got the information wrong. I hope she will put me
right later on.
20:15:00
On 12 July the relaxation was then extended until 4 October, but
the committee— I refer to its 12th report, not its 18th, which I
will come to in a minute— noted that similar regulations were
debated in March. It noted that the DVSA samples showed
“fairly high levels of non-compliance with the drivers’ hours
regime”,
and that the Department for Transport did not have records of
which of those cases, where there was non-compliance, had
actually applied to use the extended hours officially and which
cases were just ignoring the limitations. In practice, the
Government have sanctioned longer hours. One action is bound, I
believe, to knock on to the other. By sanctioning longer hours,
it is almost a nod and a wink to those rogue operators the noble
Earl mentioned—although I do not suggest that was the
Government’s intention. It is not just a question of longer daily
driving hours; it is a complex weekly pattern of rest periods for
at least 24 hours.
The areas of concern are as follows. First, complexity itself is
a problem in the observance of these regulations and, secondly,
the Government give them as the reason for this relaxation so
that they can maintain critical supply chains. But this
relaxation applies to the industry as a whole. In so far as the
department has undertaken consultation, the answers on whether
the relaxation was welcomed were very divided: 47% were
supportive and 43% were opposed. It is worth pointing out that
the major haulage organisations have, over a period of time,
expressed grave concerns at this method of managing, or
attempting to alleviate, the crisis of a lack of drivers. They
point out that this is a significant worsening of the employment
conditions for drivers at a time when the Government have lighted
upon poor employment condition as a reason why we have a driver
shortage in the first place.
I notice from the Explanatory Memorandum on the current set of
regulations that the word “Brexit” is not allowed to be used, but
Brexit has complicated an already serious situation. The problem
is that the Government cannot alleviate the situation by
encouraging in new drivers from Europe, because the extending of
drivers’ hours is seen as a worsening of conditions.
Getting to the nub of this, there is of course an inevitable
impact on road safety. “Don’t drive tired” is a slogan for a
reason. The secondary legislation committee points out that
evidence from previous periods of relaxation has not been
referenced or utilised. Normal drivers’ hours are based on
accident statistics so they should not be ignored. Seriously,
there are a lot of crashes involving lorries, so there is no lack
of evidence.
Finally, the 18th report extends this measure again until 10
January. Temporary is becoming permanent, and it is not
acceptable. People are learning to accept this; 27% of drivers
stopped in roadside tests are now in breach of the normal hours,
and there is no evidence that those people have applied for any
kind of alleviation of their hours. The Explanatory Memorandum
says:
“The Department has not been made aware of any increase in
accidents”.
This is the Department for Transport, for goodness’ sake; it is
in charge of collecting the statistics, it is not for them to be
“made aware” by some outside body.
We need a more constructive approach to improving standards and
quality of employment for HGV drivers, and I recommend that the
Minister looks at the relais routiers in France. That might not
be a popular idea with the current Government, but it is a
well-established system that provides good facilities, and I
would welcome reassurance from the Minister that, now that the
number of HGV drivers is beginning to pick up somewhat, we will
not see this measure come back again.
(Lab)
These regulations, made at the end of October, further extend the
relaxation limits to HGV drivers’ hours until 10 January next
year, at which point this temporary exemption will have been in
place continuously for six months, since 12 July this year. The
instrument extends the normal daily limit of nine hours’ driving
a day to 10 hours, up to four times a week, with an overarching
limit of 56 hours’ driving in a week and 90 hours in a
fortnight—or, as an alternative, introduces an amended weekly
rest pattern that allows an additional day of driving in a
fortnight, provided that an equivalent period of rest is taken
before the end of the third week. This exception increases the
maximum permitted driving time in a fortnight to 99 hours from
the standard 90 hours.
In its 18th report of the current Session, published on 11
November, the Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee, as the
noble Baroness, Lady Randerson, said, repeated its concerns
“that cumulative tiredness in HGV drivers may constitute a road
safety hazard”.
It said:
“The responses to the consultation exercise quoted in the
Explanatory Memorandum ... also take that view and add that these
Regulations make HGV drivers’ working conditions worse, which is
having a negative effect on recruitment”.
Continuing, the committee said—again I repeat something that the
noble Baroness, Lady Randerson, said:
“Our concern is bolstered by figures … that indicate that a
significant proportion (27%) of the drivers stopped in roadside
checks are breaching the Drivers’ Hours legislation. We have
repeatedly asked the Department for Transport to provide evidence
that would allay our concerns, but the responses have indicated
that the Department does not have information either way”.
The department has said that it has
“not been made aware of any increase in accidents involving HGVs
since the temporary exceptions to the drivers’ hours rules were
first introduced in July 2021”.
That, not surprisingly, says the Secondary Legislation Scrutiny
Committee, is “not sufficient to allay” its concerns.
Therefore, I invite the Government to say in their response what
evidence they have that the relaxation of limits to HGV drivers’
hours provided for in these regulations, which have been in
effect for nearly five months, does not increase cumulative
tiredness to an extent that constitutes a road safety hazard. On
how many occasions has the relaxation in hours provided for in
these regulations actually been used, and by how many different
firms? Why does the Department for Transport not have figures on
the proportion of drivers stopped in roadside checks who breached
drivers’ hours legislation in force at the time they were
stopped? I would have thought that that was a fairly important
piece of information, which one would have thought the Department
for Transport would have.
The Department for Transport provided the Secondary Legislation
Scrutiny Committee with 28 short, medium and long-term
interventions it had put in place to alleviate the existing HGV
driver shortage. One can of course take the government line that
this shows how active and focused they are in seeking to address
the driver shortage—a shortage that they have known about for
years but have nevertheless still been caught on the hop by—or
one can take the view that the Government do not know what steps
will address the driver shortage issue. That would be consistent
with their inability to provide the information and meaningful
assurances sought by the Secondary Legislation Scrutiny
Committee, and would suggest that the 28 interventions simply
reflect an approach more akin to thrashing around in all
directions hoping that a course of action will finally turn up
trumps.
The Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee says in its report
on the list of 28 interventions that
“while this list shows the various strands of the Department’s
current activity, we still lack a strategic statement of the
programme’s objectives, milestones and costs, against which its
effectiveness and value for money can be assessed.”
Can the Government now provide that strategic statement, either
in their response today or subsequently, and indicate the cost of
each of the 28—or perhaps now more—interventions and the specific
impact each one is expected to have on the existing HGV driver
shortage, bearing in mind that the noble Earl, Lord Attlee, has
argued that these specific regulations on drivers’ hours will not
address the underlying causes of the shortage?
On one specific intervention, namely increasing cabotage for
foreign hauliers in the UK, which extends through to the end of
April next year, can the Government say today how that meets the
Prime Minister’s previously stated desire to see significantly
higher pay for UK drivers? Allowing foreign transport operators
to make unlimited journeys in the UK for two weeks before
returning home can only mean UK drivers facing more competition
for work, which will depress rather than increase levels of pay,
as previously desired by the Prime Minister.
The Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee commented that no
formal impact assessment had been prepared and that the
Explanatory Memorandum provided no information on how many
additional HGV journeys might be added by this instrument or what
the take-up by foreign operators might be. Continuing, the
committee said:
“We therefore have no means to assess whether the number of
operators involved will constitute a threat to the UK workforce,
or to measure whether the legislation is likely to be
effective.”
Can the Government in their response give some figures to
indicate what the impact has been to date of this relaxation in
restrictions on cabotage?
It appears that the underlying causes of the driver shortage—and
I will not go through all the reasons mentioned by the noble
Earl, Lord Attlee—relate to pay and conditions, including the
provision of decent facilities for drivers away from the cab of
their vehicle. The job, and the standing it has at present, does
not appear attractive, particularly to younger people. The
workforce is overwhelmingly older white males and is certainly
not diverse, which means that the actual potential recruitment
pool is less than it might be. I understand that pay is now
rising, turnover is falling, provisional licences are increasing
and further improvements are anticipated in the new year—albeit
there is still a shortage which will not be properly addressed
until next year.
I am sure the Government will have some hard information to give
on the current driver shortage situation today in their response
and the extent to which it is the Government’s 28—or is it
32?—measures that have or have not delivered, and the extent to
which they agree with the noble Earl, Lord Attlee, on the
underlying causes of the shortage of HGV drivers, which these
regulations on relaxation of limits to hours, the noble Earl has
powerfully argued, fail to address.
(Lab)
My Lords, before the Minister gets up to reply, could she tell
the House whether it is the Government’s intention to renew these
regulations next year, and, if so, why and on what basis?
20:30:00
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department for
Transport () (Con)
My Lords, I thank all noble Lords who have taken part in this
short debate today, particularly the noble Earl, Lord Attlee, who
has extensive knowledge of and expertise in this area. We are
very grateful for his input. I will address the drivers’ hours
issue first, as fully as I can, and then go on to discuss some of
the other issues that have been raised.
Let me start by saying that we are absolutely committed to
ensuring the welfare of drivers and protecting all road users,
and we recognise that the long-standing drivers’ hours rules that
are in place are critical to achieving these objectives. We have
therefore deployed these relaxations with the utmost care. Safety
is the key consideration, and there are four pillars to our
thinking. First, safety must be considered with regard to the
extent of the relaxations made. Secondly, we must protect drivers
against any cumulative fatigue. Thirdly, it must be clear to the
industry about when and how it should use these relaxations; we
have published clear guidance on this. The last pillar is about
the use of these relaxations.
First, on the extent of the relaxations, I apologise to the noble
Baroness, Lady Randerson: I thought she was talking about the
current SI—not the one before last—when she said 11 hours,
because it is now 10 hours, as I am sure she knows. I was shaking
my head when she said 11 hours because I thought we were talking
about the current relaxation, not the one that expired many
months ago.
The drivers’ hours relaxations are very limited; I think noble
Lords will agree on that. No requirements of the rules, whether
it be breaks during the day, daily and weekly rest periods, or
weekly and fortnightly driving limits, have been removed. The
rules have been relaxed in a limited and controlled way.
I will not go into the details of the relaxations, because noble
Lords have mentioned them, so I assume that they are aware of
them. But, of course, these two relaxations are underpinned by
the requirements of the Road Transport (Working Time) Regulations
2005, which also limit drivers’ working hours to an average of 48
hours a week over a 17 to 26-week reference period. These
regulations also limit drivers to a maximum of 60 hours in any
given week, provided that the average is still 48 hours. These
working time regulations provide the protection against
cumulative fatigue, which is the second pillar we considered when
putting the 2021 regulations into place.
The third pillar is the published guidance. We are absolutely
clear about when and how these relaxations can be used. There has
to be evidence of a detriment to the wider community, there must
be a significant risk of a threat to human and/or animal welfare,
and there must be confirmation from the haulier’s customers that
these risks actually exist. Only then can the operator use the
relaxation. Operators using the relaxation, or proposing to use
it, must notify the department. The operator must also notify the
department later on about whether it has used the relaxation or
not. Of course, this assists with transparency, and we can check
compliance.
Some noble Lords may feel that that is not enough and that
perhaps we need more evidence of who is actually using these
relaxations. As of July last year, there were 68,982 HGV operator
licence holders in Great Britain, which rounds up to 69,000. In
October, 141 operators submitted notification forms. So, that is
141 out of 69,000. Only 111 of those submitted forms to follow up
with the department, and just 80—out of 69,000—actually used the
relaxations. We are not hearing from industry that they are not
using the relaxations because they are too complicated, or
whatever. It is because the safeguards are in place and we have
set those out in guidance, and we are absolutely clear on the
circumstances in which these relaxations can be used. Therefore,
I am content that they are being used in circumstances when it is
really necessary to meet those criteria that we set out in
guidance. So, let us face it, we are talking about very few
drivers.
The noble Baroness, Lady Randerson, was concerned about this
impression that the Government want to worsen conditions. I am
not getting that from the industry. I think it recognises this
very limited use of drivers’ hours extensions. We have acted
really carefully, again within the guidance, to make it clear
that transport managers should make sure that risk assessments
have been carried out if they plan to use these relaxations at
all. They must monitor and review where the relaxations are used;
it must also be done in agreement with the workforce.
I believe there are sufficient safeguards. I hear from HGV
drivers quite a lot, and I am not hearing anybody, as yet, say to
me that they are being forced to work extended hours owing to
these relaxations. Maybe I will get a flurry of emails
tomorrow—something tells me I probably will not.
The noble Lord, , asked about the evidence of
incidents. I think the noble Baroness, Lady Randerson, was aghast
that the Department for Transport does not have up-to-date,
real-time information about incidents on the roads. That is
because the data is collected by the police and not the
department. The data from one year goes through a series of
checks and is usually delivered annually from the police to the
department midway through the following year. We are not hearing
from the police that there is a flurry of serious incidents with
HGV drivers. That is a good thing. None of us wants to see
incidents on our roads, and I believe that the protections are in
place to ensure that they do not happen.
We must come to the very important issue of enforcements and the
oft-quoted figure of 27% in the SLSC report. I think it is
terrible too; I cannot agree with your Lordships more. It would
be an astonishingly bad figure if it were representative of the
sector as a whole—which it is not. I had the privilege of
visiting the DVSA on Friday. I chatted to a group of enforcement
people, who showed me some of the really bad stuff that goes on
out there: drivers’ hours, wheel nuts—we have some very strange
configurations of wheel nuts—and all sorts of things which are
really bad. I was shocked; I congratulated them on their work and
encouraged them to continue with great vigour. Then they showed
me their pièce de résistance, which they have had for about 18
months.
They have access to all the ANPR cameras in the country, and they
basically track all trucks, which is very cool. As they track all
the trucks, they look at which ones to target on the basis of the
intelligence they have coming through and what has happened
before. In that 27%, there has already been a great big screening
of all the trucks wafting around British roads, and they are the
ones that have been targeted by the intelligence coming out of
the fantastic work the DVSA does—not only the intelligence it
gets from industry but the operator compliance risk score, which
I am sure noble Lords are well aware of. They can do it in real
time; they can see a truck driving up the road, and if it has a
little red flag by it, they can send a car out, stop it and
enforce it.
The other issue to note, which is regrettable, is that overseas
operators make up a large proportion of non-compliance on UK
roads. That is very disappointing, and we will need to look at it
more closely. Between 12 August and 31 October, the DVSA
undertook 111 checks against operators that had notified the
department of their intent to use the relaxations; 58 offences
for drivers’ hours were identified, of which only 12 related to
the relaxed rules—this is the important bit, which certainly goes
back to what my noble friend Lord Attlee was saying—and none was
sufficiently serious to warrant a fixed penalty. To be honest, if
it is five minutes, it is probably not worthy of a fixed
penalty.
I reassure my noble friend that the Government are aware that we
do not want to victimise HGV drivers for very small
infringements, and that it must be sufficiently serious to
warrant a fixed penalty. That does not mean we want to give them
an easy ride, but we understand that, sometimes, for a few
minutes it might be impossible to stop, for whatever reason. In
general, though, that enforcement record is pretty good.
I hope I have been able to convince noble Lords of the thinking
behind these relaxations. The noble Lord asked whether we would
extend them. That is not currently our intention, although of
course we are looking at the data very carefully as we head
through and past the Christmas period.
Now I can come on to some good news. I am sure that noble Lords
will have spotted today that there is some good news coming out
of the sector. My 32 different actions, which the noble Lord,
, is so fond of mentioning, are
working, which is brilliant. Logistics UK, one of the large
representative bodies, has come out today with a report showing
that people are returning to the industry, if they had previously
left. We also know from DVLA data that it is pumping through
4,200 applications a day—we have thrown an awful lot of resources
at that.
We are looking at the lack of facilities, which is something that
we take very seriously. We have completed the tender for a report
reviewing parking and facilities countrywide. We have a £32.5
million pot of funding that we can use to encourage the private
sector to improve facilities and set up new ones. I would like to
share with noble Lords that I had a really good ministerial trip
on Friday: I went to open the Ashford international truck stop
and, my word, it is amazing. It sets a really high standard. I
encourage all private companies and operators that have truck
stops to go and look at Ashford because those in charge have done
a lot of thinking about what drivers need. It is a class site,
with 600 HGV parking spaces available. Now we have to think about
how we either improve lots of existing sites or find places for
new ones, because noble Lords will recognise that there are
issues with planning.
I will finish with a couple of other issues. On medical
examinations, we have set out plans to widen the pool of
registered healthcare professionals who do DVLA medical
questionnaires, which should help. We are also working with GPs
to make sure that routine medicals are restarted.
We have launched a review to look at ways of streamlining driver
CPC. My noble friend said that it would be easy to relax it—I
wish it were. We cannot even suspend it, as it would take primary
legislation to do so. However, we believe that ongoing
professional training is a valid part of an HGV driver’s life so
we are looking at reviewing how to make that better. Randomly
saying that you must have 35 hours does not seem the best way of
making sure that HGV drivers are up to speed with the
regulations.
As I said on Friday, if we do not look after them then they will
not look after us, so we need to look after them and the
Government are doing that. We are working very closely with the
industry. Hopefully, next year we will have a hugely impactful
year of logistics. We will make sure that people understand that
HGV driving is a good career that we want people to come into.
The Government are doing everything that we can to improve the
situation, but we recognise that, at the end of the day, this is
a private sector and we must support this private sector in doing
what it does best.
(LD)
My Lords, I am interested in the Minister’s visit to the DVSA and
her comment that a large percentage of the drivers not obeying
the rules work for foreign operators. Is that not rather at
variance with the Government’s decision to relax the rules on
cabotage for foreign operators? Is that not a risky decision?
(Con)
We must recognise that the vast majority of all haulage operators
obey the rules. It is because we have such a good, targeted
approach that we are able to target those that do not. A lot of
work goes into connecting the dots between different vehicles
belonging to the same operators.
Let us turn to cabotage, although I will probably write further
on this subject. The cabotage extension is very limited, going
from being able to do two journeys under cabotage to a period of
two weeks. From what we understand, this is about a tiny
percentage of haulage journeys. I will see if I can get any
further figures for the noble Baroness. Again, I am not getting
huge numbers of hauliers writing to me saying “This is terrible,
they’re stealing our business.” Most hauliers have more business
than they can possibly cope with. I will write with that
information but I do not think you can necessarily relate the
two. It is the case that the vast majority of haulage operators
and drivers follow the rules.
20:45:00
(Lab)
The noble Baroness made reference to the driver hours relaxation
and gave some figures, for which I thank her very much. Is not
the real explanation of why those figures are low that, in the
consultation, the proposition was opposed by the Road Haulage
Association as well as Unite the Union? Clearly they were not
going to queue up to use it, because they did not agree with it
anyway.
I notice as well that the noble Baroness said that the cabotage
extension is limited, so that is two of the 28 items down here
where the Minister herself has admitted that they have had a
fairly limited impact. I suggest that it is not the Government’s
28 items—or indeed 32, if that is what it is now. The biggest one
so far as far as road haulage drivers are concerned has been the
increase in pay that has happened. I do not think that this
featured too highly in the 28 courses of action to which the
Government referred.
Finally, what is the significant proportion of drivers stopped in
roadside checks who are breaching the drivers’ hours legislation?
I gather that it is not the 27% that was quoted in one survey, so
what is the figure? Why was it that the Secondary Legislation
Scrutiny Committee repeatedly asked the Department for Transport
to provide evidence that would allay its concerns but the
responses indicated that the department does not have information
either way. Why did not the department provide any information
then?
(Con)
I could possibly give an entirely new speech on this but I would
probably not be popular if I did—my Whip agrees with me.
The RHA wanted something entirely different—we know that. It
always wanted us to open the floodgates and allow EU drivers to
come in. Indeed, I am looking at the noble Lord and trying to
remember whether any good ideas have come from the Benches
opposite as to how we solve the HGV crisis. I believe wanted to open the doors to
100,000 EU drivers—that was the Labour way of solving this
crisis. We have taken a very different stance. As the noble Lord
will know, no EU drivers are willing to come flooding in anyway,
as I have said many times. We have set out a range of short,
medium and long-term actions. Some are very substantial; for
example, we removed the HGV levy. That saves hauliers lots of
money, and from that money they can pay their staff more. We have
also frozen VED. As I have said right from the outset, there is
not one thing that will fix this; it is a whole succession of
things. Some are short, medium and long term, some are big and
others are little; that is why we have 32 actions. I am proud of
those 32 actions and I believe that they are fixing the
crisis.
(Con)
My Lords, I am grateful to all noble Lords who have contributed
to this debate. I am especially grateful to the Minister for
explaining how limited the relaxation is to the drivers’ hours.
It is very helpful for her to clear up the issue of the 27%
infringement rate. I have always been very well aware that when
the DVSA stops a commercial vehicle it is normally acting on
intelligence, so it is not surprising that it finds a high rate
of infringement both on drivers’ hours and vehicle condition. It
does not go and stop a Tesco’s lorry, for instance.
The noble Baroness, Lady Randerson, talked about the complexity
of the drivers’ hours regulations. They are indeed very complex
if you want to go right up to the limit. If you do not need to go
right up to the limit, they are quite simple.
The noble Lord, , talked about the lack of a
strategic statement. The problem the Minister has with facilities
is very wide-ranging, and the planning system is a very major
obstacle to providing better facilities. I do not think £32
million will go very far; it will not be easy to change the
planning system, and this is not even a matter for my noble
friend’s department. However, I am extremely grateful for her
responses and I beg leave to withdraw my Motion.
Motion withdrawn.
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