Skip to main content

More driver licence screening for UK?

Anomalies regarding the return of driving licenses to people found guilty of serious driving offences have been uncovered in the UK. In a number of instances, these drivers have then gone on to commit more driving offences and in at least two cases, causing fatalities.
April 25, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
Anomalies regarding the return of driving licenses to people found guilty of serious driving offences have been uncovered in the UK. In a number of instances, these drivers have then gone on to commit more driving offences and in at least two cases, causing fatalities.

The 5244 Driver Vehicle Licensing Agency (DVLA) has been reviewing its processes. In these two tragic cases, the drivers had lost their licences after being found guilty of drink driving. But once the period of each ban was complete, the drivers were allowed to have the licence back. Medical tests that could have determined whether the drivers were still drinking to excess were not carried out and they subsequently continued their previous behaviour, which led to their causing fatalities while driving under the influence of alcohol.

An electronic driving licence checking service would have ensured that the drivers would not have had their licences returned until the medical checks had been carried out. There is major concern that the incidents caused by two drivers being mistakenly given back their driving licences may not be isolated events. The records of nearly 30,000 drivers need to be checked to ensure that the drivers are entitled and safe, to drive.

Richard Brown, managing director of Driving Licence checking service Licencecheck said, “The sad thing is that we can easily ensure that drivers’ licences are checked and the bad eggs stopped from driving. Our service enables us to check the most up-to-date information with the DVLA so that all penalties and disqualifications are brought to people’s attention. This ensures that decision makers, such as employers, have the correct information at hand in order to prevent HRO’s (High Risk Offenders) being allowed to drive.”

UK companies have been slow to adopt such electronic licence checking systems, which means that currently virtually no UK company has in its possession, or access to, the latest driver record held by a licence authority. In a number of other European countries however licence screening is carried out regularly.

Brown said, “Employers are not aware, although it is their legal responsibility, of the member of staffs licence details, endorsements, penalty points, convictions, category entitlements or medical requirements, and likewise employees are driving on company business when they are not legally entitled to.”

Using such services would increase road safety as research has shown that suitably qualified drivers are safer drivers. It is of concern that HRO category drivers should be stopped from driving. If employers and statutory bodies take advantages of driving licence checking advances then the numbers of HRO drivers can be dramatically reduced and road user safety dramatically improved.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Key UK tunnel opens
    February 27, 2012
    The UK's new Hindhead Tunnel is now open to traffic. The ?420 million (£371 million) tunnel runs under the Devil's Punch Bowl in Surrey and will reduce congestion, while boosting safety on the busy A3 route.
  • The strangest things are found spread across motorways
    December 1, 2015
    It’s often a messy business cleaning up a motorway after a truck has shed its load, and the strangest of loads have been accidentally spread down the blacktop in the UK, according to Highways England. The most recent incident was a slippery affair for maintenance crews – 24tonnes of lard that took a day to clean up, closing the motorway for 24 hours. From toilet roll and toxic waste to wine and washing up liquid for dishes, clean-up crews sometimes must tread lightly as they go about their business. They
  • CECE 2018 conference Rome: the sector powers up for digitisation
    March 20, 2019
    Getting the human-machine interface for equipment automation right is a lot trickier than expected. David Arminas reports from the CECE conference in Rome For many contractors, digitisation is key for improving on-site operational efficiency. But it may be time to take stock of progress and examine what does and doesn’t work. That is not to say that the anchors should be thrown out to halt development. Far from it. In the past eight months, the CECE - Committee for European Construction Equipment – led
  • TRA 2014 showcases the best of cutting-edge transport research and thinking
    July 1, 2014
    Despite tight finances due to the current global economic climate, the recent Transport Research Arena (TRA) 2014 show in Paris showed how innovative transport research, largely using cutting-edge ITS, is creating safer and smarter highways of the future. Guy Woodford reports How far can you drive around a car race track with no other vehicles on it on half a glass of fuel while attempting to maintain a speed of 60kph? After taking up the challenge offered by the Eco Driving Simulator using SiVIC (Simulatio