Sussex wrote:
It also begs the question why the LO had to rely on his knowledge rather than the print out from the DSA, and the penalty points checks.
Maybe that's how it did happen, or at least partly so. I mean, the previous article says that it was just chance that the LO happened to work for the two local authorities in question, then says it was a 'great example of partnership working' between the councils
Now more spin by the looks of it - somehow doubt it was *that* case that led to the new national register as per the headline below, although to be fair it's not clear whether that's the council's take on it, or maybe just the newspaper's.
But other than deconstructing the politics of it all, not really much to see here - mainly a rehash of the article above, plus that another LA has signed up to the national register, which like the safeguarding training isn't really particularly newsworthy once you've read of a few dozen
Case of taxi driver falling asleep at the wheel leads to new national registerhttps://www.derbytelegraph.co.uk/burton ... er-2930299Council signs up to countrywide database and will share informationNew measures are now in place to make it harder for taxi drivers who have had their licences revoked to submit applications to work in other parts of the country.
North West Leicestershire District Council has become one of the first local authorities in the country to sign up to a new licensing register designed to improve public safety and confidence in taxi drivers.
It comes after Burton taxi driver Ali Hassan thought he had escaped the watchful eye of council bosses when he applied for a licence in both North West Leicestershire and South Derbyshire.
He failed to state on his application that his licence had been revoked by East Staffordshire Borough Council for falling asleep while driving young people about as part of a school taxi contract.
Hassan also failed to disclose he had a speeding offence which resulted in him getting six penalty points on his licence while he was licensed with East Staffordshire council.
Fortunately, his failure to include the information on his application did not go unnoticed by an eagle-eyed licencing officer in North West Leicestershire, who, by chance, previously worked for East Staffordshire Borough Council and spotted the fraudulent paperwork.
Hassan was found guilty of fraud by false representation at Leicester Magistrates' Court in January, this year, and handed a 12-month community order, with a requirement that he complete 100 hours of unpaid work.
As a result of this case, the district council has signed up to the new National Register of Taxi and Private Hire Licence Revocations and Refusals – or NR3 for short.
It is designed to prevent drivers from submitting licence applications while failing to declare historical licence revocations in other parts of the country.
The new register will make the process of checking a driver's history in other area much easier and prevent anyone from successfully making false claims on their application for a licence as councils share details on a database.
Council signing up will update the register any time they revoke or refuse a licence.
Revoking a licence is only used in serious cases of incompetence, often when passengers are put in danger.
This information will then be available for all other authorities signed up to the scheme.
Councillor Andrew Woodman, portfolio holder for community services at the district council, said: "This is a sensible way of sharing information between licensing authorities to ensure passengers are being kept safe and that they can have confidence that their driver is both professional and competent.
"For law-abiding taxi drivers absolutely nothing changes – declaring your licence history has always been a requirement.
"It is only those that fraudulently submit inaccurate applications that need to worry.
"Safety will always be our priority as a licensing authority.
"The register also protects the integrity of all the excellent taxi drivers we have in the district who we believe will be rewarded by the confidence boost this will give to customers."