captain cab wrote:
I was pointing out that they havent told anyone what the national standard will be, they dont know yet, however, they are basing almost an entire document on something they have neither told people about or dont know themselves. So people are merely guessing.
I think the two stories post above, where councils have licensed smart cars, will give a clue to the maximum standard as set by the LC......the maximum will be 2 doors, but as a company you may wish for more.
Well the Impact Assessment says this:
The Law Commission wrote:
These standards include, but would not be limited to:
1) for drivers: “fit and proper” person, medical, CRB checks, and disability awareness training.
2) for vehicles: roadworthiness standards and potentially accessibility for particular vehicles; and
3) for operators: “fit and proper” person.
In respect of PHVs which operate exclusively on a pre-booked basis, competitive forces work
reasonably well, and the argument for intervention beyond safety is not strong. We therefore
propose the national standards above would be mandatory so that local authorities could not
impose more stringent conditions and fees for issuing PHV driver and vehicle licences would be
set nationally. We would propose to maintain operator licensing as a useful layer of enforcement
and information gathering in respect of licensing functions for local authorities.
Clearly for PH drivers topo tests and the DSA test wouldn't be applicable. Thus it would just be a CRB and a medical. The disability awareness training would be a 'turn up and tick a few boxes' type of thing.
For PH vehicles presumably age and size rules and colour codes and the like would be out.
But the document is about the broad principles of regulation rather than the minutiae of how it would be implemented, so you don't really need to know every detail of what the standard should be.
At this stage it just looks a bit like nitpicking to question the validity of the whole thing just because every minor detail isn't outlined.
You should be critiquing and questioning the proposals at the level of broad principle rather than your approach above, as I assume the consultation questions aim towards. The details will come at a later stage.
If you don't like the idea of things like a very basic standard for PH or no cross-border rules then say so, rather than getting bogged down with what the minimum width of the back seat of a PHV might be, for example.
If you're not satisfied with the lack of detail at this stage then by all means you could try asking the LC for more information, but if you submit to the consultation complaining about a lack of detail rather than dealing with the substantive principles then it'll just look like you're trying to dodge the issues.
