Vehicle uses where you don’t need Driver CPC
Quote:
You don’t need Driver CPC if the vehicle you drive is:
used for non-commercial carriage of passengers or goods for personal use
used to carry material or equipment you use for your job - but driving the vehicle can’t be the main part of your job
used for driving lessons for anyone who wants to get a driving licence or a Driver CPC
used by, or is under the control of, the armed forces, civil defence, the fire service and forces responsible for maintaining public order
used in states of emergency or for rescue missions
https://www.gov.uk/driver-certificate-o ... driver-cpcAnyone self drive hiring a 17 seater for personal/family wont have a digicard anyway
roythebus wrote:
You certainly DO need a DCPC for "unpaid driving", especially if you're a voluntary sector "charity" s19 or s21 driver. I would say that hiring a minibus for your own family would be exempt, but you are not exempt from drivers' hours or tacho laws.
The "hire and reward", "not for profit" etc statements used by the UK government has in my view been clarified by an EU Court ruling in the case of Glockner, where it was deemed that any form of money (favours, goods in kind)changing hands for transport is "financial activity", regardless of the status of the operating company, i.e. plc, charity "not for profit", sole trader doing it for a living etc.
So if driving a D1 is not your main job, your passengers are not paying anything, you are not getting paid, you "should" be ok, but no doubt it will take a test case in the UK to prove the point, even though EU case law is crystal clear on these matters. With information I have to hand which I can't publish yet due to ongoing EU talks, the UK government has been dishing out wrong information for years to protect the CT groups.
I would say that something like a scout group minibus driver will need a DCPC because the bus is paid for out of the scout group funds; "financial activity".