Anonymous wrote:
The OFT report clearly gave NONE of the Cab Sections members anything in the way of improvement to their working conditions, in fact, for the majority it threatened monies that were LEGALLY invested in the aquisition of H/C plates. Right or wrong no-one who truly cares about others would wish to see a fellow driver lose several thousand pounds of hard earned money, particularly when the transfer of such plates is undertaken with FULL council knowledge and agreement.
Well, license quotas do nothing to improve the working conditions of those who don't have one, and policy shouldn't be decided on the basis only of members of the T&G's Cab Section.
I don't think the plate premium issue can be used to justify retaining quotas, but as our opinion column points out at length, they do perhaps provide an argument for some sort of delay/phasing in implementation, which will obviously happen anyway given the snail's pace of these things, irrespective of whether any deliberate delaying policy is adopted.
But I think the OFT's mention that it will be for the Govt to consider the social aspects sends a pretty strong signal that they may be thinking along these lines, but of course the social aspects of these things are not within their remit.
But as long as plates are transferred on the basis of unequal knowledge of the position by buyers and sellers then the problem will never go away and even if de-limitation was delayed for twenty years then the problem will persist.
Dusty
PS I suggested a period of twenty years not on the basis that I thought that would be an appropriate delay until de-limitation implemenation, but to illustrate the point that as long as plates are bought by those 'in the dark' and sold by those 'who know the score' then the problem of big losses won't go away.