Remember that official Wolverhampton Council piece in PHTM towards the end of last year, which was essentially defending the whole thing?
https://content.yudu.com/web/43sy4/0A43 ... gin=readerCame across that last night when looking for something, and recalled this nonsensical statement in particular, which is part of the few paragraphs near the end where they refute that it has 'low standards'. It said:
Eight months ago, Wolverhampton City Council wrote:
The council refutes that it has low standards[...]
According to the Department for Transport statistics, Wolverhampton refused, revoked and suspended more licences than any other council.
Where to start with a statement like that?
Well, er, for a start there's a slight contradiction in claiming you have high standards if you're refusing, revoking and suspending more licences than any other council, surely?
And, even more obviously, such a statement is hardly a surprise if you're licensing so many more drivers than any other 'council' in the country?
In fact, if the DfT stats I was looking at last night are the ones referred to by Wolves, TfL has the highest annual total of refusals, suspensions and revocations at 1,907, while Wolves lags behind at 1,206.
But, of course, TfL isn't a *council* as such, so to that extent Wolverhampton Council isn't incorrect. But since Wolverhampton wants to act as a de facto national licensing authority, then it's not really like a normal council at all in this regard. So the word 'council' in the statement above is doing a lot of heavy lifting (as people often say these day)
On the other hand, TfL licences c. 124,000 drivers, while Wolverhampton 'only' licences 43,000 drivers (the numbers are lagging a bit behind now - they're for the year to 31 March 2024).
So in fact, proportionately, Wolverhampton does refuse, revoke or suspended a lot more drivers than TfL - you don't have to actually crunch the numbers to spot that.
On the other hand, the Dft stats are a real rabbit hole, and even a few minutes spent looking at it all suggests that the figures lack a certain, er, integrity (and I don't mean integrity in the sense of honesty; more like in the sense of statistical integrity, or whatever...)
In particular, the stats on the spreadsheet are entries on the NR3S database of refusals, suspension and revocations.
And, according to the DfT spreadsheet, Wolverhampton revoked 327 badges, while suspending 447.
On the other hand, TfL revoked 946 badges, while only suspending 38.
Correct me if I'm wrong, and I don't know their precise procedures for suspending and revoking. And I'm quite sure that if you compare provincial councils all governed by the same framework legislation you'd find myriad different procedures and approaches to this kind of stuff, never mind comparing Wolverhampton under one Act of Parliament to TfL under completely different legislation
But I don't think those figures are comparing like-with-like, and to that extent lack integrity
