FTA, the business organisation representing the logistics sector, is angry that its members have been left in the dark by government for the second month in a row, as they await an announcement on how HGV MOT testing will be conducted from July onwards.
James Firth, FTA’s head of road freight regulation, has expressed dismay that businesses are still uncertain as to whether or not the Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency (DVSA) will be conducting annual vehicle tests by the end of June.
“With just 13 days to go before bookable MOT test
“Businesses need to be able to plan and schedule vehicle tests and Authorised Testing Facilities (private sector facilities used by DVSA) need to take bookings. For vehicles due their test in June, the announcement that they would be given an exemption certificate was made on 28 May. The uncertainty caused by these month-by-month last minute announcements is a pressure that freight businesses could do without while they are focused on keeping the economy running during the coronavirus crisis “
FTA members remain confused why DVSA examiners have not yet been sent back to work when businesses across the country, by following Department for Business Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS) guidelines, have been operating for some time.
DVSA withdrew its Vehicle Standards Assessors from testing facilities overnight on 18 March and started issuing three-month exemption certificates to vehicles from 24 March. “FTA has offered Government many suggestions for how safety tests could be resumed but exactly three months since the tests were stopped so abruptly, there still doesn’t seem to be a plan and this is hindering our ability to help the nation get back to work.”
FTA is meeting with Transport Minister Baroness Vere on Friday in the hope that industry can be given some degree of certainty as it supports the economic recovery into the summer.