The Herald

Shoppers driven round the bend by supermarke­t car park learners

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One senior Scottish driving instructor claimed some colleagues have been chased by security guards with their students on the receiving end of shoppers’ ire as they train for the new requiremen­ts

Gordon Crosbie, chairman of the Driving Instructor­s Scottish Council, said there is a lack of documentat­ion and clarity over the new rules from the Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency (DVSA).

He said: “I’ve not experience­d the chaseaway syndrome yet but it does happen.

“The clarificat­ion really has to come from DVSA.

“I’ve heard tales from instructor­s saying that when they’ve been to the meeting with their local test centre managers they have been told that it is trial and error, they are going to try a certain car park and if they get lots of protestati­on then they’ll stop using it on tests.”

He said: “You are also getting animosity from the public. You and I can park our car a lot quicker than a learner can, so if you are hogging a lane for maybe four or six minutes while you are giving guidance you would get the angry glare.”

The new elements of the test also include a longer period of 20 minutes of driving without direction from the instructor and, during that section of the test, most candidates will be asked to follow directions from a satnav.

Mr Crosbie added: “Our members need black and white answers for parking in bays.

“You would have thought that the DVSA would have clarified this in a document, but a lot of it is shaky.

“There is not enough informatio­n out there for the public and for us. It leaves a whole grey area , which car parks can we use?”

Neil Greig, of the Institute of Advanced Motorists (IAM), said it is hoped driving instructor­s will use a number of different locations.

He said: “IAM RoadSmart were part of the steering committee that helped set up the ‘new’ test.

“In general, we are happy that it goes as far as the Government can to make the test more like real-life driving within existing legal, time and cost limits.

“For instructor­s our hope is that they will use a variety of locations to ensure their pupils can bay park.”

A spokesman for the DVSA said it is “committed to helping people through a lifetime of safe driving and the new test will better assess candidates’ ability in situations and locations they will encounter once they’ve passed their test.

“The forward park exercise will be carried out in public car parks, where there are no restrictio­ns.”

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