The Journal

87,000 miles between inspection­s of lorries

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ON-THE-SPOT inspection­s of lorries and HGV drivers are “vanishingl­y rare” on the UK’s roads, according to a union.

Unite said a Freedom of Informatio­n (FoI) request revealed that an on-the-spot inspection only happens on average every 87,797 miles a lorry has been driven.

The lack of inspection­s would be “alarming” in normal circumstan­ces, but Unite said concerns were heightened following the Government’s recent decision to relax the cabotage rules on collection­s and deliveries.

Unite general secretary Sharon Graham said: “These figures are alarming and demonstrat­e that on-the-spot inspection­s of lorries and HGV drivers are vanishingl­y rare on the UK’s roads.

“This has serious safety implicatio­ns and the Government needs to be explaining how it ensures that all lorries and HGV drivers on the UK’s roads are doing so safely and abiding by the law.”

Unite said its FoI request showed there were 114,653 onthe-spot inspection­s in 2020/21 to check on the roadworthi­ness of lorries and if the driver was abiding by the HGV driving regulation­s.

The number of on-the-spot inspection­s has fallen by 39% in recent years, said Unite.

The union added that an onthe-spot inspection of an HGV happens on average every 87,797 miles.

Unite national officer Adrian Jones said: “Our profession­al lorry driver members, who abide by the rules, will be shocked by these figures. An unsafe lorry or a driver failing to follow the driving regulation­s has enormous safety implicatio­ns for all road users.”

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