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Driver hours warning issued to car and LCV fleets after
successful company prosecution
A warning to companies that they must start tracking the working hours
of their drivers is being issued to car and light commercial vehicle fleets
after the first successful UK health and safety prosecution of its type.
The Produce Connection was fined £30,000 after one of its employees
died when his vehicle drifted into the path of an oncoming lorry. He had
worked 76 hours in the previous four days and chronic fatigue is believed
to be a major factor.
The prosecution is thought to be significant because it is the first time
that a company has been fined in a case of this type where the accident
occurred outside working hours. Mark Fiebig was driving home from work
at the time.
Andy Leech, sales and marketing director at cfc solutions, said that the
case was a strong indicator that the Health and Safety Executive was taking
the subject of car and LCV fleet driver hours ever more seriously.
He explained: "Traditionally, driver hours has been a subject that
fleets believe is mainly the preserve of companies that run mainly HGVs,
but this is rapidly changing. We are reaching a point where it is arguable
that every fleet manager should monitor driver hours while this is still
a suggested practice rather than a legal requirement.
"The Produce Connection case is a further signal that the HSE is
tightening up in this area. This kind of prosecution signals that employers
have a wide ranging responsibility to stop fatigued drivers getting behind
the wheel of vehicles, especially company ones."
Leech added that cfc would be writing to its 3,000 strong customer base
in order to warn them about the implications of this case on their own
fleet operations.
He said: "While duty of care as a fleet issue is getting lots of
publicity, the area of driver hours where we are actually seeing prosecutions
being brought forward ö is one that we believe is not being adequately
talked about or acted upon."
cfc launched its own software solution to tackle this problem, the Driver
Hours Module, earlier this year. This can be used either as a standalone
product or in conjunction with cfc's FleetPlus software package, in use
by around half of the UK's top 100 fleets.
It is highly flexible in its approach. Drivers can clock on
in a number of ways - such as using a dedicated in-car device or by interfacing
with existing systems such as digital tachographs and telematic systems.
It also supports multiple drivers using the same vehicle - for example
where a team of three drivers take turns to drive, load and unload.
Leech said: ""Our new module uses an innovative approach to
manage the process, with key factor reporting and exception reports produced
at the touch of a button, and e-mails sent to the driver and/or fleet
manager when needed straight from the system."
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