Sunday, 10 October 2010

Driving Licences

Question: How many people are aware that all UK driving licences are issued in accordance with and to comply with an EU Directive? Yup, that's right - the issuance of these are an EU competence, first laid down in Directive 91/439/EEC of 29 July 1991. The main contents are:
  • Necessary to pass a test of knowledge (theory) and a test of skills and behaviour (practical)
  • Required to meet the minimum standards of physical and mental fitness to drive
  • Mandatory to have the normal residence in the Member State issuing the licence
  • Harmonisation of categories of driving licences
  • Minimum ages for driving different types of vehicles
  • Progressive access in categories A, C and D, from light vehicles to more large or powerful vehicles
  • Creation of a Community driving licence model (paper & plastic card)
On 19th January 2013 Directive 2006/126/EEC, of 20 December 2006, comes into force and these new rules are designed to reduce possibilities of fraud, guarantee a true freedom of movement for EU drivers and reinforce safety on European roads.
The main aspects of are:
  • Anti-fraud measures
    • Only plastic card
    • Optional microchip
    • Limited administrative validity
  • Further harmonisation of categories
    • Mopeds: AM
    • Motorcycles: A1, A2, A
    • Categories B and BE
    • Categories C1, C1E, D1, D1E
  • Reinforce progressive access to categories (age, dimensions)
  • Harmonised periodicity medical checks for group 2
  • Requirements for driving examiners: new Annex
Prerogatives of the Member State of residence
As driver licensing matters have not been the subject of exhaustive harmonisation, Member States have residual competence on various points.
Therefore, when the holder of a driving licence resides in the territory of a Member State which is not the state that issued the licence, that host country can require his compliance with certain rules, for example:
  • National provisions on the period of validity of driving licences.
  • The frequency of medical examinations: Annex III of Directive 91/439/EEC places drivers into two groups. With regard to medical examinations, different arrangements apply to each of them.
Group 1 includes the drivers of vehicles in categories A, B and B+E and in sub-categories A 1 and B 1.
Candidates have to undergo a medical examination if it appears, at the time of completion of the necessary formalities or during the tests that they are required to undergo before obtaining a licence, that they are suffering from one or more of the incapacities mentioned in the annex.
Group 2 includes the drivers of vehicles in categories C, C+E, D, D+E and in sub-categories C 1, C 1+E, D 1 and D 1+E.
Candidates have to undergo a medical examination before the first issue of a licence and, thereafter, drivers have to undergo the periodic examinations which will be prescribed by national legislation.
At the time of issue or at the time of any subsequent renewal of a driving licence, Member States will be able to require stricter standards than those mentioned in the annex.
Moreover, national legislation may provide for the provisions for Group 2 to apply to drivers of Category B vehicles using their driving licence for professional purposes (taxis, ambulances, etc.),
Moreover, other fields are not harmonised by the Community legislation and fall within the residual competence of the states.
  • States can take measures on taxation (connected with holding a licence)
  • They can impose sanctions (e.g. penalty points).
  • Member States can, for reasons of safety and of road traffic, apply their national provisions on withdrawal, suspension and cancellation of the licence, to any licence holder having taken up his normal residence on their territory. The host country can, in certain cases, call for exchange of the licence.
  • With regard to the provisions on the minimum age, Directive 91/439/EEC stipulates that Member States may derogate from the conditions laid down for categories A, B and B+E and issue these categories from the age of 17.
  • Sub-categories are optional. The decision whether or not to establish them is the prerogative of the Member State.
  • Member States may grant certain equivalences for driving in their territory, such as motor-powered tricycles and quadricycles under a category A or A1 licence and light motorcycles under a category B licence
  • The choice of a "plastic" or "paper" driving licence model is the prerogative of the Member State.
  • National vehicle categories still exist. This is the case, for example for agricultural tractors or mopeds. A moped licence, issued by one Member State is not automatically valid on the territory of another Member State.
For those still awake, there is also a Commission Decision of 25 August 2008 on equivalences between categories of driving licences. 

And there you were thinking that when applying for a driving licence you were receiving a document based solely on decisions taken by our Toy Parliament in Westminster.

As an aside, a good friend of mine, Ian Parker-Joseph has a question that perhaps readers may care to attempt answering:
"Totalitarian: If you don’t believe that Britain is governed totally by political rules, regulations, orders and diktats, please name me 6 everyday activities, yes, just six, that you undertake that does not require a. permission, b. licence, c. regulated action, d. regulated packaging, materials, ingredients, tools etc. i.e. 6 activities that never touch the state or a regulator."

Well, go on then.

9 comments:

IanPJ said...

WfW, thanks for putting up the question again, but just for clarity, here is the full question.

Quiz for today, totalitarian: If you don’t believe that Britain is governed totally by political rules, regulations, orders and diktats, please name me 6 everyday activities, yes, just six, that you undertake that does not require a. permission, b. licence, c. regulated action, d. regulated packaging, materials, ingredients, tools etc.

i.e. 6 activities that never touch the state or a regulator.

Witterings from Witney said...

Post amended IPJ

richard said...

Archery? And, errrm.....

Janner said...

Coveting my neighbour's daughter (and his ox, for that matter)

Breathing

Masturbating

.....errr that's it

Witterings from Witney said...

Sorry Richard there is a 2003 act covering archery and crossbows.

Try again?

Witterings from Witney said...

janner, sorry but the second is taxed and regulated in one way or another, pollution regs, no smoking areas etc

As to the third I could reply that it reguires 'regulated action'.....but won't. Not wishing to go into details of where one might do this, the clean-up will require something that is made and regulated, or water/cleaning fluid which is subject to regs in its manufacture or a statutory charge by law.

As to the first, to covet is not an act, it is a thought!

Try again?

And also for future attempts - can we please treat the question in a sensibe manner? Thank You

Janner said...

Thing is WfW I am aware that to compile such a list may well be impossible. What I was attempting to convey - albeit somewhat flippantly - was a sense of irony in an otherwise unfunny state of affairs.

But then, a joke is only ever funny if two people are laughing...

Apologies.

Janner said...

In an attempt to redeem myself, if only partially:

Having my four year old granddaughter sit on my knee and being aware of her face as she becomes ever more involved in the story (shamelessly laden with subliminal moral guidance) I am telling her which involves young animals with a more than passing resemblance to humans of her limited acquaintance.

Witterings from Witney said...

janner, no apology necessary.