Sunday, 8 September 2013

42 Penalty points motorist still driving around

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MOTORISTS with 30 or more penalty points on licences are still driving, according to figures.
A woman from Isleworth in west London accumulated 42 points last year, statistics from the Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency (DVLA) highlighted by the Institute of Advanced Motorists (IAM) showed. The points were all for failing to disclose the identity of the driver between May 26 and December 21 last year.
Drivers can be banned if they accumulate 12 penalty points on their licence over a three-year period.
The IAM said the second-highest points total was  36 - for a person still driving went to a man from Warrington, Cheshire, who was caught driving without insurance six times in less than two weeks between February and March last year.
Other notable still-driving offenders included: a man from Southend with 30 points, who was caught speeding 10 times between March 2011 and August 2012; a man from Blackburn with 29 points, who was caught speeding eight times between September and November 2011; and a man from Pevensey, East Sussex, with 24 points who was caught speeding six times in two weeks between September 30 and October 13 last year.
IAM chief executive Simon Best said: "DVLA and the courts service are upgrading their computer systems to ensure that offence information is shared more efficiently, but this is not due to be in place until October. When drivers with 10 speeding offences are getting away with holding a licence, these improvements cannot come quickly enough."
He went on: "The IAM has no sympathy for owners who refuse to reveal the identity of the driver, and we would welcome an urgent consultation on new ways to deal with this problem. Drivers must expect that 12 penalty points means a driving ban or the whole system falls into disrepute."
A spokesman for HM Courts & Tribunals Service said: "The vast majority of drivers who get 12 or more penalty points are fined and disqualified from driving. Magistrates can use their discretion to not enforce a driving ban if doing so would cause exceptional hardship, such as losing a job or the ability to care for a dependant. A fine will still be enforced. Only a very small number of cases are affected by the data-sharing issue and we are working closely with DVLA to improve this."
A DVLA spokesman said: "The DVLA's role is to record the information provided by the courts. The courts are able to use their discretion to decide whether or not to disqualify a driver."

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