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Posted By Ali
We are looking at updating our Road safety policy and part of this is getting someone in from ROSPA to train us on driving risk assessments, particularly for our 350 van drivers. However, management are now wanting all white collar staff to be risk assessed too even office staff who may occasionally visit sites. Does anyone have experience of this ? I would have thought the requirement is driven by risk (no pun intended).
Ali
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Posted By J Knight
Hi Ali,
I agree that a requirement for further training should be risk driver; RoSPA certainly take this approach in carrying our their MORR assessments. We have had an assessment from RoSPA, and although it was expensive I feel it was worthwhile.
More recently we have had our fundraisers (some of who drive extensively for work) assessed by an organisation called DriveTech (other providers exist). This was online, and looked at three key risk aspects, driver history, attitudes and something else. As a consequence we have 30 high risk drivers who will get on-to-one on-road tuition, and about 15 people who will get workshop training. All this is quite expensive, and we have reduced costs by omitting from the training programme all those who drive for us on rare occasions only,
John
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Posted By Colin Reeves
Ali
My employer (a local authority) requires that all who drive a vehicle (including their own) on Council business attend a half-day driving awareness course and then a one hour driving assessment.
In fact, it is not as bad as I thought it would be (granny, eggs etc!)
Colin
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Posted By J Knight
Hi Ali,
My post ended up a bit garbled because I was about to go into a meeting and had to rush a bit. In essence, the management shouldn't just make a decision as to who should and should not attend training; that decision should fall out of the Risk Assessment. If the Risk Assessment findings are that everybody should be trained, then so be it. What we found was that the individual driver assessments recommended by our overall road risk assessment showed that only some of our fundraisers need training; some of them are fine as they are. They also showed that different people need different levels of training. So we don't just throw money away on one size fits all training. Get your drivers properly evaluated and use that as the basis for decision making. DriveTech charged us £10 a head for the on-line assessment (we got slight discount but the full price isn't much more), and we used one person's time for a couple of hours as a contact point with DriveTech: cheap at the price,
John
John
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Posted By Colin Reeves
As an addendum to my last, the Council does this Driver Awareness training primarily on cost grounds - a greatly reduced insurance premium and a statistically proven reduction in time off work as a result of RTA injuries.
Might help convince your boss!
Colin
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Posted By Arran Linton - Smith
John Knight,
Could you contact me direct on this matter as I have just been asked review workplace driver safety arrangements?
Arran
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Posted By Ali
Thank you all for the useful advice.
Ali
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