Volumetric Concrete operator all set with TruTac for new HGV rules
Burman Plant, the volumetric concrete and plant hire specialists, have âembraced with easeâ the recently introduced DfT regulations which now require certain categories of vehicles to fall under HGV Operator licencing regulations.
Since 1st September 2018, as with most volumetric concrete operators (mobile concrete batching plants) Burman Plant are required to comply with EU driverâs hours and working time (WTD) rules.
âIt was a bit daunting at firstâ concedes Director and founder Matt Burman, âbut TruTac quickly got us started with the new onboard hardware â which took less time to fit than a radio â and very soon we were able to tick all the right boxes to fall in line with compliance stipulations.â
On 20th May 2018 the Department for Transport (DfT) revised the rules regarding vehicle testing exemptions. Consequently, they say that around 29,500 HGVs including breakdown, road construction and engineering plant vehicles will be subject to the existing operator licencing regime and must therefore comply with the relevant compliance rules.
There is however, a phased implementation between 20th May 2018 and 20th May 2019, depending on the vehicle category.
For Burman Plant, it meant a complete change of approach and several new compliance disciplines - where before there had been virtually none.
âLuckily, this was all packaged up for us by TruTacâ continues Matt. âWe are using a range of software modules â TruControl; TruView; TruChecks; TruDriver and TruLocation - which make it easy for drivers and adminâ staff to implement and control. All the data comes straight from the vehicles via remote download to the computer - with no time wasting at the end of each shift. This of course saves time, keeps things accurate and provides us with all the key info we need, including driversâ hours, infringements and general housekeeping.â
Each element of the system was explained to Burman Plant employees onsite, by a TruTac technician. Furthermore, TruTac created templates based on Burman Plantâs existing work patterns in order that the new software would exactly match their specific operational requirements.
For example, using TruChecks, the mobile app software was based on Burmanâs current vehicle daily check sheets, making logging in, walk-round checks and reporting, easier, faster and paperless.
âKnowing that all the info required by law is being properly monitored and recordedâ concludes Matt, âgives us great peace of mind. We may have been 12 years without tachographs etc., but already it feels like we are compliance experts!â
The DfT has published the categories to which the rule changes apply:
Any operator affected can contact TruTac for guidance regarding how to determine whether a duty is domestic or EU and how to manage Working Time Directive rules (including for vehicles not requiring tachographs) and above all, says TruTac, how to stay compliant.