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April 16 2024 6.20pm

If Brexit responsible for HGV driver shortage.....

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View HKOwen's Profile HKOwen Flag Hong Kong 02 Oct 21 6.20am Send a Private Message to HKOwen Add HKOwen as a friend

Then those sneaky Belgians left with out telling anyone

[Link]

 


Responsibility Deficit Disorder is a medical condition. Symptoms include inability to be corrected when wrong, false sense of superiority, desire to share personal info no else cares about, general hubris. It's a medical issue rather than pure arrogance.

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Yellow Card - User has been warned of conduct on the messageboards View Hrolf The Ganger's Profile Hrolf The Ganger Flag 02 Oct 21 7.56am Send a Private Message to Hrolf The Ganger Add Hrolf The Ganger as a friend

This country better get used to shortages because our infrastructure will soon begin to fail under the weight of so many immigrants arriving legal and illegal.

Don't say you weren't warned. Blaming Brexit is pure politics.
The real problem is a reliance on cheap foreign labour and rapidly increasing numbers of people to service.

Just like ancient Rome.

 

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Yellow Card - User has been warned of conduct on the messageboards View Wisbech Eagle's Profile Wisbech Eagle Flag Truro Cornwall 02 Oct 21 9.26am Send a Private Message to Wisbech Eagle Add Wisbech Eagle as a friend

Originally posted by HKOwen

Then those sneaky Belgians left with out telling anyone

[Link]

I don't think anyone has suggested that there isn't a shortage of HGV drivers throughout Europe.

The issue is whether Brexit has put us in a worse position relatively to other European countries? If drivers can find plenty of work in their own countries, why come to the UK where they are regarded, at least by some, as unwelcome, and the pay and conditions inferior. Brexit hasn't caused the problem, but it has made finding a solution harder.

Imagining there is a pool of suitable labour at home ready and willing to be trained to drive HGV's, with the training facilities already in place, and that this can all be done quickly, is totally unrealistic.

We have a short to medium term problem which won't be solved by opening our doors again to the EU. Nor, I suspect, elsewhere.

Substantially increasing the training facilities, alongside making the job more attractive, both for the pay and the facilities on offer, will bring a longer-term improvement, but the same can be said for many other areas which are suffering a labour shortage. This won't be solved in my lifetime!

We will have to get used to the shortages, empty shelves and closures due to lack of staff. Oh, and Hrolf blaming it all on immigration.

 


For the avoidance of doubt any comments in response to a previous post are directed to its ideas and not at any, or all, posters personally.

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jeeagles Flag 02 Oct 21 9.42am

Originally posted by Hrolf The Ganger

This country better get used to shortages because our infrastructure will soon begin to fail under the weight of so many immigrants arriving legal and illegal.

Don't say you weren't warned. Blaming Brexit is pure politics.
The real problem is a reliance on cheap foreign labour and rapidly increasing numbers of people to service.

Just like ancient Rome.

You mean the infrastructure that's designed, built, and maintained by a Labour force that's reliant on immigration?

Lol.

 

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View Teddy Eagle's Profile Teddy Eagle Flag 02 Oct 21 10.04am Send a Private Message to Teddy Eagle Add Teddy Eagle as a friend


Wherever these drivers went it wasn’t to Poland.

[Link]

 

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jeeagles Flag 02 Oct 21 10.27am

Originally posted by Wisbech Eagle
I don't think anyone has suggested that there isn't a shortage of HGV drivers throughout Europe.

The issue is whether Brexit has put us in a worse position relatively to other European countries? If drivers can find plenty of work in their own countries, why come to the UK where they are regarded, at least by some, as unwelcome, and the pay and conditions inferior. Brexit hasn't caused the problem, but it has made finding a solution harder.

Imagining there is a pool of suitable labour at home ready and willing to be trained to drive HGV's, with the training facilities already in place, and that this can all be done quickly, is totally unrealistic.

We have a short to medium term problem which won't be solved by opening our doors again to the EU. Nor, I suspect, elsewhere.

Substantially increasing the training facilities, alongside making the job more attractive, both for the pay and the facilities on offer, will bring a longer-term improvement, but the same can be said for many other areas which are suffering a labour shortage. This won't be solved in my lifetime!

We will have to get used to the shortages, empty shelves and closures due to lack of staff. Oh, and Hrolf blaming it all on immigration.

It seems like the amount of blame placed on Brexit has been overstated, which has received an inevitable "I told you so" reaction from leavers. Exacerbated by the initial "I told you so" response from remainers before the full details emerged. Punch and Judy stuff.

For the moment, this seems like a storm in a tea cup. It seems like there are enough people with HGV license, who may trickle back into haulage jobs.

In recent years, our economy has been criticised for lack of productivity. Having a glut of cheap labour hasn't encouraged productivity. As necessity is the mother of all innovation, in future years logistics companies may need to sharpen their pencils to ensure they are using their resources as efficiently as possible.

Other infrastructure and technology developments will help. HS2 will take capacity from existing rail networks, freeing up space for freight. Moving freight on rail takes far less people.
Driverless conveying getting closer too.
East/West rail will start to deal with the London centric infrastructure layout we have in this country. We still have an issue that our ports city's are very poorly connected. Try getting from Newcastle to Hull or Liverpool to Bristol.

Long term, we might not need to train up thousands of new lorry drivers.

 

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Yellow Card - User has been warned of conduct on the messageboards View Wisbech Eagle's Profile Wisbech Eagle Flag Truro Cornwall 02 Oct 21 11.04am Send a Private Message to Wisbech Eagle Add Wisbech Eagle as a friend

Originally posted by jeeagles

It seems like the amount of blame placed on Brexit has been overstated, which has received an inevitable "I told you so" reaction from leavers. Exacerbated by the initial "I told you so" response from remainers before the full details emerged. Punch and Judy stuff.

For the moment, this seems like a storm in a tea cup. It seems like there are enough people with HGV license, who may trickle back into haulage jobs.

In recent years, our economy has been criticised for lack of productivity. Having a glut of cheap labour hasn't encouraged productivity. As necessity is the mother of all innovation, in future years logistics companies may need to sharpen their pencils to ensure they are using their resources as efficiently as possible.

Other infrastructure and technology developments will help. HS2 will take capacity from existing rail networks, freeing up space for freight. Moving freight on rail takes far less people.
Driverless conveying getting closer too.
East/West rail will start to deal with the London centric infrastructure layout we have in this country. We still have an issue that our ports city's are very poorly connected. Try getting from Newcastle to Hull or Liverpool to Bristol.

Long term, we might not need to train up thousands of new lorry drivers.

Interesting and positive post. I hope you are right. I am not sure too many holders of HGV licences, who aren't currently driving, will return without significant changes being made. I only know one and he got really fed up with always being away from home, and the lack of decent facilities. It's not as though there aren't better alternatives. He is now a gardener!

 


For the avoidance of doubt any comments in response to a previous post are directed to its ideas and not at any, or all, posters personally.

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View silvertop's Profile silvertop Flag Portishead 02 Oct 21 11.24am Send a Private Message to silvertop Add silvertop as a friend

Originally posted by Hrolf The Ganger

This country better get used to shortages because our infrastructure will soon begin to fail under the weight of so many immigrants arriving legal and illegal.

Don't say you weren't warned. Blaming Brexit is pure politics.
The real problem is a reliance on cheap foreign labour and rapidly increasing numbers of people to service.

Just like ancient Rome.

Lefty protectionist!

 

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View silvertop's Profile silvertop Flag Portishead 02 Oct 21 11.30am Send a Private Message to silvertop Add silvertop as a friend

Originally posted by jeeagles

It seems like the amount of blame placed on Brexit has been overstated, which has received an inevitable "I told you so" reaction from leavers. Exacerbated by the initial "I told you so" response from remainers before the full details emerged. Punch and Judy stuff.

For the moment, this seems like a storm in a tea cup. It seems like there are enough people with HGV license, who may trickle back into haulage jobs.

In recent years, our economy has been criticised for lack of productivity. Having a glut of cheap labour hasn't encouraged productivity. As necessity is the mother of all innovation, in future years logistics companies may need to sharpen their pencils to ensure they are using their resources as efficiently as possible.

Other infrastructure and technology developments will help. HS2 will take capacity from existing rail networks, freeing up space for freight. Moving freight on rail takes far less people.
Driverless conveying getting closer too.
East/West rail will start to deal with the London centric infrastructure layout we have in this country. We still have an issue that our ports city's are very poorly connected. Try getting from Newcastle to Hull or Liverpool to Bristol.

Long term, we might not need to train up thousands of new lorry drivers.

I agree with some of this and I am a remainer.

Much is to do with improved living standards from the origin countries where drivers used to work long hours and not see their families for months. Now they work locally and see their kids every night.

Why come back?

 

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View Badger11's Profile Badger11 Flag Beckenham 02 Oct 21 12.35pm Send a Private Message to Badger11 Add Badger11 as a friend

Originally posted by Wisbech Eagle

I don't think anyone has suggested that there isn't a shortage of HGV drivers throughout Europe.

The issue is whether Brexit has put us in a worse position relatively to other European countries? If drivers can find plenty of work in their own countries, why come to the UK where they are regarded, at least by some, as unwelcome, and the pay and conditions inferior. Brexit hasn't caused the problem, but it has made finding a solution harder.

Imagining there is a pool of suitable labour at home ready and willing to be trained to drive HGV's, with the training facilities already in place, and that this can all be done quickly, is totally unrealistic.

We have a short to medium term problem which won't be solved by opening our doors again to the EU. Nor, I suspect, elsewhere.

Substantially increasing the training facilities, alongside making the job more attractive, both for the pay and the facilities on offer, will bring a longer-term improvement, but the same can be said for many other areas which are suffering a labour shortage. This won't be solved in my lifetime!

We will have to get used to the shortages, empty shelves and closures due to lack of staff. Oh, and Hrolf blaming it all on immigration.

This is true at any time though. The reason we had a flood of workers from the EU was they could not find jobs at home and with the additional UK benefits plus the favourable currency exchange it made sense to come to the UK.

I have a builder mate who went to Berlin after the fall of the wall for the same reason. He came home when the work dried up and he could do better at home.

Many EU workers went home even before Brexit not because of racist Britain but because the economy at home had improved or they had made their dough.

Brexit hasn't helped but if they can get a better deal at home now they wouldn't come even if we were in the EU.

 


One more point

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BlueJay Flag UK 02 Oct 21 12.35pm

It's a bit of everything really. Brexit, pandemic, response to pandemic, a corrupt in it for themselves government, lack of planning and training, levels of immigration, exodus of some of those we've become reliant on and so on.

 

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View Badger11's Profile Badger11 Flag Beckenham 02 Oct 21 12.38pm Send a Private Message to Badger11 Add Badger11 as a friend

Originally posted by BlueJay

It's a bit of everything really. Brexit, pandemic, response to pandemic, a corrupt in it for themselves government, lack of planning and training, levels of immigration, exodus of some of those we've become reliant on and so on.

 


One more point

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