From the BBC:
“Cornish war
veteran driving instructor 'has to stand in rain'”
A disabled war
veteran driving instructor said he has been repeatedly forced to sit outside
during wet and windy weather because of the closure of test centre waiting
rooms. Andy Small, from Cornwall, said blanket national closures due to
Covid-19 were "ridiculous". "All instructors now have to sit or
stand, outside, for up to 40 minutes while tests take place," he said. The
Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency said it was reviewing the situation.
Mr Small was
medically discharged from the army in 2010 and has rheumatoid arthritis. He
served in the Gulf War, completed two tours of Bosnia and was awarded the Royal
Warrant in 2005. He said he could not stand for long periods so when pupils
have been taking their tests, he would be sitting in the car park in a camping
chair, holding an umbrella. "The inclement weather conditions will only
deteriorate over the coming months," he said. "There is no cover. "A
number of instructors have underlying health issues which will be made worse. "This
will lead to many experiencing a physical and financial difficulty because
they'll become ill and need time off to recover. "Now a tiered lockdown
has been introduced across the country, surely test centre waiting rooms should
be reopened using a similar approach?" He said it was ridiculous to have a
blanket closure when "some areas of the country are at lower risk than
others".
Mr Small said
he wanted the DVSA to look at waiting rooms based on the size of the test
centre. "We have five examiners covering Bodmin and can maintain social
distancing guidelines with no difficulty," he said. "The examiners
can sit in our cars, inches from strangers, but we're not allowed to be in a
waiting room that can accommodate us with social distancing." The DVSA
said it was working with the Health and Safety Executive and driving instructor
associations to ''review our centres". "We are initially reopening
nine waiting rooms and to ensure everyone's safety we will review the measures
we put in place and get feedback from staff and our waiting room visitors
before we open anymore," it added. Bodmin test centre is not one of the
nine.
^ While it may
be easier for Local, State and Federal Governments to make blanket and general restrictions
that doesn’t mean it is the right thing to do. It is one thing to do these one-sized
fits all restrictions at the beginning of the pandemic when people weren’t sure
what was going on and things were getting chaotic and deadly, but we are now
almost 8 months into this pandemic and had a lull between waves that one-sized
doesn’t fit all and restrictions and policies for employees, officials and the
public should be more tailored to both the individual agency/department/group
and the region. I know that what works in Florida doesn’t mean it will work in Maine
especially if it only calls for outside dining, visiting, waiting, etc. It
seems this is the case with this Test Centre in Cornwall. ^
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