would you "grass up" your employer?

would you "grass up" your employer?

Author
Discussion

italianjob1275

Original Poster:

567 posts

147 months

Friday 19th April 2013
quotequote all
Just a hypothetical situation...

Say your employer had downrated all his 44 tonne tractor units to 34 tonne to save a few quid on road tax. Then continued to take on jobs with higher weights thus making you anything up to 8/9 tonne overweight.

And that's say you'd taken up the matter with your employer and he replied with the usual bullst. And that's say that other drivers had turned on you and told you to just get on with it "because It's keeping us all in a job innit"

Would you have a chat with vosa about it?

Just speaking hypothetically of course...

jas xjr

11,309 posts

240 months

Friday 19th April 2013
quotequote all
as i understand it , if you were stopped by the police and taken to a weighbridge you would be 10 tons overloaded . not only would your employer be fined , so would you .
i cannot understand you agreeing to drive that vehicle

mrmr96

13,736 posts

205 months

Friday 19th April 2013
quotequote all
jas xjr said:
i cannot understand you agreeing to drive that vehicle
Because he needs to feed his family?

jas xjr

11,309 posts

240 months

Friday 19th April 2013
quotequote all
mrmr96 said:
jas xjr said:
i cannot understand you agreeing to drive that vehicle
Because he needs to feed his family?
if he gets caught , he will not be able to .

italianjob1275

Original Poster:

567 posts

147 months

Friday 19th April 2013
quotequote all
jas xjr said:
i cannot understand you agreeing to drive that vehicle
I didn't I hypothetically refused.

Other drivers don't have a problem though rage

pad58

12,545 posts

182 months

Friday 19th April 2013
quotequote all
I had to do that once,shortly after I quit.
It was well known part of the job all the drivers did it.

mrmr96

13,736 posts

205 months

Friday 19th April 2013
quotequote all
jas xjr said:
mrmr96 said:
jas xjr said:
i cannot understand you agreeing to drive that vehicle
Because he needs to feed his family?
if he gets caught , he will not be able to .
IF he gets caught, that's a risk.
If he refuses to drive, it's a certainty.

Tyre Smoke

23,018 posts

262 months

Friday 19th April 2013
quotequote all
Or you could hypothetically tell a mate who could then make a call to VOSA perhaps?

A suitably vague conversation 'overheard in the pub' about ABC Haulage running overweight..........

Your hypothetical conscience is clear.

irocfan

40,568 posts

191 months

Friday 19th April 2013
quotequote all
Damned if you do, damned if you don't frown

ZR1cliff

17,999 posts

250 months

Friday 19th April 2013
quotequote all
How about joining a union first, then refuse. That way you'll have some clout behind you, with legal help thrown in, if your employer has anything to say.

cherad

37 posts

199 months

Friday 19th April 2013
quotequote all
I don't know exactly what "downrated" means in this case, not being in that industry, but if it made the lorries more dangerous on the road then people's lives are at risk. In that case I couldn't live with keeping that to myself. Sometimes you've got to do what's right, not what's best.

Rick101

6,970 posts

151 months

Friday 19th April 2013
quotequote all
Don't do it. When it goes tits up, you'll be left holding the baby.


Conian

8,030 posts

202 months

Friday 19th April 2013
quotequote all
Report it.

All the risk is on you drivers, you'll get fines and lose licences.
You can bet your ass that if you get stopped he'll have some bullst lined up where he 'told you not to take the extra 2 pallets' etc

Jayyylo

985 posts

148 months

Friday 19th April 2013
quotequote all
cherad said:
I don't know exactly what "downrated" means in this case, not being in that industry, but if it made the lorries more dangerous on the road then people's lives are at risk. In that case I couldn't live with keeping that to myself. Sometimes you've got to do what's right, not what's best.
It doesn't mean this. Simply put, there are different tax bands depending on how heavy a load you are allowed to carry. If you are rated and 34t then that is the max load allowed to be pulled by that particular unit. If they wanted to take a heavier load (which may be worth more money) then they would need to upgrade their max weight rating.

I think.

truck71

2,328 posts

173 months

Friday 19th April 2013
quotequote all
Whether you report it or not is up to you, however your livelihood is at risk if you work for an unscrupulous employer. There are plenty of well run operations in your area so don't get caught up in it. All hypothetically of course.

gus607

921 posts

137 months

Friday 19th April 2013
quotequote all
Give VOSA a call ASAP.

anonymous-user

55 months

Friday 19th April 2013
quotequote all
Jeeez don't post this on trucknet as they would pretty much like to see vosa shut down as they are not needed and all hauliers are whiter than white and need no outside overseeing body.

Regarding the quote above,, How would running over the declared taxation
Class just on tax affect handling. The vehicle construction and use etc will not have changed just thee plated weight?

rumple

11,671 posts

152 months

Friday 19th April 2013
quotequote all
It would depend on the employer, the job market, how he went about telling me, some I've worked for I would do it for, some I would not, some Id grass up.

Panda76

2,572 posts

151 months

Friday 19th April 2013
quotequote all
No need to contact VOSA in the experience we had at work late last year.

We use contractors for some work and whilst I was shunting,said contractors trailer was put under the canopy to be loaded.
Upon loading the forkies put some ballast at the back,then continued to load,as they do with our 44t rated trailers from the front down to the ballast.
Didn't take much strain for it to eventually snap,and it did snap good and proper.From the legs forward the trailer snapped and it's headboard was on the floor.
Turns out upon some further inspection that whilst the contractor said his trailers were rated for 44t work,they weren't.They were rated for 38t work and taking the strain of being loaded like this as a stand trailer,one of them snapped.Cost them a pretty penny,and not just replacing the trailer,tieing up the pad on a very busy site,wrecker etc etc...Almost cost them the contract.
They now use 44t rated trailers.

rumple

11,671 posts

152 months

Friday 19th April 2013
quotequote all
Panda76 said:
No need to contact VOSA in the experience we had at work late last year.

We use contractors for some work and whilst I was shunting,said contractors trailer was put under the canopy to be loaded.
Upon loading the forkies put some ballast at the back,then continued to load,as they do with our 44t rated trailers from the front down to the ballast.
Didn't take much strain for it to eventually snap,and it did snap good and proper.From the legs forward the trailer snapped and it's headboard was on the floor.
Turns out upon some further inspection that whilst the contractor said his trailers were rated for 44t work,they weren't.They were rated for 38t work and taking the strain of being loaded like this as a stand trailer,one of them snapped.Cost them a pretty penny,and not just replacing the trailer,tieing up the pad on a very busy site,wrecker etc etc...Almost cost them the contract.
They now use 44t rated trailers.
That's bad.