Agenda item

"Tyred" Campaign - Motion Included on the Agenda by Councillor F McKenna on behalf of the Labour Group

On Monday 10 September 2012 a coach bound for Liverpool carrying 53 people from the Bestival music festival on the Isle of Wight, left the road and crashed into a tree instantly killing Michael Molloy (18), Kerry Ogden (23) and the coach driver, Colin Daulby (63), and left others with life changing injuries. The inquest into the crash found that the front nearside tyre which was actually older than the coach itself, at 19 years, was responsible for the crash. In 2014, Liverpool City Council unanimously agreed a motion in support of Michael’s mother Frances calling for a change in the law requiring a ban on tyres older than six years on commercial vehicles. Despite the wide spread public and political support for this campaign, no change in the law has been made, shamefully leaving others at risk from faulty and dangerous tyres.

That this Council:

 

  • Notes that Frances Molloy has launched “Tyred” – the official campaign to pressure Government – to change the law to ban the use of tyres older than ten years on commercial vehicles.

 

  • Wholeheartedly supports “Tyred” and instructs the Leader of the Council to write to the Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition to call together cross-party support for a change in the law.

 

  • Supports the “Tyred” campaign until such a change in the law is achieved and to draw the attention of the Local Government Association, especially its Environment and Transport Board, to this Council’s view that the concerns should be fully addressed.

 

That the Chief Executive be asked to write to all schools in the Borough asking them to require coach and bus operators they use for school trips etc to adhere to the provisions set out in the "Tyred" campaign.

 

That Council officers be asked to look at our own procurement procedures with a view to inserting an appropriate clause in any contracts with coach and bus commercial operators.

 

Minutes:

The following Motion was moved and seconded:

 

"On Monday 10 September 2012 a coach bound for Liverpool carrying 53 people from the Bestival music festival on the Isle of Wight, left the road and crashed into a tree instantly killing Michael Molloy (18), Kerry Ogden (23) and the coach driver, Colin Daulby (63), and left others with life changing injuries. The inquest into the crash found that the front nearside tyre which was actually older than the coach itself, at 19 years, was responsible for the crash. In 2014, Liverpool City Council unanimously agreed a motion in support of Michael’s mother Frances calling for a change in the law requiring a ban on tyres older than six years on commercial vehicles. Despite the wide spread public and political support for this campaign, no change in the law has been made, shamefully leaving others at risk from faulty and dangerous tyres.



That this Council:

 

  1. Notes that Frances Molloy has launched “Tyred” – the official campaign to pressure Government – to change the law to ban the use of tyres older than ten years on commercial vehicles.

 

  1. Wholeheartedly supports “Tyred” and instructs the Leader of the Council to write to the Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition to call together cross-party support for a change in the law.

 

  1. Supports the “Tyred” campaign until such a change in the law is achieved and to draw the attention of the Local Government Association, especially its Environment and Transport Board, to this Council’s view that the concerns should be fully addressed.

 

That the Chief Executive be asked to write to all schools in the Borough asking them to require coach and bus operators they use for school trips etc to adhere to the provisions set out in the "Tyred" campaign.

 

That Council officers be asked to look at our own procurement procedures with a view to inserting an appropriate clause in any contracts with coach and bus commercial operators."

 

RESOLVED:   A.   That this Council:

 

(i)      Notes that Frances Molloy has launched “Tyred” – the official campaign to pressure Government – to change the law to ban the use of tyres older than ten years on commercial vehicles.

 

(ii)     Wholeheartedly supports “Tyred” and instructs the Leader of the Council to write to the Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition to call together cross-party support for a change in the law.

 

(iii)   Supports the “Tyred” campaign until such a change in the law is achieved and to draw the attention of the Local Government Association, especially its Environment and Transport Board, to this Council’s view that the concerns should be fully addressed.

 

B.   That the Chief Executive be asked to write to all schools in the Borough asking them to require coach and bus operators they use for school trips etc to adhere to the provisions set out in the "Tyred" campaign.

 

C.   That Council officers be asked to look at our own procurement procedures with a view to inserting an appropriate clause in any contracts with coach and bus commercial operators.