FTA backs calls for lifting night time delivery restrictions 14 December 2011

The recommendation by retail figure Mary Portas yesterday (13 December 2011) that night-time delivery restrictions could be lifted as one way to reinvigorate the UK's ailing high streets has been backed by the Freight Transport Association.

The trade body has long supported the method of delivering goods out-of-hours as it brings convincing environmental, economic and road safety benefits and, if best practice is adopted, should not disturb the residents who share the high street.

The Portas Review sets out 28 recommendations to the government. In it, Portas identifies the need to lift restrictions as part of measures to deregulate the high street.

She states: "Businesses big and small have told me that restrictions, such as restrictions on night-time deliveries and noise, are an issue for them trading in town. Too often, the voice of the few inhibits the ambitions of our businesses and some small issue can stop a project in its tracks…"

Gordon Telling, FTA's head of urban policy, says: "Our high streets rely on vans and trucks to stay open for business, but the Portas Review shows that excessive delivery restrictions have held back business growth.

"By allowing van and truck operators to deliver out-of-hours we will see improvements in congestion levels and air quality, less wasted fuel and more reliability built into our supply chains," he continues.

"The reduced peak-time traffic should also serve to make the high street more desirable for shoppers."

Recent Quiet Delivery Demonstration Scheme (QDDS) trials, undertaken by the FTA, Transport for London and the Noise Abatement Society (NAS) across six retail parks in England earlier in the year, concluded that, by following best practice advice, night-time deliveries provide cost-saving and congestion-reducing benefits without disturbing local residents.

The government's Logistics Growth Review recently announced that FTA and the NAS will be asked to build on the QDDS by expanding the existing Scheme's best practice guidance into a toolkit that includes standards for quiet night-time deliveries and to identify if further government guidance is needed to promote uptake.

Author
John Challen

Related Companies
Freight Transport Association Ltd

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