Covid checks, more red tape and petty EU cause hell for lorry drivers

A TRUCKER has told how his fellow British hauliers have been hit by Covid rules and petty EU ­officials in the wake of Brexit. 

In a diary for Trending In The News on Sunday, Andy Couper, 57, says red tape means a simple two-day return trip to Belgium is now taking 24 hours longer.


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Covid checks, more red tape and petty EU cause hell for lorry drivers
The first trucks leave Eurotunnel’s new customs border in Calais just after midnight, as Britain formally exits the European Union on January 1, 2021

The dad of two says that truckers are being hampered by authorities in the EU who are slow to process new paperwork introduced after Brexit.

Andy says: “French customs in particular are causing us problems. 

“The officials seem resentful towards British truckers over Brexit.

“They say to us, ‘We have all this extra work to do because of Brexit and we are not being paid any more.’ They need more staff and they are not happy about it.

“They never seem in a hurry to get us through. It’s becoming extremely frustrating. 

“Sometimes it seems like they target British lorries.”

Andy kept a diary, below, of a recent trip to the Belgian city of Liege, which is 300 miles away from his base close to Heathrow airport.

Truckers at his firm are meticulously “rapid tested” before they set off from the base.


Covid checks, more red tape and petty EU cause hell for lorry drivers
Andy Cooper with his truck in a Kent service station before heading across the channel

‘IT’S A NIGHTMARE’

But these tests are not officially recognised by the French government — so he then has to drive 50 miles to Clacket Lane Services on the M25 in Surrey where he is swabbed once again.

Drivers have revealed that Covid testing takes up almost four hours of their day.

In December, France demanded truckers must produce a negative coronavirus test done within 72 hours of crossing the border.

Andy has to stop again 27 miles later — leaving at junction 8 of the M20 at Maidstone, Kent — where he gets halted by cops.

They make him show his negative Covid test result and his Kent Access Permit (KAP), then other officers hold up signs for either the Port of Dover or Eurotunnel.

Before rejoining the M20, Andy drives for 100 metres and is stopped again by police asking once more to check his Covid result.

The KAP — known as a Kent “passport” — is required for drivers of HGVs weighing more than 7.5 tonnes leaving Britain via Dover or on Eurotunnel.

Andy says: “This is all making my job really difficult at the moment. It’s a nightmare — all these ten or 15-minute waits add up.”

Long delays are imposed at Eurotunnel in Folkestone where truckers are ordered to complete a form.

The document is required to progress through to French customs to show what the hauliers have on board. There are six options to tick, including vegetables, fish, mail and empty. The form was not used before Brexit due to free movement of goods rules. Andy has to show his Covid test to British staff and then again as he passes through French customs afterwards.

Truckers then visit Belgian customs at a nearby industrial estate where they have to fill in a T1 transport form — which is needed for British truckers to carry non-EU goods through EU countries such as Belgium and France.

Andy says: “Four hours is nothing here. They wanted to check my goods so they take a sample, inspect it and you get clearance.

“When you arrive you give them the T1 document, then customs will decide to either hold you up or not.

“Sometimes it’s paperwork checks and other times they will do an inspection.

“There’s usually five or six trucks here and three or four staff.

“The wait varies but it can be as long as 14 hours.

“In that time I could be at my delivery point and unload within five minutes, then you can rest and move on to the next job.

“Before Covid and Brexit, I’d be in Liege within eight hours of ­leaving our office on a good day.

“It’s adding a whole day to jobs — and then on the Monday that truck isn’t earning the company any money.

“It’s frustrating and I can’t see it getting better any time soon.”