This morning, I was delayed slightly by the Friday refuse collection in my area - no big deal, the obstruction causing the delay was caused as much by parked vehicles as the collection itself.
However, whilst waiting, I did notice that the driver of the refuse lorry was also actively involved in the bin retrieval, emptying and return. The lorry was therefore running, not parked, no one at the wheel. Once the collection in that bit was done, he then popped back in the cab and drove another 15 metres on, at which point I could get by.
Had a google on the legality of this, with conflicting results
1) The engine of the bin lorry has to be on for the compactor and hydraulics to work
2) There is a safety switch at the rear to cut the engine if needed
3) The law that says its illegal to leave a car unattended and running is not applicable to vehicles that require the engine to be running for loading/processing purposes, eg. refuse lorry, skip mover, cherry picker etc.
I accept 3) in principle, but not so sure the safety aspect is adequately covered in the 'use case' of bin lorries, where they're stop-starting down a road, without parking, every 2 mins. This feels much closer to the illegal act of leaving a vehicle unattended with its engine running, even if there's a mechanism to override it at the back (so what, the 'driver' may be busy retrieving bins elsewhere)
Feels like the law is being pushed too far - perhaps by the cost of a dedicated driver staying behind the wheel. Maybe a bit cynical, but struggling to see the difference to how this law is applied to cars and LGVs.
Thoughts?
Edited by Sulphur Man on 13/04/2018 at 14:02
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