The f**tards are at it again... 10:32 - Sep 24 with 8982 views | SitfcB | ...big queues at all the petrol stations I’ve seen in and around Ipswich/Suffolk this morning. | |
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The f**tards are at it again... on 10:47 - Sep 24 with 4060 views | GlasgowBlue | It's a self fulfilling prophesy. The media go overboard in light of just 5 petrol stations in the whole country having issues. Everyone panics and queues up to fill their car. This causes a petrol shortage at the pumps. If you don't don't fill up your car then you are going to be fcuked due to the petrol shortages at the pump. So you join the panic buyers filling up their cars. | |
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The f**tards are at it again... on 10:48 - Sep 24 with 4053 views | Lesta_Tractor | Electricity and gas shortages, queues at the petrol pumps and empty shelves in the supermarket... My wife thinks she's back in Zimbabwe! | |
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The f**tards are at it again... on 10:49 - Sep 24 with 4030 views | noggin |
The f**tards are at it again... on 10:48 - Sep 24 by Lesta_Tractor | Electricity and gas shortages, queues at the petrol pumps and empty shelves in the supermarket... My wife thinks she's back in Zimbabwe! |
Corbyn though. | |
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The f**tards are at it again... on 10:52 - Sep 24 with 4005 views | GlasgowBlue |
The f**tards are at it again... on 10:49 - Sep 24 by noggin | Corbyn though. |
I don't think we can blame Corbyn for a pandemic which has caused a shortage of HGV drivers across the whole of the world. | |
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The f**tards are at it again... on 10:58 - Sep 24 with 3957 views | Bad_Boy_Mark | I cannot help but feel that the government fuels this situation on purpose (no pun intended). As soon as the reports say "Don't panic buy", the somewhat natural human reaction is to do exactly that, and the queues begin. It's the same with my young Son - if something appears on TV that I don't want him to see, an alarming news story or a Norwich goal, and I ask him to not look at the TV, the first thing he does is to have a look at the TV! Surely it would be better for the government to say nothing and see if the shortage does become a (slightly more certain) possibility before saying anything? Or am I missing something obvious? | | | |
The f**tards are at it again... on 11:03 - Sep 24 with 3911 views | chicoazul | Same here in sunny north Essex. Obviously if you asked any of them they would have a perfectly good reason for them being there. | |
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The f**tards are at it again... on 11:27 - Sep 24 with 3816 views | Basuco | Oh dear, I am in Cheshire and need to fill up to get home and then to the game tomorrow. Bet not many would believe me, if asked, that I need to fill up to get to Portman Road tomorrow. | | | |
The f**tards are at it again... on 11:32 - Sep 24 with 3790 views | Sarge | These are probably the same people that bought 400 rolls of toilet paper and 70kg of pasta. Was hoping covid would have killed them off but I guess it doesn’t prey on the stupidest portion of society. | | | | Login to get fewer ads
The f**tards are at it again... on 11:33 - Sep 24 with 3792 views | Basuco | I might have got this wrong, but didn't the Government change the tax rules in April for large companies hiring agency HGV drivers? Drivers who run as limited companies are now within IR35, paying income tax and National Insurance at source making them much worse off? I know when I was contracting I would not touch a job if it was within IR35 as it was not worth it. | | | |
The f**tards are at it again... on 11:38 - Sep 24 with 3749 views | Basuco |
The f**tards are at it again... on 10:58 - Sep 24 by Bad_Boy_Mark | I cannot help but feel that the government fuels this situation on purpose (no pun intended). As soon as the reports say "Don't panic buy", the somewhat natural human reaction is to do exactly that, and the queues begin. It's the same with my young Son - if something appears on TV that I don't want him to see, an alarming news story or a Norwich goal, and I ask him to not look at the TV, the first thing he does is to have a look at the TV! Surely it would be better for the government to say nothing and see if the shortage does become a (slightly more certain) possibility before saying anything? Or am I missing something obvious? |
There will be a massive surge in fuel tax income for the treasury, so maybe it was done on purpose. | | | |
The f**tards are at it again... on 11:39 - Sep 24 with 3749 views | BloomBlue |
The f**tards are at it again... on 10:58 - Sep 24 by Bad_Boy_Mark | I cannot help but feel that the government fuels this situation on purpose (no pun intended). As soon as the reports say "Don't panic buy", the somewhat natural human reaction is to do exactly that, and the queues begin. It's the same with my young Son - if something appears on TV that I don't want him to see, an alarming news story or a Norwich goal, and I ask him to not look at the TV, the first thing he does is to have a look at the TV! Surely it would be better for the government to say nothing and see if the shortage does become a (slightly more certain) possibility before saying anything? Or am I missing something obvious? |
The Government didn't announce a problem it was BP who announced on Tuesday they would delay supplying petrol to a few stations , the BBC, ITV, Sky etc then started talking about petrol shortages. It was at the point the Gov said don't panic buy, but that will never make any difference once the media start talking about it on Tues/Wed people panic buy. Same with food at the start of the pandemic, photo's of empty shelves automatically resulted in people panic buying and that caused the shortage The same happened this morning on the BBC they started talking about petrol shortages when there isn't a shortage of petrol it's just a few petrol stations. The stupid thing is petrol stations have since petrol stations where first invented had some days where they have to close a pump because they're waiting for a supply same as now, but at any other time it's not a news story. I remember a couple of years ago when my local BP garage didn't have any diesel for 3 days (I only remember it because Mike over the road moaned non-stop about it) did BP announce that to the UUK, nope they didn't. Did the BBC broadcast about it, nope | | | |
The f**tards are at it again... on 11:42 - Sep 24 with 3711 views | GlasgowBlue |
The f**tards are at it again... on 11:39 - Sep 24 by BloomBlue | The Government didn't announce a problem it was BP who announced on Tuesday they would delay supplying petrol to a few stations , the BBC, ITV, Sky etc then started talking about petrol shortages. It was at the point the Gov said don't panic buy, but that will never make any difference once the media start talking about it on Tues/Wed people panic buy. Same with food at the start of the pandemic, photo's of empty shelves automatically resulted in people panic buying and that caused the shortage The same happened this morning on the BBC they started talking about petrol shortages when there isn't a shortage of petrol it's just a few petrol stations. The stupid thing is petrol stations have since petrol stations where first invented had some days where they have to close a pump because they're waiting for a supply same as now, but at any other time it's not a news story. I remember a couple of years ago when my local BP garage didn't have any diesel for 3 days (I only remember it because Mike over the road moaned non-stop about it) did BP announce that to the UUK, nope they didn't. Did the BBC broadcast about it, nope |
Kay Burley was awful on Sky News this morning. Whipping up mass panic. | |
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The f**tards are at it again... on 11:46 - Sep 24 with 3686 views | LeoMuff |
The f**tards are at it again... on 10:52 - Sep 24 by GlasgowBlue | I don't think we can blame Corbyn for a pandemic which has caused a shortage of HGV drivers across the whole of the world. |
and brexit of course…. | |
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The f**tards are at it again... on 11:46 - Sep 24 with 3685 views | BlueBlueBluex2 | Newmarket Tesco is limiting the amount of fuel that you can purchase today. | | | |
The f**tards are at it again... on 11:49 - Sep 24 with 3672 views | MattinLondon |
The f**tards are at it again... on 11:46 - Sep 24 by LeoMuff | and brexit of course…. |
Wonder if other European countries are experiencing a shortage of drivers etc etc or whether it is a British problem. | | | |
The f**tards are at it again... on 11:53 - Sep 24 with 3652 views | hype313 |
The f**tards are at it again... on 11:49 - Sep 24 by MattinLondon | Wonder if other European countries are experiencing a shortage of drivers etc etc or whether it is a British problem. |
Apparently Poland are 100k short and Germany are 50k short. | |
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The f**tards are at it again... on 12:04 - Sep 24 with 3604 views | Guthrum | Rumour of a shortage? Let's make it real!! | |
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The f**tards are at it again... on 12:23 - Sep 24 with 3524 views | mutters |
The f**tards are at it again... on 11:33 - Sep 24 by Basuco | I might have got this wrong, but didn't the Government change the tax rules in April for large companies hiring agency HGV drivers? Drivers who run as limited companies are now within IR35, paying income tax and National Insurance at source making them much worse off? I know when I was contracting I would not touch a job if it was within IR35 as it was not worth it. |
The flip of this is that the day rates have skyrocketed to counter any additional burden put on the contractor! | |
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The f**tards are at it again... on 12:28 - Sep 24 with 3497 views | PassionNotAnger |
The f**tards are at it again... on 10:52 - Sep 24 by GlasgowBlue | I don't think we can blame Corbyn for a pandemic which has caused a shortage of HGV drivers across the whole of the world. |
Nope, but I'm sure DK could make it the fault of the post-Corbyn labour party! | | | |
The f**tards are at it again... on 12:29 - Sep 24 with 3493 views | bluelagos | The good news here, is that unlike most consumer products, Jo public can't store endless amounts of fuel. The most they can do is fill up their car and any petrol cans they may own. So once people have filled up, things should settle down in a day or two. Unlikely those needlessly filling up today will be doing so again next week. Does make a day trip out on the motorbikes an issue mind, given my range is only 130 odd miles and a round trip to Norfolk will likely mean 2 fill ups :-( | |
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The f**tards are at it again... on 12:29 - Sep 24 with 3482 views | GlasgowBlue |
The f**tards are at it again... on 11:46 - Sep 24 by LeoMuff | and brexit of course…. |
Yeah. I suppose we could blame Corbyn for Brexit. But seriously, Brexit has had little effect on the drivers shortage. "According to ONS data, the loss of EU drivers is only a minor cause of the shortage. At the start of 2020, before the pandemic hit, there were 37,000 EU drivers in the UK. Now, there are 24,500. That loss of 12,500 drivers only goes a little way to explaining the current shortfall. Given a total of almost 70,000 HGV drivers left during the pandemic alone, this represents just 18% of those who exiting. It led a logistics thinktank led by Driver Require to conclude “EU drivers leaving the UK did not significantly contribute to the current shortage”, in a new report published this week. Brits are certainly the more significant factor. Over 55,000 domestic drivers left the industry during the last 18 months. Retirement, a lack of driving tests during Covid, and tax changes have all been cited as the cause. Retirement has certainly played its part. The haulage industry is an ageing workforce, evidenced by an average age of HGV drivers of 55 years old. Less than 1% are under 25, according to the Road Haulage Association. In 2019, the number of drivers over 50 exceeded those under 50 for the first time [ONS]. It means the rate of retirement has unsurprisingly risen over the past decade, from around 7,500 per year in 2010 to 10,000 per year in 2020, according to analysis of ONS data by Driver Require. This works out at about 4% of the workforce retiring each year. In pre-pandemic times at least, this was more than offset by new entrants to the industry. Between 2015 and 2019, there were three times more test passes each year than retirements. In theory, driver numbers should have been growing. However, this wasn’t the case — suggesting many of those who passed their test choose not to drive commercial HGV vehicles at all. There are now more than 230,000 HGV licence holders under the age of 45 alone in the UK deciding not to work in the commercial haulage sector. For whatever reason, these people have spent around £3,000 acquiring an HGV license only to later opt out of driving commercial vehicles for a living. To put that in perspective, there are more 30 to 34-year-olds that fall into this category than there were total EU drivers in the UK before the pandemic. [Post edited 24 Sep 2021 12:33]
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The f**tards are at it again... on 12:40 - Sep 24 with 3426 views | Guthrum |
The f**tards are at it again... on 12:29 - Sep 24 by bluelagos | The good news here, is that unlike most consumer products, Jo public can't store endless amounts of fuel. The most they can do is fill up their car and any petrol cans they may own. So once people have filled up, things should settle down in a day or two. Unlikely those needlessly filling up today will be doing so again next week. Does make a day trip out on the motorbikes an issue mind, given my range is only 130 odd miles and a round trip to Norfolk will likely mean 2 fill ups :-( |
You say that, but in previous similar crises, there have been cases of people storing the stuff in buckets, open barrels and other unsuitable containers. Also attempting to steal petrol from parked vehicles, including by cutting fuel pipes. | |
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The f**tards are at it again... on 12:43 - Sep 24 with 3405 views | Kieran_Knows | This country is going f**king loopy, isn't it? Seriously. | |
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The f**tards are at it again... on 12:45 - Sep 24 with 3388 views | GlasgowBlue |
The f**tards are at it again... on 12:40 - Sep 24 by Guthrum | You say that, but in previous similar crises, there have been cases of people storing the stuff in buckets, open barrels and other unsuitable containers. Also attempting to steal petrol from parked vehicles, including by cutting fuel pipes. |
The difference between 2000 and now is that back then there was a blockade of the refineries by strikers. Little to no petrol was allowed to leave refineries so there was a genuine shortage. The supply chain may not be perfect but there isn't a shortage of the product and there is no blockade to stop it reaching the pumps. So long as people don't drive around on empty there won't be any need for mass storage. | |
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The f**tards are at it again... on 12:46 - Sep 24 with 3380 views | Swansea_Blue |
The f**tards are at it again... on 10:47 - Sep 24 by GlasgowBlue | It's a self fulfilling prophesy. The media go overboard in light of just 5 petrol stations in the whole country having issues. Everyone panics and queues up to fill their car. This causes a petrol shortage at the pumps. If you don't don't fill up your car then you are going to be fcuked due to the petrol shortages at the pump. So you join the panic buyers filling up their cars. |
I bet it's more than 5. There have been 2 garages near me lately with pretty much the whole forecourt closed. Mind you, it's harder for the horse and carts to reach this backwater! There's certainly a feedback loop though irrespective of how serious shortages are. Shouting 'don't panic' is the surest way to get people to panic! | |
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