
RSA plans fall short say frustrated Meath representatives
The Road Safety Authority announced its plans to reduce driving test waiting times nationwide to 10 weeks. This has been met with 'cautious' optimism by Navan's local representatives - who say the town's backlog, currently standing at 41 weeks (one of the longest waits in the country), remains a pressing issue.
The mayor of Navan, Cllr Edward Fennessy said: 'Whilst I welcome today's announcement, I do so with caution. We've heard it all before.'
He added: 'Backlogs in this service have a serious knock-on effect right across the spectrum. Younger people and rural communities are particularly hard hit. Not having the independence to travel to work, school, or college puts them at a very unfair disadvantage.'
'The issue has always been about capacity. We don't have enough test centres. We don't have enough testers.'
The Road Safety Authority (RSA) is also set to open new driving test centres and expand the hours for tests in an effort to reduce the massive backlog in waiting times.
Meath East TD Darren O'Rourke said he is not convinced that these measures 'will go far enough.'
'At the root of the backlogs is a lack of capacity within the system. The RSA and the government need to ensure that capacity is in place. This must include not just increasing the number of test centres but also the working hours of the test centres as well,' he said.
'The delays are having a significant impact on people, especially the younger people. Getting a driver's license is a rite of passage, it is an opportunity for independence. It is also an opportunity to access education or employment.'
Mr O'Rourke added that many parts of Meath don't have access to good public transportation service.
Meanwhile Councillor Emer Tóibín said this is an issue that has 'taken so long to deal with it'
'This has been going on for years but it just got particularly bad now,' she said.
'The impact on young people is awful. The government failed to be pro-active, it is now reactive. The measures proposed don't go far enough to allow people to get on with their lives. Every young person's life is on hold'
In the Navan centre, the expected time of sitting a test if you applied today would be January next year.
But the RSA hopes that the proposed plans will bring the average waiting time down from 27 weeks to 10 weeks by early September.
Funded by the Local Democracy Reporting Scheme
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Irish Times
6 days ago
- Irish Times
Driving test logjam: how to beat the long waiting times
Irish people are giving serious lie to all the predictions that fewer and fewer people are interested in driving to want to take a driving test. Right now the average waiting time, from making the booking to actually sitting your test, is 27 weeks – nearly seven months – while in some individual testing locations it's stretching to and beyond 10 months. The delay is not merely an inconvenience. Learner drivers pay a higher rate of insurance, so every month that they have to wait for a test means paying excessive insurance costs. Equally, those who are required to hold a valid full licence to qualify for certain jobs are being left behind by a system which has been badly under-resourced for some time. READ MORE The blame for delays has been placed on learners who book tests and then don't show up for them. Yet it's clear that it must also lie with the organisation of Ireland's road tests, the Road Safety Authority (RSA). [ Driving tests: New centres and expanded hours in bid to ease waiting times Opens in new window ] Two weeks ago Seán Canney , the Minister of State with responsibility for road transport, seemingly finally lost patience with the RSA, and ordered it to 'publish their plan, showing their projections of average wait time and numbers of tests to be carried out on a fortnightly basis to end 2025″. According to a department spokesperson: 'The Minister further instructed the RSA to report publicly and to him fortnightly on delivery of their plan, with any deviations from projected timelines to be immediately addressed with the Department of Transport.' That plan has now been published, and the RSA says it has committed to reducing the wait time to 10 weeks from booking to testing. The published plan includes speeding up the training programme for new examiners, with new training facilities opened to help. Then the plan is to extend the hours during which a test can be conducted, stretching it from 7.25am to 7pm. This would suggest that this plan will only work through mid-October, as tests can't be conducted in the dark. The RSA is also planning to expand testing hours to include Saturdays and bank holidays. There is also a plan to take manual control of the online-booking system to try to ensure that test dates are issued first to those areas, where the backlog is at its greatest – largely in the Greater Dublin Area. Finally the RSA wants to open 19 new driver testing centres around the country, bringing the total to 60. Sam Waide, the RSA's chief executive, said: 'We know how frustrating and disruptive these delays are – especially for people who need a licence for work, college, or caring responsibilities. I want to offer a sincere apology to everyone who has been affected. 'Our team has developed a focused, projection-based plan to improve availability and reduce wait times. Every part of the system is being mobilised to deliver for the public. The RSA will publish progress updates every fortnight via its website to ensure full transparency and public awareness as the plan advances. 'We're asking customers to support the effort by cancelling early if they cannot attend, so that appointments can be offered to others. Every cancelled slot that's reused helps us reduce the backlog faster. Also, we're urging customers to ensure they are prepared for their test, as over 4,000 tests so far this year couldn't be conducted for reasons such as vehicles without a valid NCT, tax, insurance, or not deemed roadworthy.' [ The Irish Times view on delays for driving tests: another stop-gap solution Opens in new window ] In response, Mr Canney said: 'The provision of a timely and efficient driver-testing service is a key priority for me. The experience of learner drivers seeking a driver test over the last number of years has been unacceptable, and the service being offered needs to be greatly improved as soon as possible. 'I welcome the RSA plan to bring wait times down to 10 weeks by no later than early September, and I expect the RSA to fully deliver on this commitment. 'There can be no deviation from this timeline, and I have instructed the RSA to ensure contingency plans and remedial measures are in place and ready to deploy to ensure that no slippage occurs. I have also instructed the RSA to publish their plan, progress reports, projected wait times and driver tester numbers by centre to ensure that the public is fully informed of the progress being made.' However, there are significant doubts that the RSA can make its plans work. Certainly, the agency's track record is less than stellar, and while a Government commitment to deploying an additional 70 driving test examiners was made late last year, the first tranche of those examiners has only begun to take up their posts in the past two weeks. Responding to the RSA's plan, Dominic Lumsden of People Insurance pointed out just how much the delays are actually costing Irish drivers: 'The most recent data we have from the RSA shows that as at August 2024, of the almost 370,000 learner permit drivers in Ireland, almost 160,000 of these are on their second or more learner permit, while 37,000 drivers have rolled over to at least their fifth learner permit. 'All of these drivers are likely facing a three-zero bill for car insurance each year and losing out on significant savings by failing to pass their driving test. 'At the end of 2024 we ran some quote calculations which showed that learner permit drivers are paying as much as 17 per cent more for car insurance than those on a full licence. Car insurance costs for young people in particular can be prohibitive, especially when they are just starting out on the road. 'The market analysis that we ran showed that young learner drivers are facing premiums of €2,000-plus, and possibly as much as €2,618 a year, to get insured on the road. 'There are substantial savings to be made by moving from a learner permit to a full licence – to the tune of about €386 a year for some young drivers. Given the ongoing loading which those on learner permits would otherwise face, the savings will add up over the years.' There are ways around the delays, however. With 41 testing centres in operation around the country, clearly some are going to have shorter waiting times than others, and if you feel comfortable that you'll be able to pass your test on unfamiliar roads, then it might be worth booking at a distant test centre to take your test (allowing for the extra organisation of having a fully-licensed driver accompany you half way across the country). Helpfully, insurance search site Quote Devil has crunched the numbers and come up with a list of Irish driver testing centres that not only have shorter waiting times, but also have a higher percentage of learner drivers passing their test first time out. According to Quote Devil's research, the testing centre with the shortest average wait time of those where more than 50 per cent of applicants pass first time out, with the wait at 13.3 weeks, half the national average, is Tuam in Co Galway. That centre also manages to schedule 92 per cent of its applications within a month, so your chances of getting an early test are quite good. Next best is Ennis, Co Clare, on 13.5 weeks, followed by Thurles, Co Tipperary (14.3 weeks); Tipperary town (14.3 weeks); Loughrea, Co Galway (14.5 weeks); Shannon, Co Clare (15.8 weeks); Carrick-on-Shannon, Co Leitrim (17.2 weeks); Cavan town (17.6 weeks); and Monaghan town (18.8 weeks). What about the worst? According to Quote Devil's figures, the centre with the longest average wait for a test, of those with a passing average less than 50 per cent, is Dún Laoghaire/Deansgrange, with an average wait of 30.6 weeks, three weeks longer than the national average. That's a full seven months, and that's just the average. Next worst is Naas, Co Kildare, on 25 weeks, and Tallaght, Co Dublin, on 24.4 weeks. The centre with the lowest passing rate is Charlestown, Co Dublin, where only 36.2 per cent of applicants pass on the first go. Mind you, Charlestown only makes you wait 16 weeks on average for a test, so at least you can get booked again relatively quickly.


Irish Times
01-06-2025
- Irish Times
About 600 learners fail to show for driving tests each month
Almost 2,400 learner drivers failed to attend for their driving test appointments in the first four months of this year, it has emerged. This brings to 17,500 the number of unusable driving test slots since January 2023 because of 'no show' candidates, which means the Road Safety Authority (RSA) received almost €1.5 million in non-refundable test application fees. It has also emerged that there are no driver testers in 12 of the State's 57 car test centres. Currently, 137 driving testers are in place at 45 centres. The RSA is recruiting and training new testers and expects to have 200 in place by the end of the year. The RSA has said that while some test centres do not have driving testers, this does not infer that these centres are not being serviced. 'The service is managed to balance available skilled resources across all locations,' the authority said. READ MORE Across the 57 test centres, 6,440 learner drivers failed to show up for their test in 2023. This increased to 8,663 last year. Figures released by the RSA to Fine Gael TD Emer Currie show 2,387 candidates did not show for their test scheduled in the first four months of this year, having failed to cancel in advance of the test. Ms Currie said no-shows this year are working out at 600 a month. 'That level of waste should be re-examined when so may people are desperate to take their tests,' she said. 'It also brings into focus the bizarre situation where learner drivers can miss driving tests but continue to reapply to renew their learner permits.' Once a learner has written confirmation that they applied for their test, they can then apply to renew their learner permit. [ Irish motorists face up to 10 months wait for driving tests with longest in Dublin and Meath centres Opens in new window ] The Dublin West TD added: 'The RSA should be clamping down on waste and workarounds. I'm not sure we are seeing the urgency we should if people are gaming the system.' Chair of road safety campaign group Parc Susan Gray said that since the beginning of 2023 up to the end of April, the authority 'has received €1,486,650 in payments from the no-shows'. 'We believe the RSA are rewarding these drivers for not showing up by issuing a new permit at a cost of €85, which will last a year. Then the learner will be back the following year looking for another renewal for €85.' A learner who completes the test and fails can renew their permit for two years, while a no-show has to renew annually. 'These no-shows know it doesn't matter to the RSA if they fail to turn up for their scheduled test date as the RSA will continue to renew their permits every year.' She added that the Department of Transport is working on secondary legislation, which does not have to go through the Dáil and Seanad, to limit the number of learner permits issued to candidates who fail to show for driving tests. [ TD calls for free-of-charge driving tests if applicants obliged to wait more than 10 weeks Opens in new window ] But this cannot be done until the Minister for Transport receives the RSA's implementation plans to close the loophole, said Ms Gray. The new testers being recruited will have permanent contracts. In a previous recruitment campaign, a number of testers were on temporary contracts, which adversely affected waiting times when their contracts ended. Ms Gray said the lack of testers is 'very alarming'. For example, Buncrana, the only test centre to cover the Inishowen peninsula in Co Donegal, has no driver tester, she said. 'We don't have much confidence in the RSA system that these test centres will be adequately resourced because effectively they will have to take testers from another centre.' Ms Currie said she is looking forward to seeing the RSA appear before the Oireachtas Committee on Transport in the coming weeks to explain why 12 out of 57 driving test centres do not have any testers. The 12 test centres with no driving testers are: Charlestown, Maple House in Mulhuddart, and Killester, Dublin; Buncrana, Co Donegal; Clifden, Co Gaway; Talbot Hotel, Co Carlow; Mallow and Skibbereen, Co Cork; O'Loughlin Gaels centre, Co Kilkenny; Kilrush and Shannon, Co Clare; Longford; and Portlaoise. RSA chief operating officer Brendan Walsh said the authority 'will have employed 91 people on permanent contracts to bring the number of permanent driver testers up to the sanctioned 200″.


Irish Independent
26-05-2025
- Irish Independent
Control of horses in Tipperary costing significant sums of money each year
The May meeting of the Tipperary-Cahir-Cashel Municipal District was told that in the first five months of this year, over €25,000 has been spent by the council to rehome horses that have been found on public land. The issue arose at the meeting following the circulation of a video showing the shocking treatment of a horse in Clonmel, which happened earlier this month and made national headlines. Gardaí confirmed earlier this month that they are investigating the issue, which saw two to three boys apparently beating or whipping small horses or ponies in what is understood to be the Cashel road area of Clonmel. Councillor Liam Browne raised the issue, wondering if Tipperary County Council employed a horse warden who was responsible for the enforcement of by-laws relating to animal welfare and the mistreatment of horses. Responding to Cllr Browne's query, a representative from Tipperary County Council's environment section told the meeting that the council are only responsible for the control of horses in public places, which has posed a considerable expense to the council. "We don't employ a horse warden, we deal with the control of horses in public places, we get phone calls that go through our complaints system, we follow up then with the districts, we try and locate the horses and if they're there, and we confirm they're there, we arrange for the horse to be collected, and brought down to a horse pound in north Cork,' the meeting was told. "It's quite expensive. So far this year we've spent in the region of €25,000 on it [across the county], we were able to claim back so far just over €4,000 from the Department [of Agriculture]. So it's a costly expense to the council'. 'We only deal with horses in public places, we can't deal with horse welfare issues and we don't deal with horses on private lands'. Independent councillor Liam Browne questioned whether the council have any jurisdiction around horse welfare in the county. "Are you saying then, take a halting site for example, if a horse is brought from outside it, into it, then we don't have any responsibility, or we can't go in there and check on the welfare of the horse?' In response, Mr Browne was told that Tipperary County Council have no authority to check on horse welfare. "Welfare of horses is dealt with by the Department, it's not within our remit, horse welfare is not our issue, that's not what we investigate. 'We have no veterinary officers, we don't have people that would investigate that,' Cllr Browne was told. Last year, none of the horses that were seized by Tipperary County Council were returned to their owners due to people not having the correct paperwork or land to keep the horse on. The council have a budget each year of €70,000 for the control of horses, and this funding is exhausted every year, the meeting was also told. Funded by the Local Democracy Reporting Scheme