UK, I despair of you!!
Posted: Thu Sep 02, 2010 4:35 am
An ambulance driver could lose his licence and his job after he was clocked at 112mph while delivering a liver for a life-saving operation.
Paul Bex, 51, was told he had to get the organ from Cambridge to the North East within three hours when he was caught by a speed camera in Lincolnshire. Mr Bex, who was driving under blue lights from Addenbrooke's Hospital, has received a letter from police stating he will be prosecuted for speeding on July 7.
A loophole in the law makes it illegal for ambulances not carrying a patient to exceed the speed limit - even if the driver is on a medical emergency. And despite an appeal by his employer, Lifeline Medical Transport Service, the main service provider for GP collection services for Addenbrooke's, Mr Bex, of Duxford, Cambridgeshire, will have to appear in court.
Anyone caught speeding in excess of 100 miles per hour faces a 12-month ban.
Mr Bex, who has been driving for more than 30 years, said: 'I was doing my job safely and as quickly as possible. Now I find out I could lose my licence. 'It was on the A1, a dual carriageway. The conditions were dry, clear and safe. 'I have been trained in the same way that the police are trained. I have to take care of myself and the organ and other people on the road. 'The worst outcome is I could lose my licence, which means I will not be able to work.'
He does not have a fixed date for a court appearance yet. Dave Cooper, operations manager at Lifeline, said all its drivers have been trained to the same high standards as police officers. He said Mr Bex faced legal action because of the definition of an ambulance, which dates back to 1946.
He said: 'An ambulance is defined as a vehicle constructed or adapted for the purpose of conveying sick, injured or disabled persons. 'The definition does not extend to vehicles used for the transportation of blood or human tissue.'
He said the legal proceedings were creating 'added stress' for Mr Bex. Don Williams, president of the British Ambulance Association, said: 'If he [Mr Bex] was driving an ambulance and taking a patient for a transplant, he could exceed the speed limit.'
He said the law defining an ambulance is 'nonsense' and puts drivers in a 'double jeopardy' situation.
He said: 'If a senior surgeon hands me an organ and says the situation is time-critical, I owe a duty of care to the patient, the surgeon and the relatives of the person who donated the organ. 'If I fail to deliver it on time, I am in breach of everything I stand for. The alternative is I get done for speeding.'
He proposed altering the legal wording so that transporting human tissue is included in the definition of an ambulance.
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What's the odds the ambulance driver gets a bigger fine?A beggar 'earned' up to £23,400 a year while also claiming benefits.
Daniel Terry, 31, said his £80-a-week state handouts were 'not enough to get by on'.
He used a scruffy sleeping bag and a blanket to dupe passers-by into believing he was 'homeless and helpless' as he begged for cash on his patch at a revitalised city waterfront, a court heard. But despite facing a maximum fine of £1,000 after admitting an offence of begging, Terry walked free from court with a £100 fine and an order to pay £40 in costs and a victims surcharge - to the outrage of campaigners.
Terry, who has 22 previous convictions, mainly for low-level dishonesty offences, claimed he was always polite when begging and dismissed suggestions he may have spent the cash on drink and drugs as 'a joke'.
Terry said he left school with nine GCSEs and worked as an estate agent and in an office before falling into unemployment.
He claimed he found it difficult to hold down a job and turned to begging a year ago when he was made homeless from his own council flat because he owed £400 in back rent.
A spokesman for the Tax Payers Alliance branded Terry a 'charlatan' who was 'earning more money begging than many taxpayers do from honest, hard-work.'
He said Terry's sentence was a 'disgrace', given he had also been claiming benefits on top of his illegal income.
The court heard that Section 3 of the Vagrancy Act 1824 no longer gives magistrates the right to imprison beggars.
According to figures from the Office of National Statistics, the average annual wage for full-time employees rose by 2.6 per cent to £25,800 in the year to September 2009
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