This petition was submitted during the 2015–2017 Conservative government

Petition Make passing / approaching horses and horse drawn vehicles part of driving test

Many deaths on the roads of horses and riders. Recent funeral cortege resulted in the death of a horse and injury to driver and groom.Riders are forced onto the roads to ride. Government always having consults but do nothing.We need action now to protect living road users.

More details

BHS statistics of equine accidents, Mark Evans in Wales was injured, and his Friesian killed when a car ploughed into the side of them having overtaken the carriage.It ended up where the horses should have been.We riders now wear go pro cameras to record the near misses,and accidents.We need protection from ignorant drivers.

This petition is closed This petition ran for 6 months

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Government responded

This response was given on 14 March 2016

Safe driving around horseriders forms part of the driving theory test. The Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency intends to work with the British Horse Society as it develops the test in the future.

Read the response in full

EU Directive 2006/126 on driving licences sets out the minimum requirements for both theory and practical driving tests. Domestic tests must comply with these requirements which set out what, as a minimum, should be tested.

The Directive specifies that the theory test should cover, amongst other items, ‘other road users’ “specific risk factors related to the lack of experience of other road users and the most vulnerable categories of users such as children, pedestrians, cyclists and people whose mobility is reduced”.

Learner drivers must pass a theory test before they are able to take their practical driving test. The theory test consists of two parts; a multiple choice test and a hazard perception test. Both parts of the test address the knowledge of how to behave around horses and horse riders on the road, as stated in ‘The Highway Code’ and in ‘The Official DVSA Guide to Driving; the essential skills’.

The hazard perception test is a test of candidates’ ability to identify developing hazards in a series of on-road video clips viewed from the driver’s seat. The test currently includes clips showing horses and riders on the road and further clips are being developed. Although the main focus at the moment is to increase the representation of severe weather conditions in the test, the Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency (DVSA) will consider broadening the range of horse and rider clips working alongside The British Horse Society.

Within the practical driving test the DVSA’s examiners can only test candidates on certain circumstances that occur during the test. There is more chance of a horse and rider being encountered on a test in a rural environment than in a city environment. If a candidate did encounter, during their test, a situation such as either having to pass a horse and its rider or approaching one, the examiner will assess the candidate’s actions in dealing safely with that situation.

Many learner drivers would be more likely, depending on where they live and are taking the test, to encounter such situations during their driving lesson, rather than during their practical test. If the learner driver is in the company of a driving instructor then the instructor will have the opportunity to assess and guide a pupil. This learning will be supplemented and underpinned by the comprehensive advice contained in The Official Highway Code.

Department for Transport

Parliamentary question about safety for horses and riders on the roads

On 8 March, Transport Minister, Andrew Jones MP answered a written question from Simon Hart MP about safety for horses and riders on the roads.

Question:
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what steps he is taking to improve safety for horses and riders on roads.

Answer:
Rule 215 of The Highway code gives specific advice on approaching and overtaking horse riders and horse-drawn vehicles safely and with consideration. The theory test contains questions about how drivers should interact with horse riders and the hazard perception test includes a number of clips where horse riders are the hazard.

The “Have Some Horse Sense on the road campaign was launched as part of the THINK! Road Safety Campaign and encouraged drivers to approach horses slowly and give them a wide berth when overtaking. This has been supplemented more recently by the THINK! Rural Roads campaign which reminds drivers to take particular care when driving along country roads.

You can view the written question online here: http://www.parliament.uk/written-questions-answers-statements/written-question/commons/2016-03-08/30385

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