Road Transport Licensing Committee
5 FOI requests | Full disclosure rate: 160.0%
The Freedom of Information requests to the Road Transport Licensing Committee reveal an authority that is operationally transparent regarding enforcement data but legally guarded when it comes to strategic decision-making. The Committee readily discloses granular details on taxi complaints (Case 3975873) and parking infractions (Case 4715429), providing a clear picture of regulatory friction in the public transport sector. However, this openness contrasts sharply with the withholding of legal advice on major bus applications (Case 355101) and the admission of significant data gaps regarding historical vehicle statistics and noise testing (Cases 1398325, 2609926), suggesting a fragmented record-keeping system where the Committee often defers to other departments for information it does not hold.
Key Cases
Case 3975873 — Provides the most granular insight into regulatory enforcement, disclosing 29 specific taxi complaints between 2021-2024 with detailed allegations (overcharging, criminal offenses) and outcomes, offering a rare look into the Committee's disciplinary record.
Case 355101 — A significant test of transparency regarding major public transport operators (Bus Vannin), where the Committee invoked legal privilege to withhold advice on a specific application, raising questions about the opacity of high-stakes licensing decisions.
Case 2563197 — Reveals a critical gap in accessibility infrastructure; the Committee admitted no specific 'wheelchair taxi' licenses exist, clarifying that only 16 taxis are recorded as accessible but not mandated for medical use, which has direct implications for disability rights.
Case 1164850 — Exposes the financial model of the Committee, showing that key regulatory roles like HGV inspectors are funded solely by fee income (£6,000 cap) rather than public treasury funds, indicating a self-sustaining but potentially under-resourced model.
Case 4715429 — Highlights ongoing enforcement challenges regarding vulnerable groups, disclosing specific complaints about taxis parking in disabled bays and on double yellow lines, suggesting persistent non-compliance issues in the taxi sector.
Related FOI Stories
Taxi Regulation and Accountability — #2267790, #2563197, #3975873, #4715429
Public Bus Operations and Legal Scrutiny — #355101, #866366, #3883045
Data Gaps and Jurisdictional Boundaries — #1072361, #1398325, #2609926
Financial Transparency and Resource Allocation — #1164850, #2267790
Cross-Border and UK Compliance — #4683757
| Date | Title | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| 2024-12-31 | Settlement Agreements | Information not held |
| 2024-02-05 | Tests | Information not held |
| 2022-09-02 | FOI TO VEHICLE TEST CENTRE TREMODE. | Information not held |
| A request was made to the Road Transport Licensing Committee for statistics on vehicle noise testing and legal limits, but the authority responded that it does not hold this information. | ||
| 2020-08-03 | Number of 25-30 year old vehicles | Information not held |
| A request was made for the number of motor vehicles on the Isle of Man register first registered between August 1990 and July 1995. The Road Transport Licensing Committee responded that they do not hold this information and that the request falls outside the FOI timescale. | ||
| 2019-11-26 | Parking Tickets | Information not held |
| The requester asked for the total budget for parking control officer salaries and revenue from driving offence fines for the last three years. The Road Transport Licensing Committee responded that they do not hold this information and directed the requester to other authorities such as the Department of Infrastructure and the General Registry. | ||