
Dear PHTM, we are writing on behalf of a group of 12 licensed hackney carriage and private hire operators and drivers based in the Amber Valley licensing area of Derbyshire, to raise an issue we believe may be of interest to operators and drivers in similar situations across the country.
MOT TESTING CENTRE
Amber Valley Borough Council has recently relocated its hackney carriage and private hire vehicle testing centre to a garage in Sheffield, around 25 miles outside the licensing area. This followed the previous contracted garage, MAN Truck, being unable to continue providing the service due to the unavailability of a qualified tester.
The council’s own published contracts register shows this previous contract ran from September 2022 with a one-year extension option attached. Documentation published on the council’s website confirms that extension was exercised, meaning the contract was due to run through to 30th June 2026, not 2025 as the base contract term suggested.
Despite this, testing was moved to the Sheffield garage before that confirmed end date, raising the question of whether the contract with MAN Truck was formally terminated early, and if so, on what grounds. Rather than this being planned for through a proper re-tender process, the move has reportedly been handled as an emergency direct award.
The practical impact on drivers has been significant. A round trip of around 50 miles for a routine annual test represents a direct cost in time and fuel for self-employed drivers, and creates real difficulty for those with school transport contracts or other time-sensitive bookings.
There is also a genuine legal concern: under MOT rules, a vehicle that fails its test for a major defect can normally only be driven away if the test took place at the garage where the vehicle is kept, or if a repair has been pre-arranged.
A failure in Sheffield leaves a driver with a vehicle that cannot lawfully be driven the 25 miles back to the licensing area without that arrangement in place, and a dangerous fault would require recovery from Sheffield entirely.
TAXIMETER CALIBRATION
Separately, the council has now introduced a new requirement for taximeter calibration and certification, with the only approved garage for this located in Nottingham, adding a further journey and cost on top of the testing issue.
As a group, we have submitted a formal letter to Amber Valley Borough Council setting out these concerns, including direct questions about the overlap between the confirmed extended contract end date and the date the Sheffield garage’s testing arrangement began, and a Freedom of Information request has been submitted asking the council to clarify the circumstances behind the decision, including the handling of the contract’s expiry and the process used to appoint the Sheffield garage.
We have also raised the matter with our local Members of Parliament.
We believe this is a situation that may resonate with operators in other licensing areas who have experienced or could face similar changes to testing arrangements, and we would welcome the opportunity to share further detail or documentation if needed.
Yours faithfully
Drivers of Amber Valley

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