The UK government has agreed to temporarily suspend post-Brexit rules for some music truckers following a number of tour cancellations and delays.
- READ MORE: UK touring bands are suffering due to âBrexit fuck-ups and a lack of government controlâ
Earlier this month, White Lies were forced to cancel the opening night of their 2022 European tour in Paris due to âBrexit legislationâ seeing their equipment held up for two days.
Since January of 2021, when the post-Brexit trade deal between the EU and the U.K. came into force, truckers in both regions are now subject to “cabotage rules”, which require haulers to return to the EU or the U.K. â wherever their business is based â after making just three stops in the other market (via World News ERA).
The move has resulted in long delays for artists and in some cases tour postponements with musicians unable to get their equipment, which is being held up in transit through the rules due  to huge backlogs.
The new relaxation of rules allows some of the UKs biggest trucking firms to now work and travel freely across Europe by temporarily switching their vehicles from an EU operatorâs license to a UK one for the home leg of a tour.
Speaking to Billboard, a government spokesperson said:Â âThis is a temporary exceptional measure which will ensure that our world-leading creative and cultural artists can continue to tour widely.”
However, the government still has no long-term plan in place beyond this temporary measure. It also comes with significant caveats – including the fact that it only applies to UK based trucking firms who also have EU registered fleets. Those who don’t will still suffer as a result of the rules.
Likewise, trucking firms with EU bases won’t benefit from the relaxations either. They are only permitted three stops in the UK before returning home to the EU once more.
âWe keep hearing strange things from bands, such as being told that theyâre not allowed a passenger ticket on a splitter van and that they have to buy a freight ticket instead â which is three times the price,â Coldrick recently told NME. âMusicians have also been told that if theyâre carrying portable instruments then theyâd be OK without a carnet, and then we heard from the Musiciansâ Union that one of their members had been fined ÂŁ150 at the French border for not having a carnet.â
âItâs very uncertain and really tricky. Weâre going to have to learn how itâs all applied on the ground.â
Coldrick argued that âa lot of whatâs been going on has got nothing to do with P&Oâ, and was down to unnecessary Brexit-related bureaucracy. âWeâve also heard from people filling out all of their paperwork correctly and sending their merch out to Germany for a tour to go on sale, but then it randomly getting stopped at Rotterdam and not getting to its destination until the tour dates have ended,â she said. âThey canât sell it, so thatâs a huge loss of money.â
Touring aside, UK independent artists and labels are also experiencing the devastatingly âoutrageousâ impact and âspiralling costsâ of sending music products and merchandise to Europe in the wake of Brexit â leading to more huge losses of income.
Meanwhile, the charity Help Musicians are helping those artists whose touring plans and being affected by âthe excessive red tape of the Brexit dealâ. You can find out more about their work and funding to help artists affected by Brexit here.
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