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Garage fined after youth buys petrol

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Published Date: 11 March 2010
A PETROL station has become the first in Edinburgh to be fined for selling fuel to a child following a council crackdown aimed at cutting antisocial behaviour.
The South Queensferry BP garage was caught out after a 14-year-old volunteer was sent in to carry out a "test purchase". The owners were fined £200 in court.

The city council said the case should serve as a "stark warning" to other retailers.

T
he test purchasing initiative was launched over concerns that youngsters were buying petrol for mini-moto bikes, following a series of complaints over antisocial behaviour.

In all, five garages in the west of Edinburgh were tested, with three failing to ask for proof of age before selling petrol to the underage volunteers.

All three were reported to the procurator fiscal, with no further action taken in one case and another case still to go to court.

The city's environment leader Cllr Robert Aldridge said: "This behaviour is totally unacceptable. Petrol is a hazardous substance and we must ensure that it is not being sold illegally to children. I hope this fine will serve as a stark warning that retailers must abide by the legislation."

Tom Martin, chair of Queensferry and District Community Council, welcomed the initiative. He said:

"There was a concern about youngsters using mini-motos in a few areas, as they are very dangerous and the children involved could easily lose control and have an accident, injuring themselves and others."

BP was fined after pleading guilty to selling petrol to an under-16 – a breach of the Petroleum (Consolidation) Act 1928.

A spokesman for BP said: "BP takes age restrictions on the sale of petrol extremely seriously, with a number of training procedures and programmes in place which we continually review."

It was the first such test purchase exercise of its kind the city council has carried out since 2006, when four out of eight tested stations failed. All four were handed written warnings.

David Lockhart, community safety manager for Lothian and Borders Fire and Rescue Service said: "We welcome any measures to combat antisocial behaviour.

"Young people messing about with petrol can result in serious consequences, not to mention creating avoidable situations which tie up emergency services."





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  • Last Updated: 11 March 2010 10:47 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

john3,

11/03/2010 12:15:02
In New Zealand it is the resposibility of the employee, not the firm, and they get the fine
2

Thinner Bob 79,

11/03/2010 13:15:29
The South Queensferry BP garage was caught out after a 14-year-old volunteer was sent in to carry out a "test purchase". The owners were fined £200 in court.


Well I will sleep safer at night knowing that they have dressed some poor 14 year old up to look over 18 to buy fuel.
Forget knife crime, serious assault, or underage drinking the amount of kids I see running about with petrol cans is shocking.

WHAT A WASTE OF TIME!.... all that effort for a £200 fine, how much did the sting operation cost?...





3

Rambo The Jambo,

11/03/2010 13:28:04

It's Queensferry not South Queensferry

4

likkitysplit,

11/03/2010 14:25:05
£200 fine? Stark warning? what a joke!
5

tumshie heid,

11/03/2010 16:07:29
Nice to see where the taxpayers resources are going.
What a waste of time and money.
This seems to be the favoured way to solve crimes nowadays, send in the decoy and hey presto a conviction.
6

Wild Bill 73,

Edinburgh 11/03/2010 19:41:37
A two hundred pound fine for BP?

Are you having a laugh?
7

JulesF,

Kirkliston 11/03/2010 21:02:07
What a load of cr4p !

Clamping down on 'underage' fuel purchases will not inhibit the antisocial use of mini motos and the like.

The irresponsible parents the provided the equipment in the first place will just provide them fuel instead !

 

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