How can I find that out - or have the DVLA lost all the pre-computerisation information?
Hi,
To the best of my knowledge (I started at DVLC in 1972), we did not receive any history when a driver moved over to the computer system. You just sent in your old licence, an application form, and the fee. The Driver System went LIVE, I think, in 1974.
The Vehicle System went live maybe a couple of years later, but initially, you dealt with your Local Office, and they sent everything to DVLC.
I say to the best of my knowledge ... I was aware of most things that were going on, including many ad hoc decisions, such as dumping thousands of "notification of sale" cards, and I personally helped my team dispose of tons of the old green log books. (I personally returned some very interesting log-books back to the owners, paying for the stamps myself. Probably a "disciplinary offence" if caught).
Some of our older readers may remember their Local Office cancelling their grubby old VE60 (I think), and returning it with a nice new copy. It was only later that I realised it was so the DVLC Data Input clerks could key the data onto paper tape, at 13,000 keystrokes per hour (allowed 1 error per 1000 key strokes. Every document was keyed twice, and the results compared).
One of my girls could maintain 36,000ks per hour, with NO errors, which was embarrassing. She spent too long walking to her manager's desk to collect fresh work ... which was logged by the clever keyboard. The solution was to allow her to collect three batches of work at a time.
I devised a system that allowed me to see at a glance how often any one of my girls had visited the ladies room, how long she had spent there, and who she had met while there. Similarly with days off sick. I didn't implement either ... my girls under enough stress as it was.
All verbal warnings were recorded on personal files. I received one such warning (in the RAF it would have been a commendation). I'd put myself in an "iffy" situation, to prevent all of DVLA coming to a standstill, by climbing into the paternoster system). The sealed envelope travelled with me when I moved to a new branch. My new boss handed it to me, unopened, said he didn't want to see it.
602
DVLA's "avowed intent" was to collect taxes, and help fight vehicle crime. Any help given to enthusiasts would be from the goodness of somebody's heart.