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Gravesend coach firm Manns Travel operated uninsured school coaches

By: Tom Acres

Published: 12:00, 26 November 2015

Updated: 15:23, 26 November 2015

A coach company has been ordered to pay almost £5,000 for operating a fleet of vehicles without insurance.

Manns Travel, which ferried hundreds of children to and from schools across the county for more than 20 years, was based in Norfolk Road, Gravesend until going bust in March this year.

The liquidation process began after a police investigation into the firm, and former director Bakhtawar Singh Mann pleaded guilty before magistrates despite denying the charge at a hearing in June.

Manns Travel Ltd in Gravesend was operating without insurance for more than three months.

He has been hit with a £4,500 penalty, along with a £120 victim surcharge and £250 for court costs.

“We cannot have our children driven around in uninsured buses,” said a magistrate.

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“This is very serious and we must make clear that anyone thinking of doing similar recognises that. You knew that these buses were uninsured and yet you still allowed them to go out.”

The family business used to own 20 vehicles, including cars and minibuses, but just three were running at the time police began their investigation following a tip-off from a concerned parent.

Police stopped one of the coaches as it transported Gravesend pupils on a trip to Rochester on March 5. It had been driving without insurance since December 1.

The former Manns Travel Ltd headquarters, which have been shut since March.

Speaking for the defendant, Farrukh Sherwani said there had been a number of mitigating factors behind his client’s failure to insure his vehicles.

“The business was growing consistently until 2014 until it lost a major contract for Medway Council,” he said.

“It began to suffer and Mr Mann’s health also suffered.”

The company ferried children to and from school for 20 years.

Three of the firm’s coaches were also involved in accidents in September and October last year, resulting in expensive insurance claims.

The firm’s insurance cover came to an end in December, and Mr Sherwani insisted that his client’s failure to renew the plan was “not a deliberate action”, citing his financial difficulties and health problems.

Despite the mitigating circumstances presented to the court, Mr Mann is required to pay the total £4,870 charge within the next six months.

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