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 Post subject: Re: Non UK taxi news
PostPosted: Wed Dec 17, 2025 5:36 pm 
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Location: Stamford Britains prettiest town till SKDC ruined it
Sussex wrote:
An interesting tale, and one that I'm not sure has an answer.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/articl ... ornia.html



why doesn't the vehicle have sensors to detect luggage/shopping/refugees in the boot ?

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 Post subject: Re: Non UK taxi news
PostPosted: Fri Dec 26, 2025 11:35 pm 
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Uber happy to allow (in the USA) drivers with violent felony convictions — including assault, child abuse, and stalking — so long as those convictions were more than seven years ago. :shock:

https://mashable.com/article/uber-inves ... al-assault

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 Post subject: Re: Non UK taxi news
PostPosted: Thu Jan 29, 2026 9:11 pm 
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Proof that not all the stupid taxi/PH drivers reside in the UK.

https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/38054382/ ... ill-spain/

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 Post subject: Re: Non UK taxi news
PostPosted: Sat Jan 31, 2026 8:33 pm 
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Interesting article showing that in New York, Uber and Lyft drivers can't be banned unless they have committed a serious offence.

https://gothamist.com/news/city-council ... their-apps

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 Post subject: Re: Non UK taxi news
PostPosted: Mon Feb 09, 2026 6:43 pm 
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Transgender taxi driver loses discrimination case after being fired over inappropriate comments

https://www.breakingnews.ie/ireland/tra ... 63125.html

A transgender taxi driver who was fired after making inappropriate comments to staff and relatives of children at a special needs school has lost a case in which he claimed he was discriminated against on the grounds of his gender.

The Workplace Relations Commission ruled that a transport company, which terminated the driver’s contract to transport children and their special needs assistants to the school following complaints against him, had not breached the Employment Equality Act 1998.

The identities of the parties were not published due to the sensitive nature of the case as well as that it related to a school with special needs pupils.

The WRC heard that the taxi driver was born male and secured the taxi contract in 2023 when he was transitioning from male to female, but had stopped transitioning in August 2024.

The WRC heard his contract was suspended the following month before his contract was unilaterally terminated in October 2024 after the transport company received several complaints about his conduct and use of inappropriate language.

At a meeting on October 15th, 2024, the taxi driver said he was informed that the conversations that were the subject of complaints generally related to his transgenderism and the reasons behind his transition, namely a prior sexual assault.

He told the WRC that they were consensual conversations between adults when there were no children present and that the SNA making the complaints against him had actively encouraged such talk when he felt he was in a “safe space.”

He said the SNA had been questioning after he had stopped transitioning and had come to work with a beard.

The taxi driver said the contract was his only source of income and he had not found any work since which had caused him ongoing stress and anxiety.

He denied doing anything wrong and felt he was robbed of a job he loved.

Counsel for the transport company, Niamh McGowan, said it had acted reasonably and in the best interest of its service users in terminating the taxi driver’s contract for significant breaches of a code of conduct and safety protocols.

McGowan said the company had no issue with the taxi driver’s transgenderism and he was treated exactly the same way as any other contractor.

The WRC heard that the company had been notified of a complaint from a SNA by the school’s principal which related to multiple issues.

They included a disclosure of sexual abuse, a description of a couple being intimate in a doorway and walking in on a partner being intimate with a man.

The taxi driver was also accused of asking the SNA if she was “playing the field” and referring to “hump day” in connection with “getting a ride.”

The WRC heard that it was also claimed that he had commented about experience with intimate waxing and making inappropriate contact with relatives of some children.

The company said the school principal had informed it via e-mail on September 27th, 2024 that the taxi driver had engaged inappropriately with multiple parties despite having been suspended.

The e-mail also documented allegations of inappropriate conversations, rude and sarcastic behaviour, driving aggressively and smoking near and child and their parent.

McGowan said the taxi driver made multiple admissions at a meeting on October 15th, 2024 including his failure to report an incident of a child misbehaving and assaulting a SNA and leaving his vehicle to go to the school yard while children were in class.

She said he had engaged with the children which caused them stress and anxiety as they associated his presence with time for going home.

WRC adjudication officer, Gaye [edited by admin], said the fact that the taxi driver had divulged information which he would not have done if he did not believe he was in a “safe space” was an unfortunate and regrettable element of the case from his point of view.

However, [edited by admin] said the conversation he had engaged in which related to sexual abuse, sexual intimacy between strangers, acts of infidelity and intimate personal care issues were inappropriate conversations within the workplace irrespective of one’s gender.

She ruled that the transport company in addressing such inappropriate conversation and breaches of child safeguarding had acted reasonably in terminating his contract.

A separate claim of discrimination on grounds of sexual orientation was withdrawn during the hearing before the WRC.

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 Post subject: Re: Non UK taxi news
PostPosted: Wed Apr 01, 2026 5:14 pm 
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Mass robotaxi malfunction halts traffic in Chinese city

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cvge91r9j80o

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A mass robotaxi outage in the Chinese city of Wuhan caused at least a hundred self-driving cars to stop mid-traffic, sparking renewed debate around the safety of driverless vehicles.

Local police said initial findings suggested a "system malfunction" caused multiple vehicles to stop in the middle of the road on Tuesday.

Videos, external on social media have documented the outage, with one appearing to show, external it resulting in a highway collision, although police said no injuries had been reported and passengers exited their vehicles safely.

Baidu did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

According to the police statement, posted on social media site Weibo, the cause of the incident is still under further investigation.

Baidu operates its Apollo Go driverless taxi service in dozens of cities across the world, mostly in China.

In December 2025, ride-sharing apps Uber and Lyft announced partnerships with the Chinese technology giant to test its Apollo Go cars on UK roads, aiming to start trials in 2026.

However, both still need approval from regulators before they can begin the pilot programmes.

While driverless tech may be safer on average than human drivers, this incident showed it could "still go wrong in completely new ways," said Jack Stilgoe, professor of science and technology policy at University College London.

"If we're going to make good choices about this technology, we need to understand entirely new types of risk," he told BBC News.

The outage is not the first time self-driving cars have faced technical difficulties.

In December 2025, a large power outage in San Francisco led Waymo taxis to stop working around the city, causing huge traffic jams.

Meanwhile in August 2025, an Apollo Go robotaxi carrying a passenger in Chongqing fell into ​a construction pit.

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