'Rogue Drivers' tip-off Backfires On Cabbies
1 September 2009
A campaign by Hackney carriage taxi drivers in Lancashire to root out rogue private hire drivers backfired – and landed a dozen Hackney drivers in hot water.
Council bosses carried out a two-night clampdown in Preston on private hire cars – which cannot be flagged down at the roadside – after a tip-off from within the Hackney cab trade that drivers of the pre-booked cars were plying for trade or "flying".
But when licensing chiefs took to the streets and checked the two areas highlighted – outside Yum Yums in Lancaster Road and outside Waterstones in Fishergate – they found no private hire drivers breaking the rules.
Instead, they caught a dozen Hackney drivers illegally parked at the same locations, which are not designated ranks, and they were all given five penalty points.
Mick Rooney, who runs private hire firm Ribbleton Taxis, said: "There seems to have been half a dozen new unofficial ranks which have appeared.
"This sort of thing's been going on for years. It's only now all the work's disappeared, everybody's scraping to make a living.
"I don't think flying goes on any more because the council has got that strict on it – if you get caught it's an instant (licence) revocation."
Mark Selley, secretary of the Preston Hackney Carriage Association, said "flying" had been going on "since time immemorial".
He said: "Of course, when times are hard like they are, it's annoying for Hackney drivers to see private hire drivers taking their work. I can sympathise with the (Hackney) drivers but the by-laws are quite clear: if a rank is full, you must proceed to an available rank.
"We can't expect the council to apply the rules to the private hire trade and turn a blind eye to us.
"Sometimes the council may be a bit over-zealous but it really puts the emphasis back on the council for the need to push ahead with some of those new ranks we've identified."
Three of the drivers have appealed and their cases will be heard at a taxi sub-committee meeting at the Town Hall on Thursday, September 10.
"Mike Thorpe, head of licensing at Preston Council, said: "All the private hire drivers approached by council enforcement staff provided evidence of legitimate fares that had been pre-booked in the proper manner but, what was observed, was Hackney carriages forming illegal ranks and appropriate action was taken."
An 11-space rank was lost earlier this month when the Corporation Street sliproad rank closed to allow building work to start on a new hotel complex.
Mr Thorpe said: "If ranks are full, they have the choice of proceeding to another rank or plying for hire in the streets of Preston."
Any driver who accumulates 20 points under the council's penalty scheme in any 12-month rolling period will have their licence reviewed.
Source; lep.co.uk