Wharfie
If you ever wake up then you have a lot of coffee to smell.
Let's be quite clear about this.
The job of the Council, any Council, is to license taxis, set tariffs and ensure public safety. Anything else is entirely optional, dependent upon what individual taxi trades allow them to get away with. It is down to each licence holder, in common with every other type of licence holder - window cleaners, publicans, door stewards, jewellry sellers etc - how that service is delivered, based around their own commercial circumstances.
How has our lot gone beyond this?
A dress code - we're not employed by the Council, why should they tell us what to wear?
A training course (which is just plain crap - ask for details and I'll tell you).
Telling us that if a customer decides not to pay then we should allow him to walk away. Lock him in the cab and take him to a cop shop and we will be liable for charges of abduction. CABforce put a stop to this nonsense.
We had a Council Solicitor, who was defending a case aginst the Airport demanding the addition of an extra seven taxi licences, being told by a Sheriff thet he was unprepared and his case was incompetent.
Our Council has just withdrawn Fairway vehicles, despite the fact that they are still able to licensed anywhere else in our nation. Unreasonable!
Our Council has used taxi budget money to express their own opinions.
Our Council has licensed an advertising system which has a screen located just 2 inches from a drivers head. This could cause tumours. The screen could cause epilepsy in passengers, or a migraine. By being easily visible by other road users, it cause a disrtraction to them. The screen image could reflect around the taxi windows on a dark night, distracting the driver and placing the passengers at risk. There's lots more concerns. How do we know this? We don't. But neither does the Council. Yet, they ignored public safety concerns and licensed it anyway. We say that a proper health and safety check should have been carried out, prior to licensing the system. The fact that it hasn't, causes us to ask why? What vested interests allowed the process to be cut short?
It's a requirement of legislation in Scotland that any conditions attached to licences need to be "reasonable". In the past no one has ever questioned this simple premise. Consequently, the Council have run rampant over the trade. Not now. This has stopped. CABforce has ensured that.
But, we still have to deal with all the nonsense perpetrated on the trade by the previous discredited taxi liaison group, which was subverted by vested interests.
Guys, and guyesses, taxi trades generally have allowed themselves to be dictated to by local authorities. Remember, the significant investments in the trade - the long hours, the £30K vehicles, the £25K plates, the grief from punters - is not made by them. So, why does the various trade elements allow Councils to dictate to them? Which other business, even those licensed by local authorites, would allow this to happen?
There's a lot of coffee to be smelt here.
We've just produced FairerView III. Anyone who wants a copy can email
secretary@cabforce.org. A copy will be mailed to you. Let's know what you think, even if you disagree. We're trying to learn. We're trying to make our trade better - for our owners, drivers and the travelling public.
Remember, without satisfied customers, we are nothing.
regards
Jim Taylor
