I've always had a soft spot of Great Yarmouth.
Drivers angry at decision on cabs
Taxi drivers have pledged to carry out a New Year's Eve boycott after Yarmouth Borough Council's executive voted unanimously to approve plans lifting licence restrictions.
More than 25 protesters packed into the public gallery with signs reading 'Save our jobs – Say no to more taxis', and heckled councillors after the decision was taken last night.
The group warned they would be parking their cars up on New Year's Eve, usually a busy time for cabbies, and would not pick up passengers.
As they left the meeting, many drivers shouted that the council would have to sort the problem out on its own, and that the councillors should "try living in the real world".
Yarmouth has 154 licensed hackney carriages and the borough council had put a cap on issuing any more.
However, the Government, acting on the advice of the Office of Fair Trading, recommended local authorities should limit the number of licences only if they could prove there is no greater demand for taxis in the area.
Council officer Linda Mockford told the committee that a demand for more taxis had been highlighted in the borough.
She added: "Groups representing the disabled said there were not sufficient accessible vehicles and the police said there were not sufficient taxis working in the evening."
But taxi drivers are concerned the move will result in a rush of applications for licences and lead to a loss of revenue for current licence-holders.