captain cab wrote:
I think your wide of the mark or getting the wrong end of the stick.
Which part of the stick is it that you just don't understand
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In so far as I am aware, the LA based their decision on;
(Revised) Code of Practice - Rights of Access: services to the public, public authority functions, private clubs and premises
Correct me if I'm wrong, but we've know for years that the DDA provisions don't apply to taxi accesability, and that the DfT are formulating provisions that will take effect in the future (if at all), thus I can't really see the LEGAL relevance of the DDA.
And even if it was relevant, then what about the other ranks in Carlisle, not to mention the continued existence of saloon taxis in Carlise, not to mention hundreds of other LAs, not to mention the entire PH trade?
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The rank in question has a designated loading area for wheelchairs.
So if a rank doesn't have it then that breaches the DDA, using your logic?
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Whatever the rights or wrongs it would appear Mr McCullough managed to put a doubt in their minds.
Well that was perhaps my point - it wasn't about the rights and wrongs; the committee is duty bound to apply the law as it is, not as they think it should be.
There are arguments about the rights and wrongs of Carlisle's policy (and, as I said in the past, it does have some merit) and of wheelchair accessability more generally, but what we're talking about here is the letter of the law, and the rights and wrongs of complying with that.