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PostPosted: Fri Jul 03, 2026 4:15 pm 
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Ignoring the licensing thing, this represents another aspect of P&J elitism.

Maybe it's just me, but an absolute lack of self-awareness here - I mean, only *female* *passengers* feel unsafe in taxis, apparently :roll:

As for the licensing thing per se, possibly interesting that she's basically saying the councillors are biased based on whether they're male or female :-o



Rebecca Buchan: Six men voted on a Highland Council taxi licence – none of them know what it’s like to fear the journey home

https://www.pressandjournal.co.uk/fp/op ... i-licence/

While those men were weighing up a licensing application, countless women reading about it were remembering every precaution they've ever taken in the back of a taxi.

Getting into the back of a taxi has never been as simple as opening the door.

Not for me, anyway, or I would argue, any other woman.

Before the car has even pulled away, I’ve usually shared my live location with someone.

I’ve checked the registration plate. I’ve made sure Uber’s safety features are switched on. Sometimes I’ve even pretended to be on the phone because a fake conversation somehow feels safer than silence.

I know I’m not alone.

Almost every woman I know has her own version of these rituals. They’re so ingrained we barely think about them anymore. We just do them.

Not because we’re paranoid, but because we’ve learned to.

Women spend enough of their lives being told to think about their own safety.

Don’t walk home alone. Text when you get in. Share your location. Trust your instincts. Check the registration. Sit behind the driver. Call someone if something doesn’t feel right.

We’re constantly reminded that keeping ourselves safe is, in part, our responsibility.

Which is why I couldn’t stop thinking about all of those little precautions as I read about Highland Council’s decision to allow a taxi operator’s licence to remain in the name of David Brown – the man jailed for raping a woman in his own taxi.

There are some news stories where the facts almost become secondary.

Not because they don’t matter. They do.

But what stays with you long after the headlines have faded isn’t the nuts and bolts; it’s the message.

When I read that six male councillors had voted to support the application, I couldn’t help but think about the difference between making a decision and living with its consequences.

Because while those men were weighing up a licensing application, countless women reading about it were remembering every precaution they’ve ever taken in the back of a taxi.

I’ve read the council’s explanation. Brown cannot drive a taxi, and his driver’s licence was suspended long before his conviction.

Those male councillors will never know how it feels to fear a journey home

The operator’s licence is something different, and the decision is now being referred back to the full council for further consideration.

I understand all of that.

I also know Highland Council’s own licensing officers recommended the application be refused.

That tells me this wasn’t simply a black-and-white administrative exercise. There were people within the process who recognised that this decision carried a significance far beyond paperwork.

And that’s where I think the committee got it wrong.

For me, this was never really about the licence.

It was about the message.

As I looked at those sitting around the committee table, I couldn’t help thinking that many of the male councillors involved would never know what it feels like to take those precautions in the first place.

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They’ll never scour an app to make sure every safety feature is switched or discreetly check the child lock isn’t on.

These are all things I have done, and almost every woman I know would say the same.

Perhaps those around the committee table saw a licensing matter.

Many women saw something entirely different.

They saw the name of a convicted rapist continuing to be associated, however indirectly, with a licensed taxi business.

Whether Brown ever sits behind the wheel again is almost beside the point.

Highland Council taxi licence saga highlights male privilege

For women, the damage was done the moment his name remained attached to a licensed taxi business.

If the intention is that the business continues without him, then surely the obvious course would have been to create a clean break. Encourage his wife to apply for an operator’s licence in her own name and start afresh.

Remove any lingering association between the business and the man whose crimes shattered trust.

This isn’t about punishing family members for someone else’s crimes. Quite the opposite.

A licence in her own name would have sent a powerful message that the business was moving forward independently, with no remaining connection to the man whose actions destroyed public confidence.

Instead, the message became muddled.

For many women, a vote to retain the licence feels uncomfortably close to minimising the enormity of Brown’s crimes. That may not have been the councillors’ intention, but messaging isn’t about intention.

It’s about how decisions are received.

This isn’t about arguing over the finer points of licensing law.

It’s about recognising that there are some names which, because of the unimaginable harm attached to them, should no longer appear anywhere near a business that relies so heavily on public trust.

Every decision made by elected representatives sends a message.

Sometimes those messages reassure people. Sometimes they leave them wondering whether anyone in the room stopped to think about how the decision would feel to those expected to live with it.

For me, that’s the most disappointing part, not the legal arguments, not the technicalities, the missed opportunity.

An opportunity to send a clear, unequivocal message that when it comes to women’s safety: perception matters.

Women don’t need institutions to explain the difference between a driver’s licence and an operator’s licence.

We understand perfectly well.

What we want is to know that the people making these decisions understand us.

Rebecca Buchan is deputy head of news and sport for The Press and Journal and Evening Express.


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PostPosted: Fri Jul 03, 2026 6:09 pm 
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Cllr Birt said: “I voted in that direction, nothing really to do with the convicted criminal but to protect his wife.

That's not what you are a licensing councillor for. That option is not one that you had.

The decision was whether the rapist was a fit and proper person to have a license to operate a taxi. It's a yes, or it's a no.

The fact that a no decision would have an adverse effect on his wife is 100% irrelevant.

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PostPosted: Fri Jul 03, 2026 6:30 pm 
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Councillor resigns after row over rapist taxi driver's licence decision

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c9q2dqzl12zo

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One of the Highland councillors who voted in favour of a rapist taxi driver keeping his operating licence has resigned from the local authority's licensing committee.

Scottish Liberal Democrat councillor John Grafton said he now realised it was not the right decision and apologised for the distress caused.

David Brown, 50, of Croy, near Inverness, was sentenced to six years and nine months in May following his attack on an 18-year-old female passenger in December 2023.

Highland licensing committee voted in private last month to take no action on Brown's operator's licence following a request from his family, but the decision has been criticised by rape charities.

Police Scotland had objected to the operator's licence continuing in Brown's name.

Highland Council said the decision would be referred to a future meeting of full council for further consideration.

Rape and Sexual Abuse Service Highland and Rape Crisis Scotland said it had sent a "harmful message" on women's safety.

In a statement, Grafton said he had voted in favour of taking no action to "protect" Brown's family.

He said that with the benefit of hindsight and information that was not available on the day of the meeting, an alternative decision could have been taken.

Grafton said he asked officials if there were any legal implications around the licence, and had assured himself that Brown "presented no current threat".

He added: "The remaining vehicle licence would expire well before he was due for release.

"It is my compassion and my processing which led me to this decision on the day. We have been told in licensing several times that we are not here to punish – that is the job of the courts."

Grafton said he had not taken the decision to resign from Highland Council's licensing committee and board lightly, and had lost sleep thinking about it.

An operator's licence covers a vehicle, allowing it to be driven by someone holding a taxi driver's licence.

Brown's taxi driver's licence was suspended in January 2024.

Rape and Sexual Abuse Service Highland chief executive, Romy Rehfeld, told BBC Scotland News on Wednesday that decisions like the licensing committee's could cause additional distress to survivors.

She added: "A convicted rapist who used his professional position to attack a young woman should not be permitted to hold a licence in that same industry."

Rape Crisis Scotland and Highlands and Islands MSP Maree Todd also criticised the decision.

Brown picked up the 18-year-old woman after a night out in Inverness. She wanted to go back to her Highland village.

Instead he drove past her destination before pulling into a lay-by near a farm, somewhere between Strathpeffer and Dingwall, and sexually assaulting her.

He then left her in Dingwall in sub-zero temperatures.

Brown had denied the charge of rape and claimed he had a consensual sexual encounter, but was found guilty after a three-day trial in Edinburgh in April.

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PostPosted: Fri Jul 03, 2026 6:31 pm 
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He said that with the benefit of hindsight and information that was not available on the day of the meeting, an alternative decision could have been taken.

Grafton said he asked officials if there were any legal implications around the licence, and had assured himself that Brown "presented no current threat".

I wonder if the legal team will resign as well. :-k

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PostPosted: Fri Jul 03, 2026 6:50 pm 
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And now the Chair of Licensing has resigned.

Chairman resigns over taxi rapist operator’s licence as Sean Kennedy says the thought of making things worse for the victim ‘haunts’ him

https://www.strathspey-herald.co.uk/new ... ce-439213/

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The chairman of the committee at the centre of the scandal surrounding the taxi operator licence for convicted rapist David Brown has resigned from his role.

Councillor Sean Kennedy expressed regret at the impact the issue must have had on Brown’s victim and said that, given the public outcry since the issue came to light, felt he had no other option but to quit the licensing committee.

But he also called on Highland Council to investigate the leak that saw The Inverness Courier break the story on Monday, triggering the fall-out that has made national headlines.

The revelation that all of those who backed the continuation of the licence in a private hearing were male while those who opposed it were female sparked a fierce - and ongoing - online backlash, with two councillors going on the record with us to refute claims of misogyny.

Yesterday we reported claims that the decision to continue the taxi operator’s licence (separate from a taxi driver’s licence) was about not penalising Brown’s wife, who would lose her income without the licence.

Sources also claimed that council officials could have acted years ago to remove the operator’s licence from Brown, but failed to do so.

Now after days of unfolding controversy, Cllr Kennedy has exclusively told The Inverness Courier his side of the story and why he has chosen to step down.

Further details emerge showing the vote split entirely along gender lines: all-male members backed continuation, while all-female members opposed it. The revelation sparks intense public backlash and allegations of misogyny.

He said that the original decision taken regarding the licence was well-intentioned, but said today: “More thought should have been given to his teenage victim from the taxi cab that night in 2023. This preys on my conscience and will continue to do so.

“I cannot imagine what she experienced the night she was attacked, nor what she experienced after that night. The thought of making that worse for her haunts me.”

He continued: “I hope that integrity has been at the very heart of everything that I have tried to do as a councillor, including as chair of the licensing committee.

“So I now have to resign as the chair of the licensing committee given my own views on how a councillor must act.”

He added: “The decision to continue the operator's licence for a convicted rapist was done purely so we did not penalise his wife and family, who could be considered secondary victims in all this, and who needed that licence for their income.

“This has been misconstrued in some quarters as support for the individual rapist or as insensitivity to the security that all women deserve. That is just entirely false.

“But as a democratically elected representative, I have seen over the course of the last week, how the public have reacted to the decision that was taken.

“They feel that we have fallen far short of what they want and so it is democratically correct that I take accountability. It is on this basis that I resigned from the committee.”

Addressing the issue of who leaked the information in the first place, he said: “I would suggest that those that originally leaked this information also now consider their positions, if they too have integrity.

“I am fully aware that there may be political motivations for allowing this private meeting to come out. It has played zero part in my decision.”

He hinted that there are wider issues with licensing when he said: “In time I will make known my views about how licensing is problematic in this country and what can be done to improve it, specifically around the areas of sexual attacks on women.”

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PostPosted: Fri Jul 03, 2026 6:51 pm 
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But he also called on Highland Council to investigate the leak that saw The Inverness Courier break the story on Monday, triggering the fall-out that has made national headlines.

Clearly this councillor doesn't believe in transparency. [-X

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