Hannibal Lecter wrote:
Mr Jasbar commented that both companies have ruined the Trade! I believe there is an individual who believes that deregulation is best for the taxi trade, we all know that this would be detrimental to the trade. Your opinions on that imbecile Mr Jasbar?
I have NEVER sought de-regulation of the trade. We all know we need regulation, if only to ensure that owners properly maintain their vehicles.
Now, did you understand that Mr Imbecile?
Second, I have argued for de-restriction of numbers. because:-
1. Of any market sector in the economy, only the taxi trade enjoys restriction of numbers to protect the interests of a privileged group.
2. PH are unrestricted, and they expand to do the work we should be doing, lost because of a lack of fleet expansion.
3. De-restriction would help avoid PH reaching the critical mass where they will dictate what happens.
4. 75% of all UK LAs are already unrestricted, and the trade survives quite happily.
5. Preserving privilege contravenes every tenet of freedom of employment.
6. Plates accrue a "value" despite the 1982 Act stating they are NOT for sale. Their sale is illegal, aided and abetted by the council.
7. In the around 20 years I've been in the trade PH has increased 500%, compared to hacks' 40%.
8. ECPH has already added a block of 50 cars to its fleet. It would have no problem financing similar growth again. The airport contract makes this a raving certainty.
But, primarily, I want de-restriction because it will benefit driver/workers and hurt those owners who can't compete in a commercial world, while providing a better, more accessible service to customers.
Finally, I have always underpinned my argument by advocating even tougher quality controls. And they would control numbers, while allowing everyone the opportunity to access the trade at the level they wish.
I operate a streetcar, and I am being denied principally, by two taxi companies whose cars operate the majority of time as Private Hire. How can this be right?
Restriction is the mindset of the 1980s. It's long overdue for our politicians to wake up to the realities of the modern commercial world.
I consider the trade is the drivers. And it won't be detrimental to their rights. And they know this, which is why at the last time of asking well over 100 applied for their own licence. More may well have if they'd believed the system wasn't rigged. That's a lot of guys who saw the demand the council ensures doesn't "exist" through its corrupted consultations.
Under de-restriction, good owners would keep their drivers. Rentals would be set at a sensible level to make it not worthwhile for drivers to jump ship. The owners who set levels which make drivers' pips squeak will lose out. And so they should.
So, the trade imbeciles bumping their gums in fear of how de-restriction is bad, are likely owners who know they're not real "businessmen" and couldn't compete on their best day. The very ones who should be ousted from the trade. The same imbeciles handing out huge discounts to the point where sole trading cabbies are subsidising major corporations.
And we all know who they are
And who's losing any sleep over them?