Working group plans could herald end of cabbie woes"BRAKING" news – a new era of harmonious relations may be dawning between taxi drivers and Cheltenham Borough Council.
Plans are afoot to set up a working group giving cabbies the chance to sit down with licensing officials and enforcement officers at the authority to discuss their woes.
It comes after Hackney carriage drivers said relations between the parties had reached an "all-time low" amid a chronic dip in trade.
Many drivers are struggling to bring in more than £30 a day from arduous eight-hour shifts and say the council has been guilty of heaping extra costs on top of them.
But with a working group, which could be set up later this month, they hope their voices might at last be heard.
Di Mitten, secretary of the town's branch of the Hackney Carriage Association, said: "It is a step in the right direction.
"Relations have not been good between us and the council over the last few years. A lot of the time we have felt that they just aren't listening to us.
"We have to pay more and more to keep our vehicles licensed and on the roads to the point where demands on drivers are unreasonable.
"If it means they can understand our situation a bit better then I'm in favour of it."
Last year more than 100 hackney carriage drivers signed a vote of no confidence in the council's licensing office. Their criticisms included lax enforcement, which allowed private hire vehicles to encroach upon their trade. They also accused the authority of issuing too many taxi licences, diluting the amount of custom.
Drivers were left at the end of their tethers when the council told them they would have to bankroll a new scheme to crack down on unlicensed drivers. They were also told vehicles more than eight years old must now go through a "fitness test" every six months costing more than £50.
Licensing committee members discussed the issue at a meeting yesterday. But Trevor Gladding, community protection manager at the council, emphasised that drivers would have to come along to meetings to have their opinions heard, after previous attempts to negotiate had failed.
source: http://www.thisisgloucestershire.co.uk/Working-group-plans-herald-end-cabbie-woes/story-13763491-detail/story.html