Looked pretty boring, but one or two interesting nuggets.
But someone can't spell 'meter,' and let's not revisit the 'recalibration' debate again.
Taxi fares will not increase in Arun next yearhttps://www.theargus.co.uk/news/1978003 ... next-year/TAXI fares will not increase next year following consultation with cabbies.
Arun District Council’s licensing committee recommended that taxi fares stay the same from April 2022.
If the full council agrees, current fares will remain until March 2023.
The council consults hackney carriage drivers every year on fares and reviews them accordingly.
A total of 261 drivers were consulted this year.
Of those, 16 did not want to see an increase to fares; 12 supported an increase but did not specify an amount; and eight drivers wanted fares to increase by a specific amount.
Several responses from taxi drivers called for a minimum fare of between £3.50 – £5.00.
Liberal Democrat councillor Pauline Gregory said: “Only 11 per cent of the 261 have actually bothered to respond which, to my mind, says that their earnings are sufficient – even with the fuel increases.”
One disgruntled driver wants to see a £10 surcharge for muddy passengers.
They said: “I pick up a lot of walkers and they normally leave the car mats in a filthy state.
“I would like to see the option of making an additional charge of £10 to allow for the time it takes to clear up the mud afterwards.”
The same driver said they were ‘shocked’ at the cost of getting their metre recalibrated when new fares are brought in, which they said cost them £60.
Cllr Gregory commented that the cost of recalibrating metres ‘seems huge’.
Officers explained that taxi drivers who did not use the council’s chosen company to recalibrate metres could be charged any rate, whereas those using this company would be charged between £0 and £20.
Another driver commented that ‘rising costs of fuel, insurance, maintenance, and a lower number of taxi users’ makes it ‘hard to earn a living’, adding that they sometimes ‘earn less than minimum wage’.
Conservative councillor Mike Clayden said: “I think it’s a very difficult market for taxi drivers at the moment and it’s probably not the best time to push up the fares.”
Committee chair Billy Blanchard-Cooper said: “Let’s hope it starts to get a bit easier for taxi drivers because it has not been an easy time, particularly with many people opting not to use them with Covid.”
Maximum fares last increased in April when 20 pence was added from the first mile.
This means a taxi fare in Arun could cost up to £4.50 after the first mile and £2.50 for every additional mile.
The council found that the majority of drivers had not had their metres ‘recalibrated’, so were operating on the old fare structure.
Council officers took the ‘steady increase’ in fuel prices into account when recommending fares stay the same.
However, if diesel exceeds £1.50 per litre for a month or more, fares could increase by 10 pence per mile.