Delta bid to take on hackney cabs
Apr 4 2007
by Adrian Butler, Liverpool Echo
A BOOTLE private hire firm could be about to eclipse Liverpool’s black cabs.
Delta, currently building a £2.5m headquarters in Bootle, will soon have more cars on the streets than there are Liverpool hackney cabs, bosses predict.
But black cab drivers today challenged Delta: “If you want to work in Liverpool, move here.”
The existing system allows drivers based in Sefton to pass easier exams to qualify as drivers than their neighbours in Liverpool, although they are free to cross the border and work in the city.
Delta company secretary Paul McLaughlin said: “We have taken on 200 additional drivers in the past year and a lot of them have come off the Liverpool hackneys.”
At the moment there are around 1,417 black cabs in Liverpool. Delta has more then 1,200 cars at the moment, but expects to have 1,400 by the end of the year.
The firm already claims to carry more than 15 million passengers a year.
This means Delta could overtake the largest fleet of hackney cabs in Britain outside London.
Delta is currently building a state-of-the-art headquarters on Strand Road for its 100 workers who do not drive, bringing it even closer to Liverpool. It will house engineers, call centre staff and a driver training centre.
Tommy McIntyre, Transport & General Workers union representative, said: “This is going to be like a red rag to a bull to the drivers here.
“If all their work is in Liverpool, why aren’t they based here? All our new applicants have to go through an 08 course to help visitors to the city – they don’t have to do that.
“It beggars the question what is the point of going through all that when neighbouring firms can just cut across the border?”
Liverpool city council defended its tough criteria, saying it was backed by drivers.
adrianbutler@liverpolecho.co.uk
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