gusmac wrote:
http://www.oxfordmail.net/news/headlines/display.var.1856881.0.gold_plated_cab_licences.php
Alan Woodward wrote:
"At the moment there are lots of drivers earning less than the minimum wage, as it does not apply to self-employed people. Lots of blokes are working 10 or 12-hour shifts, earning £40, because business isn't there."
Yes I thought so but how about this. You can see the plate number in that pic as clearly being plate 107, well to most that pic will seem somewhat innocuous and meaningless and rightly so but it means an awful lot more to me.
Plate 107 is the "one" free plate issued under the terms of the last survey conducted by Transport Planning International. The plate was drawn out of a hat and went to a person who had recently transferred his own hackney license to a member of his family. In 2006 Plate 79 was owned by Abdul "RAZAQ" Chaudrey, considering there are no other Razaq's registered as proprietors in Oxford I assume Mohammed Razaq transferred this vehicle to Abdul Razaq .
Fortunately for Mr Razaq he hit the 85 grand jackpot when his name was drawn out of the hat? If the criteria for the one license application stipulated that existing license holders could not apply for the ballot, then one could understand why in the last 18 months all these were suddenly transferred to other family members or sold? Councillor Hussain transferred his plate to a Mr Mohamed Shahzad, 187ums transferred his, likewise Mr Razaq? I wonder how many more?
The point is, that the picture doesn't tell the full story unless you know most of the facts. I hope I have put a little more colour into the innocuous picture and instead of it being just an ordinary photograph it is now a masterpiece? lol
What I can't understand is why only 75 people applied for this one license, which even before it was issued was worth 85 grand or more on the scarcity market? There must be around 600 hackney carriage and private hire drivers in Oxford, yet only 75 applied for an instant windfall of 85 grand.
Now consider this, if for a moment we forget about the Oxford cab trade and concentrate on the ordinary members of the Oxford public and all those drivers and owners in the county of Oxfordshire and surrounding areas, I find myself asking the question, "Were any of these people aware of this ballot and if so did they really understand what was on offer? I would say not because if they did, then there would have been a dam sight more than 75 applications for the license.
Here’s what the recent Oxford report said.
People are invited to submit their names for entry into a draw for the new plates. Entry is dependent on meeting certain criteria agreed by the General Purposes Licensing Committee. According to the Taxi Licensing Office, there were 75 people in the draw for the latest plate available. The person chosen from the “hat” already had an immediate member of his family in possession of a license that had been transferred to them from the new license holder. This was also the case for two of the people selected in 2003. The review group was surprised and disappointed that this has happened.
The review group recommends that anyone who has previously held or currently holds a hackney carriage licence, either as the sole or joint proprietor should not be eligible for a new or additional plate. This is to allow those drivers who have never owned a plate the chance to licence their own vehicle.
Regards
JD