gusmac wrote:
bloodnock wrote:
gusmac wrote:
Provided the client is the hotel in question (or even a chain of hotels), its a single contract

The single contract must be exclusive, which means the vehicle in question must not do any other contract within any 24 hour period.
But the Client is not the Hotel as the Hotel in this case is the transport Provider, it's the hotels own vehicle, the client(s) are the potential multiple Patrons that the hotel hope to entice to spend money at the hotel/pub by means of a free lift.
Hey, don't shoot the messenger.
Ownership of the vehicle is irrelevant.
It is free transport provided by a hotel/pub/restaurant or whatever for implied or hoped for reward. It's an exemption from licensing and if the terms are not strictly adhered to an offence is committed.
The contract is not with the patrons but with the establishment, whether they own the vehicle or engage the services of someone else.
Similar to the 7 day exemption which was abolished in England and Wales about 4 years ago. And high time it was binned here as well.
But how can a Hotel have a 24 hour contract with itself.....If the Hotel owns the vehicle and the potential customers are scattered over a 10 mile radius, if they pick up 10 different clients from 10 different places in 24 hours then in my book that would be 10 individual contracts in one day.
It may have been a 24 hour contract had the hotel decided to use another companies vehicle and driver under a single 24 hours contract who has priced the job as one regardless of the number of people it picks up...
If the Hotel picks up 10 different people from several different places using it's own vehicle then it cannot really be anything else other than 10 individual contracts...free or otherwise.
Im not say they cant do that, im only suggesting that if they did then theu should really be licensed to do so as it would breach the 24 hour exemption rule which permits only one contract with one client within a 24 hour period..
Even if they used a third party to carry out the runs, they might get away with being unlicensed as a Taxi, Hack or Minibus but they would still need the appropriate insurance at the very least to run clients about.
At the end of the day though I smell desperation from rural hoteliers that are resorting to such means in attempt to flag up dropping customer numbers.......in the past when this kind of thing has happened its usually fizzled out within months because it cost more to run than it ever made in profit.