MR T wrote:
BC... I am not in favour of de- restriction.. But Birmingham is de-restricted. do you feel it does not work.... and did not the drivers in Birmingham apply for de-restriction.. in favour of quality controls.. ie.. a new fx4..
Birmingham is totally & utterly de-restricted.
I have been in the Birmingham cab trade since 1973 & full time since 1978. In the 1970’s, 1980’s & the early 1990’s, we had blocks of taxi licences issued at various times & then restriction again. About three or four blocks of plates were issued over that period. That is where the mistakes were made. Had the issues of plates been more progressive before the Transport Act 1985, we would have probably not been in the mess we are now.
Birmingham de-restricted in 1996 & has not re-restricted since then. And there does not seem even a suspicion of any light at the end of the tunnel! When de-restriction came about there were fewer than 750 taxis in Birmingham; now there are nearly 1400. Also in 1999 there were approximately 2500 PHV & now there are about 5300 of the little scull & cross-bone merchants.
At that time, when it was obvious that de-restriction was about to take place, the taxi trade representatives urged the licensing committee to accept a policy that all new free issue Hackney licence must have a brand new vehicle, which they accepted & this policy is still in force now. At the time the taxi trade reps genuinely believed that this policy would help to create and maintain a good quality fleet of Hackneys and would also slow the entry of HCV down to a manageable rate.
(All other vehicle changes must not be replaced with a vehicle that is older than the currently licensed vehicle & that applies to HC & PHV. So you can replace an existing licensed vehicle with another that is a month younger & that fits the criteria.)
But time & de-restriction has brought reality to bear heavily on the taxi trade in Birmingham. Between 1996 & the end of 2000 there were over 500 Hackney licences issued, an increase of over 70%. Most of the drivers who became proprietors are driving the same vehicle that they initially licensed when they had their free issue Hackney Carriage licence. They cannot afford to upgrade!!!
The age profile of both fleets is poor & that is putting it mildly. There are cabs on the road which will be coming of age in less than a year’s time & I mean 21 years of age & not the new coming of age at eighteen. PHV’s are the same with the greater majority being in the 8 to 14 year old bracket.
And now it is rumoured that the results of a survey that has recently been completed show no overt unmet demand for the services of taxis (in the area for which they are licensed). The survey is apparently available on the Birmingham City Council website under the Democracy in Action page of Licensing Committee, but I cannot find it.
The recommendations in the survey are that there should be a cull of numbers. Yes that’s the right word (my word) a CULL. There’s too many of you HC & PH b****ards so now we are going to get rid of lots & lots of you by introducing an age limit on vehicles.
PURPOSE BUILT HACKNEY CARRIAGES; MAXIMUM AGE OF VEHICLE 7 YEAR OLD. (There are no saloon Hackneys in Birmingham)
PRIVATE HIRE VEHICLES; MAXIMUM AGE OF VEHICLE 5 YEARS OLD.
In other words if you cannot afford to upgrade your vehicle, then get out of the trade!!
So what was your initial question???? ….
But Birmingham is de-restricted. do you feel it does not work....
YOU BET YA!!! DE-RESTRICTION DOES NOT WORK!!!!!!
There must be a better way & full re-restriction ad infinitum is also NOT the way forward either. A policy of managed growth as has taken place in Manchester since 1992 (I believe) is the only sensible way to expand.
10.00am to 12.00noon Monday to Friday without exception 200 – 300 cabs waiting in line to join a 12 cab official city council rank that feeds New Street Station, snaking along about three quarters of a mile of road around a u-turn then a left-hand corner and another left-hand corner, then a right-hand bend, then another left-hand corner onto a fast-flowing dual-carriageway where the cabs wait in a bus lane to move forward. And when that lot is full they continue to queue on the fast-flowing dual-carriageway beyond a slip road that joins the dual-carriageway. But now other cabs are coming up the slip road to join this mega illegal feeder rank & the fun now really begins!!!
“I’m in front of you mate” shouts Mohammed, who is stuck in the slip road, blocking buses & traffic with nowhere to go.
“No you’re not, says Ali. I’m in front of my mate ‘the pigeon feeder’ & he’s in front of Abdul, who is in front of Derek & both of them are in the slip road in front of you Mohammed”
And then a dozen or so drivers get out of their cabs to tell other driver whose in front of who & the confusion really start. Waiting time, after 10.00am, for a fare a New Street Station from the back of the mega feeder rank is about 20 – 30 minutes if 3 or 4 big trains come in together, but it can also be one and a half hours or more. But at least its not as bad as Birmingham Airport where it is not uncommon to wait 4 – 5 hours for a job & you are lucky if you do 5 jobs in a 14 – 16 hour day.
And those are just typical of ranks in the city. We have regular “Shooh offs” from these mega snake ranks by police, enforcement, traffic wardens (now called Civil Enforcement Officers in Brum) etc., etc. And when we ask where we are supposed to go, because there are not enough rank spaces in the city, guess what we are told to do? The answer is, “Go home & come out again when it is busy”
So you see de-restriction is not working!!!!