Quote:
John.
that is offensive and much michchief and guess work.
I am very sorry you of all people have chosen to behave like this
your reputation is for accuracy not guess work.
by the way this of a government experiment and will opperate within the law some of the new ones which you are not up to date with.
Geoff
I don’t know which comments are misleading or inaccurate but if there is any ambiguity I have taken the time to chronicle the events from their inception.
I pointed out that the legislation by which this scheme is being run is the 1985 Transport act. I don’t think there is any ambiguity about that. A special committee was formed several years ago by the West Yorkshire Passenger Transport Executive to look into the feasibility of using Taxis as buses, under the 1985 act. The following link confirms that was indeed the case. This committee consisted of among others Councillors from Kirklees council.
Their terms of reference were as follows.
To discuss the relationship between public transport services and taxis and the opportunities for co-operation between the PTA and District Councils in exercising their functions in relation to passenger transport and taxi licensing respectively.
To consider the role of taxis in providing local bus services in accordance with Section 12 of the Transport Act 1985.
http://www.wypta.gov.uk/CommitteeStruct ... s/Taxi.htm
The very fact that this committee was set up to investigate how to implement the use of Taxis as buses in a way which would benefit the community, is not in itself untoward. However, when you bring into the equation the fact that Kirklees is a restricted Authority and you put all the pieces of the Jigsaw together you find that a decision to grant Hackney carriage licenses to these vehicles was a foregone conclusion.
Kirklees don’t have a waiting list mechanism “they just flatly refuse to grant every public application for a Hackney Carriage licence that comes before them”. So perhaps we should ask ourselves “why have Kirklees councillors” bent the rules in favour of the WYPTA?
In 2002 under the Government Rural bus challenge scheme the WYPTA won a grant for just over eight hundred thousand pounds, the grant is to supply the type of service which is soon to be implemented in Kirklees and Calderdale.
http://www.wymetro.com/AccessibleTravel ... yGrant.htm
The Rural Bus Challenge scheme amongst other things rewarded innovation for supplying bus services that benefit the public in rural areas. The Taxi bus scheme was highlighted as being a typical innovative service that would most likely succeed in funding.
Since 1998 the WYPTA have been granted nearly four million pounds, however the last and final round of Rural Bus Challenge funding was submitted in 2003. The Government is now considering what should replace this popular Rural-funding scheme.
It is now a matter of history that in 2002 the WYPTA were awarded over 800.000 pound in funding for the proposed Taxi Bus service in Kirklees and Calderdale.
One would assume however that the WYPTE would not have submitted the Taxi bus scheme if they were not confident that permission to licence these vehicles as Hackney carriages was going to be obtained. In fact I suspect they would have had to submit this information in their application.
Perhaps the conclusion can be drawn that the Kirklees councillors on the WYPTE Taxi liaison committee gave assurance that these vehicles would be granted hackney carriage licenses regardless of Kirklees council’s current policy on Hackney carriage numbers.
http://www.wymetro.com/AccessibleTravel ... axibus.htm
Kirklees Hackney carriage regulations are quite straight forward, their Hackney carriage policy is unambiguous when it comes to the likes of you and I but when it comes to the WYPTA the council are prepared to bend the rules.
http://www.kirkleesmc.gov.uk/you-kmc/km ... elines.pdf
If you phone up Kirklees licensing department and ask them for a Hackney Carriage proprietors licence you will be told Kirklees council are not issuing any proprietors licences. When you point out that the council have already agreed to issue two new licences to a yet unknown individual for the purpose of section 12 of the 1985 Transport act, you will be told that these licences are for a Taxi bus.
Kirklees licensing department don’t like it one bit when you point out to them that there is no such thing as a Taxi bus license and for a proprietor to be granted a special bus licence under the 1985 Transport act they are required by law to already have in place a Hackney carriage proprietors licence.
All this may sound incidental because it has been mentioned that an agreement in writing is to be entered into stating that these vehicles will not ply for hire in the normal way a Taxi plies for hire. That only applies to Kirklees but how tenable is this proposed agreement? What happens if the licence holder decides the Taxibus scheme is uneconomical? Does he change his vehicle for the more traditional type Taxi? Or does he hand back both proprietors licenses, which have a current total black market value of around 40 grand?
The whole gamut of Taxi = Bus legislation is totally up in the air. You have councils throughout the country that are bending the rules to suit there own flexible transport needs.
The 1985 Transport act is specific in what a Taxi can and cannot do under section 12. The Government has acknowledged that legislation is needed to bring about cohesion in the Taxi bus market.
Not so long ago the DFT brought out an information booklet that outlined some local transport issues. It was called Flexible Transport Services. As per usual it failed to take account of the Law governing Hackney carriages and vehicles prohibited from plying for hire. In fact one of the very first paragraphs states.
The purpose of this booklet is to give a brief overview of the options for flexible services currently available. It does not give a description of the law, and should not be relied on for that purpose.
http://www.dft.gov.uk/stellent/groups/d ... p#P53_3698
The document goes to some length in explaining the flexible powers bestowed on a Transport commissioner with regard to bus timetables and routes. The document would seem to imply that the commissioner’s powers of flexibility are boundless. However, on taxis it does state the following.
Special bus licence for taxi holders: taxibuses
(Section 12 of Transport Act 1985.)
4. If you have a taxi licence and wish to run your taxi like a bus as a local service with separate fares along a route registered with the Traffic Commissioner, either wholly or for part of the time, you can apply for a special bus licence. You will be required to register a route with at least one stopping place within the area of the local authority, which granted the taxi licence. Your vehicle will need to be one for which you hold a taxi licence, display a 'BUS' sign (not an illuminated 'taxi' sign), and display a table of fares; the driver of the 'Taxibus' must be licensed as a taxi driver by the same licensing authority as the vehicle.
5. Provided your taxi licence is valid, the issue of the special bus licence should be a formality.
Requirements
apply to local Traffic Commissioner (details at Annex 1)
register the route with local Traffic Commissioner (details at Annex 1)
Benefits
increased flexibility for taxi operators
vehicle can be used for normal taxi services when not being run as a bus service
provides passengers with a bus service when a larger vehicle would be uneconomic
where appropriate, cheaper for local authority to subsidise a local Taxibus service at specific times than a larger bus service
Taxibus licence holder can qualify for Bus Service Operator Grant (fuel duty rebate) when running local bus service.
What we have here is basically what it says in the 1985 act but the so called Taxi buses earmarked for Kirklees won’t be running at separate fairs or indeed sticking to a route and timetable. They will be deviating off a route picking up anyone who happens to flag them down, or book by phone. Under those circumstances and under the provision of the 1985 act the Kirklees Taxi bus won’t be performing as a bus at all, it will be a Taxi.
Perhaps the licensed proprietor of these Taxi buses is relying on the Traffic Commissioners flexible powers to circumvent the law?
Another aspect of the 1985 act is the section on Taxi sharing this idea was brought in to enable the public to share a Taxi and lesson the expense of getting from A to B.
Countrywide, It has very rarely been put into practice but it seems to me that the experiment in Kirklees is based on a mixture of the two totally different sections of the 1985 act. In order to perform the duties of section 10 of the 1985 act you don’t need a special bus licence from the Traffic Commissioner. If the council set up such a Taxi sharing scheme under section 10 it means any Hackney carriage proprietor may avail themselves of that scheme.
Taxi sharing from designated places
(Section 10 of the Transport Act 1985.)
1. Local taxi licensing authorities (in rural areas, usually a district or borough council) can set up a taxi sharing scheme so that passengers, who would not normally travel together but who are going to the same or similar destinations, can travel in the same taxi and pay separately. Passengers must all board the taxi at a designated place, usually a taxi rank. Where a rank is also in use for a regular taxi service, passengers can make their own choice on whether they wish to hire the vehicle as a whole or if they wish to share the journey and pay separate fares.
2. If you are a taxi owner and wish to operate such a scheme or a member of the public who would like their area to have such a scheme, then you can ask your local council to set up a scheme and discuss the best places within your area for the service. The decision to establish a taxi sharing scheme is for the council, but if the holders of at least 10% of taxi licences ask for one, the council must set one up. The licensing authority is required to consult local taxi owners and drivers and other interested parties, such as the chief constable and the county council or Passenger Transport Authority.
3. The council will lay down operating conditions, such as special signs at appointed places and on vehicles, the number of passengers - up to a maximum of 8 depending on local licensing requirements - which the vehicle can carry, and maximum fares, which must be lower than an exclusive fare.
Finally there is no new legislation beyond 1985 on what duties the law actually allows a Hackney carriage to perform.
The Government recognises the need to remove barriers in order that Community and Rural Transport can become more flexible but they also realise the need to balance current legislation with any changes that may effect competition.
The Flexible future was a consultative document on behalf of the DFT its conclusion gave a broad outline of how the Government should proceed in future legislation. It made a great effort in pointing out the restrictions that buses, Taxis and Private hire vehicles face under current legislation.
It proposes sweeping changes in future flexible transport policy, changes which, if implemented would bring about greater and perhaps unfair competition to both sides of the Taxi and private hire industry. The following links may be entertaining for some.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/3513431.stm
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/3418139.stm
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/3417533.stm
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/3202313.stm
http://www.travelwithdoris.co.uk/aboutDoRiS.htm
http://www.wigglybus.org.uk/
The Governments blue print for the Future of Transport can be found here. It mentions nothing of Taxis from what I can see.
http://www.dft.gov.uk/strategy/futureoftransport/
Best wishes
JD