Guest wrote:
Anyone else heard this? Rumour has it that a well known Private hire operator has brought 15 guys over from Croatia, provided them with accomodation and is putting them through the taxi school free of charge.
Steveo, you're from Plymouth, you heard anything?
Here it is in Black and White:
http://www.thisisplymouth.co.uk/displayNode.jsp?nodeId=133188&command=displayContent&sourceNode=133171&contentPK=11018267
DRIVERS TO CZECH IN WITH FIRM
MARTIN FREEMAN
12:00 - 27 September 2004
A plymouth taxi company is believed to be the first in the UK to recruit drivers from the Czech Republic. Eight men and one woman are in the final stages of training in Plymouth by private hire firm Taxifast, the city's biggest operator.
They will have to pass the company's own tests and be approved by the city council before they can operate in Plymouth.
Taxifast chairman John Preece said he expected seven to make the grade and be taken on.
He said he looked to the Czech Republic because he was unable to find enough suitable drivers in the UK for the expanding company.
"We need 60 new drivers a year because of our growth," he said. "It is difficult to find people in Britain, partly because so many have criminal records."
Mr Preece, another senior manager and the company's head of training flew to the Czech capital, Prague, to interview and assess possible recruits with the help of an agency there.
"We were so impressed with these people, by their qualities including their keenness, that we decided to bring them over and give it a try.
"The UK Government advised us that provided they had held a European driving licence for at least 12 months that counted as having a British licence for the same time."
All nine recruits had undergone criminal record checks in their homeland, which were overseen by a public official in Prague, a procedure accepted by Plymouth City Council, said Mr Preece.
He said the nine were in 'extended training' with Taxifast including knowledge of city streets, customer care and first aid.
One of the nine previously worked in the UK as a limousine driver but none of the others had worked in private hire.
"They come from a range of backgrounds. All speak English and are well-educated people, many of them graduates, who are looking for an opportunity in life. There aren't the jobs in the Czech Republic that there are here.
"They have to go through the city council's own tests the same way as any (British) driver would."
The Czechs would be with Taxifast on the same self-employed terms as the company's 327 existing drivers, said Mr Preece.
"This is good for Plymouth," he added. "It shows that people want to come and work here.
"Even if we took on another 50 Czechs we would still have jobs going in Plymouth because we need so many drivers."
A city council spokeswoman said that all private hire drivers went through the same stringent checks, no matter where they came from. "All drivers are subject to a Criminal Records Bureau check (or the equivalent) and have to pass a special driving test and the 'knowledge' test. We also check the validity of every applicant's driving licence. If an applicant is not from this country, they must provide an official statement from their Embassy, confirming their suitability as a public hire driver."