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One hit wonder?
Money cant buy you friends, but you get a better class of enemy
Spike Milligan
I don’t know if any of you have sky television, being poor taxi drivers you probably haven’t. On sky there are a few music channels that play music videos 24/7. This past weekend they dedicated the entire weekend to one hit wonders. This of course refers to a bands ability to get a single to number one in the charts, but to have no follow up and they then disappear into obscurity.
During the 1980’s a favourite one hit wonder of mine was that timeless track by Toni Basil called “Mickey”. Anyway, watching the TV in the bored manner I normally do, got me to thinking about the one hit wonder of our trade that is SCATA and their article in last months issue.
SCATA’s rise to fame has been somewhat of a trial, at least for those of us who like to read the magazine from cover to cover anyway. Whilst I admit I am not that intelligent, I’m not thick either, yet reading through a SCATA article is a bit like a journey through the land that time forgot, while it may make decent reading for those of you who have degrees in English Literature, it is very often confusing, repetitive and like a quest for the holy grail.
Therefore, I prepared to leave the warmth of the living room, the musical harmony of Toni Basil fading in the distance, my tearful wife holding my children saying “don’t do it honey”, armed with a dictionary in one hand, a flask of coffee in the other and my cigarettes in my breast pocket. I set off on the trek that is a SCATA article. I like to be prepared for these things.
In 1995 the DDA came out with all party support, SCATA have never agreed with all taxis becoming wheelchair accessible, unfortunately they seemed to realise a little too late, 7 years too late to be precise and some 10 years too late from the initial date of the DDA. They have subsequently failed to realise that no government in its right mind is going to mess about with a piece of legislation that promotes equality to those less fortunate, after all the dear old British public like legislation that make them feel better.
A little late in the day, seems to be the modus operandi of SCATA, with last months article coming just under a year after the government response through the DFT. Indeed, given the level of being a little late in the day it can be hardly surprising that the SCATA article was urging local authorities to wait and see. With this level of waiting, seeing and missing dates, we can be perhaps thankful that SCATA were not left in charge of making the wheel all those years ago.
The article effectively stated the policy of the T&G, whilst I am sure the T&G like their policies being agreed to, it is perhaps a little disconcerting that SCATA couldn’t seem to find the time or perhaps be bothered (delete as applicable) to come up with their own or something new, after all they did have a year, instead they borrowed the T&G’s.
I will again go back and mention what SCATA advocates from the article, local authorities should wait and see what the government do if they decide to not justify their policy. It then states that the government may use a Regulatory Reform Order (RRO) to implement delimitation should local authorities not do anything. At this point in my trek I was becoming a little nauseated, perhaps the large words were getting the better of me, I do not know, however I think I missed the point, and decided to re-read that bit. Were SCATA advocating calling the governments bluff? Were they saying that during the forthcoming two years an angel would appear and fix the delimitation issue once and for all?
Then like a beacon of light I read a section of the SCATA application form, perhaps my head was starting to nod as it does when I fall asleep. “SCATA stands for the unity of all Representative Organisations of the Taxi Industry in confronting the intransigent activities of “this Government”, obviously SCATA believe it is a political matter. “this government” is Labour, the previous government was Conservative, it was the Conservatives that brought about deregulation in virtually all industries and they brought it to the taxi trade via the 1985 transport act. Indeed if it wasn’t for a certain little section of the act being altered by the NFTA’s Lord Renton, we would have all been delimited 20 years ago.
If you cannot grasp what I am actually saying here, it’s that politicians of both political parties are equally culpable, they are also responsible to a nation and not just taxi drivers. It is not a political issue and never has been, the DDA stands for the less well off in our community being able to obtain the same as the able bodied. Do you not understand this? It passed with all party support, it passed with a conservative government and the timetable for implementation was announced last year by a Labour administration, the timetable will be upon you very soon indeed.
One word keeps appearing in SCATA articles, the word “intransigent”, this word means uncompromising in politics. Since when have those in power been willing to give up that power, although could you call an act of parliament that passed with all party support, such as the 1995 DDA, uncompromising in politics? No you certainly could not.
With regards to the government bringing in a RRO if local authorities fail to justify their policies, then SCATA urging them to ignore the government will surely be counterproductive, at the moment a local authority can justify a policy of limitation, they would be probably unable to do so if an RRO were to be incurred. Bearing in mind that only one third of local authorities restrict numbers, and bearing in mind the level of importance to which taxis are dealt with by local authorities, these calls should hopefully fall on deaf ears anyway.
It is very difficult for me to understand SCATA’s objectives. In the instance of the DDA, a local authority may appeal for exemption due to its circumstances, even then a local authority could put in place a policy that will ensure saloons are retained, but new licenses must go to WAV’s. The SCATA insistence on the DDA being changed is therefore unnecessary in many people’s eyes, including my own. Indeed the failure to recognise the multitude of new types of WAV’s coming onto the market, with prices to suit all pockets and as advertised in this magazine every issue, is perhaps even more surprising.
If delimitation is an abyss, then 2/3rds of the country are in that abyss, which means by SCATA’s way of thinking, 1/3rd of the country is fine and dandy, sorry to urinate on your vision, but that isnt the case. Are people really trying to tell us that they fear a lack of trade upon delimitation? Or has this become a convenient argument in protection of the value of a plate or permit?
It would appear that the article was basically an address aimed at Chelmsford Borough Council by the local Taxi Association, it gives one part of the story, as obviously it would. While local councillors may well be interested in the effects of delimitation in Atlanta, USA, it may come in handy for future use in a pub quiz, what is its true relevance to a town in Essex? Indeed, the “cut price” taxi wars to which the article refers may well be to the ultimate advantage of the customer. It certainly has not been the case in this country that after delimitation taxi fares create taxi wars. Unfortunately, while you can also criticise the 1976 act until your little heart is content, the fact is that the act is there and there is sweet FA the local authority can do about it and it must operate with what it has.
Their seems to be some confusion about what the OFT was about, it was about competition, I would honestly believe that when a department is called the Office of Fair Trading it would give a little clue to their aims. Restrictions are obviously not conducive to an open and free market. With reference to the earnings of taxi drivers, again this is of little consequence, if you can’t make a living, leave the trade, it is raw, it is brutal, but it is also the truth of business and like any truth, when you leave, someone else will take over.
The question gas been asked before, if I am suitably qualified and want to purchase a brand spanking new purpose built TX2, why can I not operate a taxi business in a limited area? This is the one thing that the public cannot understand, why should I have to spend extra or additional money for an inflated price of a license, when a local authority, could at any time, start issuing more licenses. I am not effectively buying any trade for the vehicle, as the customer is walking to a taxi rank or hailing me, I could have been any one, and they are not specifically my customers, I was merely there at the time. If I am not buying custom, then am I buying into a monopoly? A monopoly that may be ripped to shreds if the local authority delimit.
The points in the SCATA article concerning fares are of very little credibility, the fares charged in the provinces are usually a maximum fare, it has always been the case that a driver can offer a discount on the metered rate, so long as that rate is not more than the one laid down by the local authority.
Surely, and I am trying to be constructive, the best way to persuade a local authority to justify their policy is basically to ask them to. Tell them you want the system to work, tell them you want to be a part of a solution and not the hindrance. You must recognise that undersupply is as bad as oversupply, and persuade the local authority to this. Going on about the injustices of the OFT, the Labour government and the number of private hire cars is not a solution it is indicative of the problem.
While stating this, if the local authority in Chelmsford actually think that issuing hackney licenses to all and sundry will assist them at peak-times in getting the streets clear, they are sadly mistaken and should perhaps look at delimited areas elsewhere in the country at throwing out time. The suggestion that more taxis will lead to less traffic on the road made by advocates of delimitation is additionally a false argument with no proof. The inference made by one private hire operator in Chelmsford that delimitation will lead to more competition and therefore a better service is not quite correct either, delimited areas find that drivers tend to work when they know work is there, leaving some shifts virtually uncovered. The local authority, not the private hire firm, further jeopardising the argument, sets fares.
The Reiver
_________________ Think of how stupid the average person is, and realize half of them are stupider than that. George Carlin
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