Taxi drivers seek talks with First Great Western over permits at Bristol Temple MeadsANGRY cabbies hope to hold talks with train operator First Great Western over controversial taxi permits being introduced at Bristol Temple Meads railway station.
The permits will cost the cabbies £375 a year for using the rank on the station’s concourse.
But the cabbies claim the permits have been illegally brought in because the rank is part of the public highway and not private property.
Morad Tighilt, correct secretary of the Bristol Taxi Drivers’ Association, said they feared the permit would soon go up nearly seven fold.
This was because he claimed First Great Western used a formula to calculate permit costs which depended on the annual number of passengers at each station. He said the footfall was about nine million, equating to an annual permit charge of £2,500.
Mr Tighilt said: “Cabbies take about three or four months to earn that kind of money and they need it to pay for running their vehicles and all their overheads as well as looking after their families.
“This year it is £375, but next year they will double it and it will keep going up and up.”
He also criticised First Great Western for introducing the permit which was introduced at midnight on Wednesday without consultation.
A First Great Western spokesperson said: “There are 7.8 million people who go through Temple Meads every year, and the permit scheme will allow us to improve the overall station experience for all of our customers.”
source:
http://www.thisisbristol.co.uk/-