Sussex wrote:
I suppose we could talk about pollution controls.
I'm not sure the national trade would be too happy to have to meet those conditions laid down by Boris in London.
Well of course not, but the London trade isn't too happy either, thus that doesn't necessarily make it a good or a bad thing.
So why not have councillors setting emissions standards for private cars, buses and goods vehicles, after all it would be another thing for them to do and help justify their existence?
Sussex wrote:
But in general I think it's the ending of local adaptability to local circumstances. If area A had an issue, then the chances of getting the rest of the country to support your amendment is very slim.
A prime example is CCTV.
B&H had three convicted taxi driver rapists (on customers) in three years, and that was one of the main reasons they decided to make CCTV mandatory. In effect they have a duty to punters.
Now there is no way the rest of the country will do that
So to that extent Oxford and Southampton
shouldn't have mandatory CCTV then, while the likes of the London minicab trade
should have it? And indeed Worboys would justify mandatory CCTV in the London taxi trade as well?
The Law Commission wrote:
Transport for London reported 111 cab-related sexual offences in 2010 alone and Greater Manchester Police recorded 98 offences of rape or sexual assault linked to taxis and private hire vehicles in the same period.
So presumably Manchester councillors are being grossly negligent in
not having mandatory CCTV?
And even if other big cities aren't quite as bad as Manchester are they really that different that a different approach to the likes of CCTV is warranted?
After all, there must be few areas of the country where drivers and passengers haven't been attacked, and the kind of workaday disputes that you and others often use to justify CCTV must be universal.
And then there's the hundreds of councils who
don't have mandatory CCTV.
Why hundreds of different rule books for those who
choose to fit CCTV, assuming the council allows them to fit CCTV at all?
Or no doubt the dozens of councils who have never even thought about the subject, and as a corollary many drivers who have CCTV fitted without any form of effective regulation at all.
I'm not saying that local circumstances don't vary, but I don't see them as varying sufficiently to justify the current mish mash of standards and inconsistencies, not to mention the hundreds of different bureaucracies administering it all.
If there needs to be variation from area to area then perhaps it should be on the basis of things like urban/rural, high crime/low crime or whatever, rather than the current mess.
And as for things like advertising on/in vehicles, seating capacity (not to mention the related approach to fares) and things like tinted window then I can't see any need for national variations at all. Or driving standards - why should a taxi driver need a DSA pass while a PH driver doesn't (as the LC's approach would permit) or indeed taxi drivers in one area requiring it while taxi drivers in another area don't?
Indeed the current mess is why the LC have become involved in the first place, but I don't see their proposals doing enough to clear the mess up. It might get rid of some of the rougher edges, but in my opinion what's needed is something a bit more root and branch.
Of course, I think to a large extent the LC are hamstrung by the localism agenda, not to mention the vested interests of local bureaucracies and those in the trade who probably feel they will have more leverage with a continuation of local decision-making.