Rogue taxi drivers are named and shamed by Newcastle City Council Newcastle City Council catch out taxi drivers caught working illegally in Newcastle and refusing to take customers on short journeys

Stuart Burns outside court - he did not have a valid taxi licence
Rogue taxi drivers have been caught flouting licensing laws in a council sting.
Dozens of cabbies have been caught out by officials since they launched a city wide crackdown at the beginning of summer.
Today Newcastle City Council has named its worst offenders and wants to assure residents, and particularly students, they have a firm eye on any illegal activity.
Jonathan Bryce, the council’s regulatory licencing manager, said: “These prosecutions show the council’s commitment to pursuing action against anyone who breaks the law.
“We take enforcement very seriously and our role is to ensure that the trade operates legally and to the high standards expected.”
In the past few months the council has found an increasing number of Hackney Carriage taxi drivers coming to work in Newcastle whose vehicles are registered to work in Northumberland and Durham.
This means customers are at risk of being picked up in uninsured cars as the vehicle’s haven’t been checked by Newcastle City Council.
Students and residents travelling very short distances, for example from Collingwood Street to Jesmond, have also found that taxi drivers have refused to take them because of the low fares, despite it being illegal to turn down a job.
Others have been ripped off, and have complained to the council that the taxi driver has turned off the meter and instead charged their own fee, like taxi driver Arafath Habib Riyad of Swaledale Gardens, Newcastle.
“We would also like to remind the travelling public that it is an offence for a Hackney Carriage driver to refuse a fare that starts and finishes in Newcastle,” said the spokesman.
“It is also an offence for such a driver not to use the fitted meter or to charge more than the legal tariff of fares displayed in the licensed vehicle.”
One taxi driver prosecuted by the council, Adil Mohammed, was caught when he picked up a team of council officers in a car not legally registered to be driven in Newcastle. Following a hearing at Newcastle Magistrates Court he was fined £55 and ordered to pay prosecution costs of £100.
Stuart Burns, of Benwell Grange Terrace, had carried out a number of journeys without a valid taxi licence.
The council have said that those who have declined fares of just £3 or £4 to take people home after night out in town have gone on to face fines of up to £300.
So far 700 vehicles and drivers have been stopped and checked by the licensing authority at Newcastle City Council alongside Northumbria Police to make sure that driver standards are maintained in the last year.
The council have also written to both Newcastle University and Northumbria University to advise students how to stay safe while using taxis in the city and to report any problems to the council.
source:
http://www.chroniclelive.co.uk/news/nor ... ed-7892376