Rebel-Taxi-Driver wrote:
Is there a driver shortage in Grantham?
Depends who you ask.
The fleet owners in Grantham were moaning about a shortage before Christmas, but what's new, apart from the fact that some drivers have moved on to delivering parcels and pizzas.
viewtopic.php?f=2&t=37812&p=415301And the person who arrived at the station obviously thinks there's a shortage, too.
Which reminds me of last night at our nearest station, which is five miles from town. The last train arrives at half past midnight, and the train before that is an hour earlier at 2330.
I was there when the last train arrived last night, and it was about fifteen minutes away when I arrived. There were two other taxis on the rank.
Train came in, probably about a dozen people alighted, maybe four left in cars, and maybe eight waited for the last bus.
There's a bus just after the last train, but the train was a few minutes late, so the bus had gone.
The last bus was due at about 0045, so I decided to wait, just in case it didn't turn up, or some of the punters changed their mind and got a taxi rather than wait for the bus.
Then the bus arrived, so no taxi got a fare. I'd waited half an hour in total, so between the three taxi drivers we must have waited at least an hour and a half in total. In fact, who knows, the driver at the front could have been there 90 minutes himself.
Anyway, once-upon-a-time the last bus had left before the last train, because of the lateness of the train. So some people wanted a taxi, but there were none there
A local councillor (who's a public transport zealot) got wind of this, and kicked up a stink, and there was an article in the local paper about these people being in danger etc
Danger my backside. Over the years me and other drivers have spent hundreds of hours there on our own, with cash etc in an unlocked car. Then there's the punters...
And over the years I've walked miles and miles close to the rank while there on my own, because the toilets are closed after 8pm
So for a group of people the danger was negligible, and if they thought they were in danger, somehow I don't think they'd last long as a taxi driver
Of course, the councillor was just trying to promote public transport (she's best known for promoting the extension of the rail network, which would effectively close the taxi rank), and demonise the trade at the same time.
In fact, prior to that incident there was only one bus after the last train, but after that an even later bus was introduced, so people arriving by train have two bites at the last bus cherry
But even on the night of that particular incident there would have been maybe twenty taxis in town ranking up, so no real 'shortage', and just that the cars were all in the wrong place as far as the station was concerned.
And any of the taxis in town would have been out to the station like a shot if they'd know there was a fare there back into town - it's an easy £18 at least for a trip of less than ten minutes.
And this was late Saturday, early Sunday, so I'm surprised the people stranded at the station couldn't flag a passing taxi easily enough. There's normally one passing every few minutes at least at that time of the week.
But, of course, it wasn't really about that. It was more about grossly exaggerated danger, and grossly exaggerated inconvenience to make the case for more public transport and to demonise the taxi trade at the same time.
And, coming back to last night, suppose us three drivers had left the station when the punters all went for the last bus, but that bus hadn't arrived when it was due ten minutes later?
Of course, they'd have no doubt been in grave danger, and there'd be shortage of those irresponsible taxi drivers.
But in fact we taxi drivers ended up waiting a couple of hours between us. For nothing. And then five miles back into town to join the queue for the late night drunks.
So shortages are essentially in the eye of the beholder.
(And I wouldn't have even been at the station at all last night except for the fact that I was lucky enough to get a fare out that way, and on a lucky night I might have gotten one back in after twenty minutes or so. But that certainly didn't happen last night.)
(And the councillor who has spent a lifetime banging the drum for public transport and making things more difficult for taxi drivers has also been a licensing councillor for 20-something years. Conflict of interest, much?)