The precise question was about 'working conditions'.
I keep on reading on here that tariff levels are fundamental to working conditions. I wonder which department is responsible for overseeing tariff levels
(Of course, strictly speaking PH tariffs aren't normally regulated, but would the answer be any different if the MP had asked about HCs rather than PH? I'd guess not. And why ask only about PH and not the other side? Possibly because neither the questioner nor the responder have much of clue...)
And who's also responsible for overseeing restricted HC numbers?
Again, we're told the rationale for that is effectively 'working conditions', so ditto the above.
Also, isn't DfT's best practice guidance fundamentally deregulatory, which feeds through to 'working conditions'? (Or, at least, that's Wolverhampton's interpretation of them, although to be honest I've never sat down and read the best practice guidance all the way through

)
But that's why, it would seem, I could get my car MoTd in Dundee, which would mean I could get it plated by Wolverhampton City Council, then go and work in Plymouth, say
Which may seem fantastic for new drivers in the short term, but in the longer term maybe explains why the likes of Uber drivers are on strike and demonstrating etc all over the shop.
(Was thinking of this when having a quick look back at some of the Law Commission stuff, which I'd forgotten was encouraging minimal standards throughout England (its remit doesn't extent to Scotland).
But which in turn resulted in all the cross-border stuff, and the minimal standards which Wolves has effectively extended across much of England
In fact, I was looking back at the Law Commission stuff specifically to work out whether Wolverhampton's claim that the cross-border stuff
isn't a loophole has any merit - Wolverhampton's case is that the near-50,000 badge beast they've created is what was intended, and thus it's
not a loophole.
Not so sure about that - although the Law Commission wanted to make local authority licensing borders less relevant, I can't see how they wanted an existing licensing authority like Wolves to act effectively as the Amazon of 'taxi' licensing across the whole of England

)