Article in The Times
And his previous free taxi was quite a few years ago now, but looks like he got away with it for a couple of years.
I'm guessing the photo is an old one, and not one of the vehicles he actually used. But certainly not much chance of that thing getting plated now
Anyway, for context, this pub is in a village about 7 miles from the centre of Kidderminster.
Drink-driving reforms spur publican to launch free taxi servicehttps://www.thetimes.com/uk/transport/a ... -ht2bb2h8zSean McGahern, of the Royal Forester Inn in Worcestershire, said cutting the legal limit is ‘another nail in the coffin’ of the hospitality tradehttps://d19ah76kfl4z60.archive.is/QQJxR ... 32e71.webpA publican is preparing to launch a free taxi service for drinkers at his rural pub after he said the government’s plans to lower the drink-drive limit struck “another nail in the coffin” of the hospitality trade.
Sean McGahern, 55, a third-generation publican who owns the Royal Forester Inn on the edge of the Wyre Forest in Worcestershire, was previously stopped from running a successful free lift service when local taxi drivers complained.
He said he was stopped by the council licensing office in 2009 after several years of successfully operating a free taxi service for drinkers to get to and from his village pub.
After the latest hit to his business, he has said that he needed to relaunch the service to stay afloat, and that he is willing to fight his case in court.
“This is a death of a thousand cuts,” he said of government plans to reduce the drink-driving limit in England from 35 micrograms of alcohol per 100ml of breath to 22 micrograms. The move will bring it in line with Scotland’s limit, which was lowered in 2014.
“It’s just another deterrent to stop people going out,” McGahern said. “I don’t think drink driving is the problem it was years ago and those having two pints compared to one pint isn’t the problem. People caught drink driving now are having a lot more to drink and are well over the limit when they are stopped.”
McGahern began a free taxi service from his pub, in the small village of Callow Hill, in 2007 and ran it successfully with two multi-purpose vehicles until local taxi drivers complained to the council in 2009.
“I only did it initially because the local taxi firms were reluctant to come out here, but when it got successful they made a complaint to say I was doing it in an unregistered taxi,” he said. “The local licensing officer said if I picked someone up and they bought a packet of crisps in the pub, it counted as a reward and I would need to register as an official taxi and provide a service for the disabled. It would have cost me thousands, so I stopped it.”
McGahern said his solicitor told him it was a “grey area” of the law and he could have fought his local council in court.
“Back then my pub was doing OK so I could afford to leave it but now we are operating under completely different trading conditions,” he said. “The increase in the minimum wage has forced me to cut back my staff’s hours by 25 per cent and me and my wife are having to do a lot more ourselves. I had one day off over the entire Christmas period.”
The pub trade is also struggling with higher national insurance contributions and more expensive food, drink and energy bills.
“These have been the two hardest budgets I have had to operate through and I don’t know where it’s going,” McGahern said. “They are putting everyone out of business. I am very lucky, because I was left this pub by my parents, I have bedrooms and a restaurant and I am not tied to a brewery. If I am struggling to turn a profit, what is it like for those having to pay rent or a mortgage?”
Critics of a lower drink-drive limit believe that better enforcement of the existing limit with more random breathalyser tests would have a greater impact on road safety. They argue that the most serious accidents are usually caused by drivers significantly over the legal limit and not by those with lower levels of blood alcohol.
This claim is hard to verify because there are no official statistics showing the average blood alcohol readings of those involved in serious accidents. However, international studies show that higher blood alcohol levels are associated with a greater risk of involvement in fatal collisions.
Lilian Greenwood, the local transport minister, has defended the plans, telling Times Radio: “We don’t want to stop people from going to the pub and having a great night out. What we’re just saying is don’t take your car. So that might mean … take a bus or a taxi.”
Greenwood insisted the government had the evidence to justify the reforms. “Studies by the University of Stirling and University of Bath show that [lowering the limit in Scotland] didn’t have a significant impact on the pub trade,” she said.