Well at least they've heeded public opinion for once.
On the other hand, it seems that the strength of public opinion was in some way problematic because it was 'orchestrated', or whatever
And the current vetting process was retained not so much because of the potential threat to women in girls in particular.
More, it seems, because of the safety of the drivers who might have been granted a licence under relaxed vetting. Work that one out
Inverclyde criminal checks for taxi drivers won't be relaxedhttps://www.greenocktelegraph.co.uk/new ... t-relaxed/Criminal checks for taxi drivers born outside the UK will not be relaxed by Inverclyde Council following massive public opposition to the idea.The proposal was highly unpopular with the public with almost 96 per cent of those who took part in a consultation saying they opposed any relaxation of the rules.
Provost Drew McKenzie supported keeping the rules as they are but said he wondered if an 'orchestrated campaign' may have lain behind the sheer scale of the opposition.
He told a meeting of the council's general purposes board that he was surprised that 'such a large percentage of people went for the same option', but added that comments made on social media on the subject 'certainly back up the results from the consultation'.
Anyone seeking a taxi or private hire vehicle (PHV) driver’s licence currently must declare previous convictions in their application.
A criminal check from Police Scotland is also carried out, but it doesn’t reveal details of any convictions outside the UK.
Applicants must provide a criminal record check for any country where they have lived for six months or more.
If the applicant is born outside the UK, and criminal record checks are not available for that country, the application is rejected.
The board unanimously voted to maintain the status quo.
A council officer said she did not know the number of current applicants to whom the rules as they stand apply, but that there were eight applicants last year, and that that had risen by a ‘significant number’.
Sergeant Kevin Craig from Police Scotland, who was also present at the board's meeting, said changing the rules could open up taxi drivers to being the target of racially-motivated abuse, citing an example of a taxi driver in Renfrewshire he said had been racially abused.
Sgt Craig said: “A fully licenced taxi driver was subject to some horrific racial abuse for a mistake that he had made.
"There was quite a large public outcry, and folk were then starting to say, ‘these folk are undocumented and have not provided criminal records checks'.
“If we're giving folk a bit of leeway, where they're not subject to the same stringent checks that all other drivers are, then there's a risk that even if they do provide a full, clear criminal records check, the drivers may become targets for unwarranted abuse as well.”
Cllr Jim Clocherty (Labour, Inverclyde North) supported maintaining the status quo but said there was a need for balance.
He said: “We've got to make sure that it's not seen as the taxi driver's fault because they're of a different colour or a different nationality, or that t that somehow allows passengers who might have different views from them to insult drivers.
"I just think we need to be balanced when we're talking about this.”
He added that it might be ‘better to see 11 innocent people not getting a licence’, to ensure that one with a criminal record did not.
Cllr Sandra Reynolds (SNP, Inverclyde West) raised a concern that children born abroad but raised in Scotland might be negatively affected by the current rules.
She said: “For instance, our Syrian new Scots have been here for quite a while, and their kids have gone through our school system. They will reach an age where they could drive, and be a taxi driver some time in the future. Does this affect them?”
Councillor Pam Armstrong (SNP, Inverclyde Central) said: “There can be an issue with unaccompanied minors. Previously in my career, I had had an issue with individuals who claimed to be younger than everybody thought they were.”
Cllr Innes Nelson (Independent, Inverclyde South West) said the issue should be dealt with in a sensitive manner because ‘you really don't know what [unaccompanied minors] have been through’.
A council officer said that City of Edinburgh Council had recently changed its policy to allow children born abroad but raised in Scotland an exemption, and suggested that was ‘something that the officers could look at in the future'.