Posted in tonights Edinburgh Evening News
http://edinburghnews.scotsman.com/opini ... =100052007
Former council leader Donald Anderson often informs us Edinburgh’s economy is “burgeoning”. Rightly, the city needs a transport infrastructure to match and the council’s 5 year transport strategy aims to deliver this.
Curiously, the council’s plan omits taxis, although they complement all other transport types and form a significant part of the travelling public’s choice mix.
Council owned Lothian Buses’ expansion of its night bus service will be welcomed, particularly by those who experience difficulty hailing a taxi during peak periods. However, why does this taxi shortage exist?
In my thirteen years driving taxis, fleet numbers have risen from 1030 to 1260 (static for four years) - private hire from around 100 to nearly 900.
While private hire soared by over 800%, taxis increased only 20% because of the council’s policy to deliberately restrict them - causing the taxi trade to surrender its numerical presence and its market share to dwindle.
The council has refused numerous licence applications, spending tens of thousands of pounds of our money in legal fees defending its policy. With inexhaustible public funds it knows the prohibitive legal cost deters opposition.
Although claiming no significant unmet demand for taxis, the council is spending £582 million on trams to meet passenger demand and spent over £300,000 launching a taxi-bus service to the airport. These compete directly with taxis, as does the Scottish Executive grant subsidised expansion of its night bus service.
These are set against the backdrop of an expanding local economy, increased traffic through rail stations and airport (recently opened to taxis), more hotel beds with higher occupancy rates from expanding tourism, and the introduction of taxi marshals at taxi ranks to manage queues forming at peak periods because of an excess demand the council tells us doesn’t exist.
Yet, there’s no demand for more taxis in our “burgeoning” local economy?
The council’s unreasonable restriction policy has driven licence plate “values” to over £50,000 (£125,000 in five years at current rate of increase). Although legislation does not permit licences to be transferred, this is circumvented through the council’s own policy of “Incorporation”.
Rentals for drivers who can’t afford to “buy in” to secure their employment have risen towards £350 per week, their employment status no more secure than casual labour. With three drivers for every owner, the real prospect of unemployment discourages drivers from speaking out through fear of being ostracised.
However, granted their own licence, drivers could operate a brand new, fully funded, single-shifted taxi for as little as £190 per week - a huge saving, less hours at the wheel, more hours worked during peak periods and improved service for the public.
Isn’t it time for change, for modernisation in line with the London model - no quantity restriction of taxis but with quality controls like “the knowledge”? The Office of Fair Trading recommended de-restriction and over 70% of UK local authorities have, Aberdeen being the latest.
How is it acceptable, in a free market economy, for the council to compete against the taxi trade it also regulates and restricts? Doesn’t this conflict of interest work against the interests of both taxi drivers and fare paying passengers, who simply want access to taxis when they need them?
Isn’t the council’s policy to restrict taxi numbers and stifle competition unreasonable, unjustifiable, unsustainable and morally bankrupt?