GA wrote:
The problem is that councils for policies that are in the publics interest.
The problem is that no-one other than Edinburgh's "wanna plate" massive are convinced there is any un-met dend that warrants the extra plates you crave for free.
I would suggest that you prove un-met demand and follow the advice of my little southern softy mate, and take that evidence to court.
Alternatively, if every jockey in Edinburgh decided to take some direct action against the plateholders by witholding rental/services more benefit could be gained.
B. Lucky

Thing is GA its not up to applicants to prove that there is demand, it's up to council's to prove otherwise.
And that proof has to be robust, not just a few numbers written on the back of a fag packet and passed off as evidence.
Before applying we asked the council to explain what it's methodology for their surveys was, what formula they would use to determine demand levels, and how it arrived at its conclusion.
They didn't answer. But the convener of their licencesing committee did say that the evidence they found was flawed, applied only to the ranks surveyed and that there could be demand elsewhere.
So, having told us that the council didn't know what the real demand level was what did they do? They refuse the applications. You think this is right?
Later in the G5 applications, councillors, before refusing, told us that we hadn't provided any evidence of demand. Notwithstanding that we had pointed to Edinburgh's burgeoning economy, the huge increase in demand for all transport sectors and the council's own bus company recognising increased demand by launching (later expanded) their own taxi bus service, they still refused the licences on 30th January, the day before the six month deadline for consideration under the Act.
I immediately wrote to the council solicitor and asked that given the council's new position of apparently requiring an applicant to provide evidence of demand could he advise me what evidence an applicant would need to provide in order to be granted a licence. I also asked where this was provided for in the Act, and where the council advises applicants of this burden prior or during them taking £1205 application fee.
Surprise surprise, no response from the council solicitor.
I wrote to the councillor who said this to us before denying the licence and asked her to raise this on our behalf. No response.
I wrote to all councillors and asked whether there was one among them who would ask this for me. No response.
I have written again to the council solicitor and asked him to answer the question. No response.
They have no intention of answering. But they will in court.
We're now heading into recession. But these applications were made when Edinburgh was booming. So those are the conditions that will be the focus of the trial.
As for witholding rentals? It aint going to happen. Drivers are chained to the concept of driving for owners. They are self employed. No drive - no wages. Who can afford that?
But it shouldn't come to that anyway. The only reason these cases are going to trial is because the political system doesn't work. There is a cogent argument for the same market principles to apply to taxi licensing as every other commercial sector of our economy. It is only vested interest that has allowed the Government intrusive trade restrictive practice to survive. It has to go. It will go.
If government had listened to reasoned argument we would not be having this fight now.
But government isn't listening. It is dictating. It is failing us all.
And, if you look at other shenanigans of our councils up and down the country, the evidence is there to see that they are intruding into our daily lives to a level that George Orwell's "big brother" predicted.
Orwell gave us the warning, our government is using that as a template for how they are reconstructing our surveillance led nanny state.
Ignore this at your peril. And the peril of those you beget and have begat.