I won't be voting for Reform (in fact I won't be voting for anyone), but this smacks of the council playing party politics. As for the Labour MP...
I mean, they're basically endorsing what he's saying, but just saying that it doesn't happen nowadays, and when it happened in the past it's OK because nothing happened
The Reform councillor's statement is a bit OTT, but the reaction seems a bit OTT in the other direction
And not sure if the PHD v taxi terminology here has any significance, but I suspect all the politicians involved are pretty clueless anyway
Reform UK councillor told to apologise for saying some taxi drivers have 'dangerous criminal histories'https://www.nottinghampost.com/news/loc ... e-10707648The councillor found that 13 taxi licences had been issued to people with convictions over the past 10 yearsA Reform UK councillor is being told to apologise for describing some of his area's taxi drivers as having "dangerous criminal histories" after he questioned why some had been granted a licence.
The councillor is still demanding a full review of all taxi licences after he found that over the last 10 years, 12 private hire licences had been granted for people with convictions for violent offences and one for someone with a conviction for a sexual offence.
The figures relate to licences issued by Bassetlaw District Council and the figures were provided by the authority in September 2024.
Councillor Fraser McFarland asked for an update on the figure at a recent council meeting and it was confirmed that a further two licences had been granted in the last 12 months to applicants with convictions.
Councillor McFarland, who serves as the leader of the opposition on Bassetlaw District Council for the Reform group, wrote after the new figures were confirmed: "That means at least 15 people with dangerous criminal histories have been approved to carry passengers across our district.
"Let me be clear. This is unacceptable. It is unsafe. And it cannot continue.
"No resident should ever get into a private hire vehicle worrying whether the person driving them has a history of violence or sexual offending.
"The fact that this is happening and has been allowed to continue represents a serious failure of oversight and judgement within the licensing system."
Councillor McFarland has repeatedly clashed with Bassetlaw District Council - with the authority having recently spent £19,000 on an investigation into comments he made about asylum seekers.
The authority has now rebuked Councillor McFarland again, saying in a statement: "It is important that Councillor McFarland's comments do not undermine the wider taxi industry in Bassetlaw and cast any doubt over the legitimacy of all taxi drivers in our district, especially during what will be one of their busiest times of the year."
Bassetlaw's Labour MP Jo White has also called for an apology, having written to local taxi firms and said: "The suggestion that our hardworking local taxi drivers are a risk to the public is a disgrace.
"I know that local taxi firms carefully consider who they employ and they would never allow someone to work for them who presents a risk to the public."
Bassetlaw District Council now says that its policy does not allow the licensing committee to grant a licence to anyone with a previous sexual offence conviction.
The authority also says it does not issue a taxi licence to anyone who has committed a serious violent offence within the last 10 years, or within 10 years of the end of their sentence.
Bassetlaw currently licences 142 active taxi drivers and of the 15 licences in question, only five are now active drivers and their historical convictions were committed and spent between 10 and 33 years ago.
The council added: "There have been no complaints or allegations made to us by the public or by the police regarding these drivers.
"We take public safety extremely seriously and want to reassure the public that anyone providing a licensed taxi service in Bassetlaw has been through a rigorous and stringent application process, which includes Enhanced Disclosure and Barring Service (DBS) checks and mandatory safeguarding training."