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TfL Taxi Consultation to "kill" Uber
On 2015-10-04 15:00:03 +0000, Roland Perry said:
One of the main complaints in London is that they lurk around places where people might want a cab, and then presumably get the customer to book them on the spot. That's the reason for the 5-minute timeout proposed in the consultation. God forbid they should do anything convenient for the user. Neil -- Neil Williams Put my first name before the @ to reply. |
TfL Taxi Consultation to "kill" Uber
In message
-sept ember.org, at 15:16:43 on Sun, 4 Oct 2015, Recliner remarked: Why makes Uber cabs "pirate cars"? Unlicensed plying-for-hire, of course. But they don't. They can only come when a registered customer books one. So they're not pirate cars. One of the main complaints in London is that they lurk around places where people might want a cab, and then presumably get the customer to book them on the spot. That's the reason for the 5-minute timeout proposed in the consultation. It wouldn't be at all surprising if they lurk near places with high demand. Except it causes traffic congestion because they park in awkward places. That's exactly what they're meant to do. They can't get customers to book them on the spot: the booking has to be made through Uber. They can get the customer to book them through Uber, on the spot. Or possibly do an off books "deal" with the customer. And, if the demand is very high, they may be able to benefit from "surge pricing". I see no customer benefit from a five minute delay rule. Perhaps you don't see a customer benefit in private hire cars not being able to operate as hackneys. But that's what the law says. That's the equivalent of high street retailers insisting that Internet retailers not be allowed to offer quick delivery. There isn't an easy retail analogy; except perhaps an unlicenced street trader lurking outside a blue-chip shop and offering to sell people about to enter, "exclusive" items at a discount. -- Roland Perry |
TfL Taxi Consultation to "kill" Uber
On 2015-10-04 14:49:57 +0000, Eric said:
It has been known to get addresses wrong or fail to find them entirely. So have taxi drivers. Neil -- Neil Williams Put my first name before the @ to reply. |
TfL Taxi Consultation to "kill" Uber
On 2015-10-04, Neil Williams wrote:
On 2015-10-04 14:49:57 +0000, Eric said: It has been known to get addresses wrong or fail to find them entirely. So have taxi drivers. Of course, but you did seem to present Google Maps as a better answer. Eric -- ms fnd in a lbry |
TfL Taxi Consultation to "kill" Uber
On 2015-10-04 16:08:41 +0000, Roland Perry said:
Except it causes traffic congestion because they park in awkward places. That, surely, is a matter for traffic enforcement. Neil -- Neil Williams Put my first name before the @ to reply. |
TfL Taxi Consultation to "kill" Uber
On 2015-10-04 16:23:18 +0000, Recliner said:
I don't think they can. You can't pick a particular vehicle to book through Uber, can you? I thought you could (or the review thing would be a bit pointless). Neil -- Neil Williams Put my first name before the @ to reply. |
TfL Taxi Consultation to "kill" Uber
On 04/10/2015 15:41, Recliner wrote:
JNugent wrote: On 03/10/2015 02:16, Recliner wrote: JNugent wrote: On 02/10/2015 06:26, Robin9 wrote: ;150401 Wrote: Vehicle tests, DBS & Police checks, knowledge tests. Not sure how many could be credibly done by an operator. -- Colin Rosenstiel The vehicle tests and criminal record checks are not done by the operators. Negligent TfL has only delegated knowledge testing to the cab firms who, of course, pass every driver because they want as many drivers as possible. TIs there a street knowledge test (or requirement) for the drivers of the unlicensed vehicles? Surely that's only for taxi-drivers? Surely it's only for black cab drivers in Central London? All London cab-driver applicants have to pass a version of the Knowledge, whether they are going for the "All London" (green badge) or a "suburban rank" (yellow badge). There is no parallel test for the would-be drivers of pirate cars. Just to be clear, is "pirate cars" your description of all mini cabs? There is no such thing as a mini cab. Do you want to re-phrase your question using valid terms? Other cabbies of all types don't have to get the "knowledge". And are there any other professionals who can only qualify by not using modern technology? Cab-drivers have to be able to do it with their brain. Whenever I've taken a black cab home, I have to provide more driving directions than I do with a mini cab. The Knowledge doe not extend to your street, unless you live in the West End, the City, Kensington or somewhere equally salubrious. One can only conjecture as to why such a requirement might not be appropriate for pirates. Conjecture all you like: mini cabs have technology on their side. There's nothing to stop taxis using satnav. |
TfL Taxi Consultation to "kill" Uber
On 04/10/2015 15:41, Recliner wrote:
JNugent wrote: On 03/10/2015 09:07, Someone Somewhere wrote: On 10/3/2015 2:29 AM, JNugent wrote: On 03/10/2015 02:08, Recliner wrote: What the law will not stomach is the operator and/or driver of the cab (or pirate car) doing the arranging. It has to be up to the passenger to do the picking and choosing of travelling companions. Why is that deemed to be a passenger benefit? What? Seriously? Because a taxi is - in its very essence - a *private* space which can be hired by the passenger to the exclusion of others. It is not a bus. If a bus is what is wanted, buses are available. What? There's a bus that takes me from Heathrow to outside my house in Shadwell? Provided you're willing to change a few times, yes. Please explain why you think that's a benefit to the customer? I don't. It is not I who recommends that you share a small-ish vehicle with some stranger who may do you harm. Or perhaps you needn't bother, as you've made clear your extreme hostility to customers. Or, as the case actually is, my hostility to any idea that it is right to deny the rights of those passengers. HTH. |
TfL Taxi Consultation to "kill" Uber
On 04/10/2015 14:58, Neil Williams wrote:
On 2015-10-04 13:13:13 +0000, JNugent said: In order to protect the passenger and preserve his/her right to privacy. Which they could still choose by requesting sole use of the taxi, just as they do now. The point is not to ban single-user taxis, it is to allow another method of operation. What would you think if a minicab driver picked up your daughter in the West End late at night, then airily informed her that she had to share the vehicle from Marble Arch to Ealing with his brother-in-law the convicted rapist and the Southall Strangler? She wouldn't have requested a shared taxi when booking so the situation would not arise. She would have requested a sole-use taxi. One rule to apply to all. Vagueness could lead to the passenger being (unnecessarily) in harm's way. It would seem to provide an effective half-bus half-taxi means of transport in smaller towns where proper bus operation is increasingly unaffordable. Safety first. Why do you seek to deny the option of a money saving shared taxi to those who want it? I don't. I don't what the driver or operator to dictate it to the passenger, that's all. Not never, not nohow, no exceptions, less scope for error. This would not prevent those who don't want a shared taxi from having one to themselves by paying the fare, as at present, for the whole vehicle. That's good of you. |
TfL Taxi Consultation to "kill" Uber
On 04/10/2015 14:50, Neil Williams wrote:
On 2015-10-04 13:14:08 +0000, JNugent said: Buses are still available, if not always convenient. A taxi is not a bus. The hybrid matatu/jitney model works reasonably well in many countries. A public transport operator is free to apply for the necessary permissions to make that work. Your preferences are not a reason to abolish protection for taxi-passengers. Who's proposing to abolish your ability to hire a taxi to yourself? What is being proposed is allowing people who wish to to take a shared taxi. Those who do not wish to can continue to take one to themselves, obviously at a fare commensurate to that. As I have already said, several times: that is already allowed. It's just that the passenger decides on the sharing, not the driver or operator. |
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