Glasgow Times

Taxi drivers demand fares be discounted

- BY RUTH SUTER

GLASGOW Taxis drivers are demanding a cut in fares amid increased pressure from competitor­s. A board consultati­on with drivers resulted in a proposal for fares to be cut – and members of the public could be in for a 15 per cent reduction, if accepted.

It comes as trade members become increasing­ly concerned over a loss in business as the coronaviru­s lockdown enters its seventh week.

One driver told the Glasgow Times: “The Glasgow Taxi trade has never known anything remotely like the current situation.

“Lots of our drivers have taken long periods of work off and don’t know when they’ll start back.

“Guys are going out and working five hours for £20. They’re becoming really dishearten­ed.

“If you sat there for five hours and you’d picked up four hires and pulled in £20, then it’s a complete waste of time.

“Sometimes you’re waiting two hours alone on ranks for a fare.”

Drivers and members fear that if a public discount is not introduced soon, customers will continue to use competitor­s’ services – which could result in the loss of jobs.

The driver added: “The discount would help footfall on the taxi ranks.

“It would help us go out to the larger schemes around Glasgow.

“We’ve lost an awful lot of out of city centre work because our competitor­s are much cheaper, however, they don’t have the overheads a taxi owner has.

“They can buy a good car for £10,000, whereas a new electric taxi costs £57,000 and then they have a licence to buy and a test to sit.

“We are the city’s proper taxi drivers but we know can’t match our competitor­s, but what we can do is try to bridge the gap.”

Before plans to fully implement Glasgow’s low-emission zone (LEZ) were halted, many trade members had forked out £57,000 on new electric cabs that would comply with the new regulation­s.

Unite the Union cab secretary Steven Grant said: “The Union cannot back any reduction in fares as members have been asked to update vehicles by December 2022.

“This LEZ deadline was already unaffordab­le due to the economic reality of running a taxi in Glasgow.

“The specialise­d vehicles we use are highly adapted for a broad spectrum of passengers and provide an excellent separation for social distancing due to the safety partition.

“Unfortunat­ely, these adaptation­s come at a cost with a current taxi vehicle price range of £40,000£60,000.

“The impact of the coronaviru­s crisis on the trade would be exacerbate­d by a 15% fare reduction.

“The tariff is set by GCC using a well defined formula of operating costs. We do, however back a freeze on any tariff increase during the crisis.

“It is possible that taxi dispatch systems may offer discounts from the meter price.”

Glasgow Taxis Lld has since started a consultati­on process to address members’ concerns.

Dougie McPherson, Glasgow Taxis chairman, said: “At Glasgow Taxis we continue to focus our energies on supporting our members, serving our customers and assisting in the collective fight against this virus, all as best as we can.

“A key part of this is maintainin­g thorough cleaning processes which are highly visible to the public, something which will only be stepped up further.

“Equally important is pricing in the current environmen­t and the prospect of discountin­g. As a members organisati­on we have opened up consultati­on, initially with members, and will gather the opinion of all involved.

“This process is not a vote, it is intended to gather the opinions of the members and allow decisions to be made which have the support of and contributi­on from the members. We’d encourage everyone to participat­e.

“On behalf of the committee, I must close by thanking all members and drivers for their outstandin­g commitment to the trade and the city at this extremely challengin­g time.”

 ??  ?? Taxi drivers fear jobs could be lost if action isn’t taken
Taxi drivers fear jobs could be lost if action isn’t taken

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