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Old October 19th 15, 04:02 PM
Robin9 Robin9 is offline
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First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Feb 2011
Location: Leyton, East London
Posts: 902
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Quote:
Originally Posted by View Post
In article ,
(Robin9) wrote:

;151187']On 17/10/2015 10:02, Robin9 wrote:-

;151173 Wrote:-
In article
,
(JNugent) wrote:
-
On 16/10/2015 23:05,
wrote:-
In article
,
(Roland Perry) wrote:
-
In message
, at 11:41:37
on Fri, 16 Oct 2015, Paul Corfield
remarked:

Haven't you been introduced to Mr R Perry, Honourable Member for all
things Nottingham, Ely and Cambridgeshire? :-))))

I can do urban transport in some detail in Geneva and Amsterdam too
(as well as London of course).

Never taken a private hire in Ely, so I have no idea if they have
meters or not. The cars in the rank at the station are [East Cambs]
Hackneys.-

I should bloody well hope that any car on a rank is a licensed
hackney carriage as only they may ply for hire legally.

The answer to your earlier question is that some other major cities,
Birmingham to my personal knowledge and as also mentioned in a news
report today, Manchester and Sheffield, share with London the
inexplicable (to me) Luddite rule that bans meters in hire cars.
What

possible justification can there be for this?-

Eliminating any excuse for mistaking a pirate car for a taxi, of
course.-

That is addressed by marking rules on vehicles, both hackneys and hire
cars. The position should be clear enough. They aren't unmarked like
Addison Lee cars in London are.-

Addison Lee vehicles are cleared marked on the back with the
company logo. However, any mentally competent person can tell
the difference between a London Hackney Cab and a minicab. The
idea that a meter - inside the vehicle, remember - is necessary to
enable people to differentiate is absurd.-

Not everyone using transport in London comes from London.

Not everyone using transport in London comes from a town or city
where the proper purpose-built taxi can be found and purpose-built
taxis are
fitted with a taximeter and a sign on the roof in order to
distinguish them from any other car on the road.


into believing that a London pirate car is somehow a "taxi".

There are even some people who will deny that obvious truth.


It may be the case that a small minority of people travelling in
London are unfamiliar with the iconic London Taxi and also don't
know that licensed minicabs have a yellow sticker on both front
and rear windscreens. However such people are extremely unlikely
to be sufficiently knowledgeable and sufficiently eagle-eyed to
notice the meter and make a decision accordingly.

I don't know why Tony Blair's government decreed that minicabs
in London were not allowed to have a meter in the car - probably
the usual blend of ignorance, incomprehension and prejudice - but
I can't believe it was to help people differentiate between taxis and


Was that decided in legislation or by the Mayor? In the rest of the country
which has had hire car legislation since 1976 it's up to the licensing
authority which is the local council in all cases, even where there is an
executive Mayor.

--
Colin Rosenstiel
I've read on several occasions that the Act of Parliament has a
specific clause or sub-clause expressly stating that meters are
not allowed in London private hire vehicles.

I've never read through the Act line by line so I can be only
99% certain.