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OT Paris Taxis
Does anyone here have any knowledge of regulations regarding cabs in Paris?
I was a bit perturbed yesterday when the meter on a cab I took between two railway termini read only E-Erreur. I suspect the driver had switched off the meter and was on the fiddle somehow. We were not overcharged for the trip (I suspect the driver understood I was suspicious as I told my partner in clear English that I thought off-meter work was illegal). I have noted the cab's number. My French is rather poor but I wonder if I should still try to report the matter somewhere. -- Helen D. Vecht: Edgware. |
OT Paris Taxis
Helen Deborah Vecht wrote:
My French is rather poor but I wonder if I should still try to report the matter somewhere. Try Inspector Maigret at the police HQ, Quai des Orfèvres. He'll be happy to investigate. E. |
OT Paris Taxis
In article ,
eastender wrote: Helen Deborah Vecht wrote: My French is rather poor but I wonder if I should still try to report the matter somewhere. Try Inspector Maigret at the police HQ, Quai des Orfèvres. He'll be happy to investigate. Unfortunately M. Maigret appears to be en vacences at present, he's away visiting some rum sounding cove named Wimsey. Nick -- http://www.leverton.org/blosxom ... So express yourself |
OT Paris Taxis
In message , Helen Deborah
Vecht writes Does anyone here have any knowledge of regulations regarding cabs in Paris? I was a bit perturbed yesterday when the meter on a cab I took between two railway termini read only E-Erreur. I suspect the driver had switched off the meter and was on the fiddle somehow. We were not overcharged for the trip (I suspect the driver understood I was suspicious as I told my partner in clear English that I thought off-meter work was illegal). I have noted the cab's number. If (and this sounds unlikely) the journey went outside the City of Paris itself (ie outside the "75" departement, roughly enclosed by the boulevard peripherique) then the meters don't apply and the fare should be agreed first. But if the two railway termini were main line ones then this probably doesn't explain it. My French is rather poor but I wonder if I should still try to report the matter somewhere. Regulation of taxi is the responsibility of the Prefecture of Police. According to their website at http://www.prefecture-police-paris.i...fr/contact.htm you can e-mail comments on taxi service to the rather unlikely address of: Feel free to take this to e-mail with me if you'd prefer to send something in French....... -- Ian Jelf, MITG Birmingham, UK Registered Blue Badge Tourist Guide for London and the Heart of England http://www.bluebadge.demon.co.uk |
OT Paris Taxis
Ian Jelf typed
If (and this sounds unlikely) the journey went outside the City of Paris itself (ie outside the "75" departement, roughly enclosed by the boulevard peripherique) then the meters don't apply and the fare should be agreed first. I would very much doubt if either Gare d'Austerlitz or Gare du Nord were out of town; they're the rough equivalents of Euston and Victoria, aren't they? Thanks. -- Helen D. Vecht: Edgware. |
OT Paris Taxis
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OT Paris Taxis
In message ,
Colin Rosenstiel writes In article , (Helen Deborah Vecht) wrote: Ian Jelf typed If (and this sounds unlikely) the journey went outside the City of Paris itself (ie outside the "75" departement, roughly enclosed by the boulevard peripherique) then the meters don't apply and the fare should be agreed first. I would very much doubt if either Gare d'Austerlitz or Gare du Nord were out of town; they're the rough equivalents of Euston and Victoria, aren't they? Thanks. I always thought of Austerlitz as the Paris equivalent of Waterloo. I remember after my first exchange visit to Paris asking why the railway stations seemed to be named after defeats. :-) Bet that went down well. Mind you, over at Porte Doree [1] there's a monument to the French victories in Vietnam....... You're right about Gare du Nord and Austerlitz being in the City of Paris. Indeed. On reflection and if the fare seemed right, it may simply have been a faulty machine. What's the London procedure for a faulty meter? (Mike H?) [1] Top get vaguely on topic, the nearest metro station for the former transport museum at Saint Mande. Now closed I understand with no clear idea for a replacement. Even more back on topic, the museum was home to preserved London Trolleybus 796 and I think an RT whose number I can't recall. -- Ian Jelf, MITG Birmingham, UK Registered Blue Badge Tourist Guide for London and the Heart of England http://www.bluebadge.demon.co.uk |
Paris Urban Transport Museum (was: OT Paris Taxis)
Ian Jelf writes:
... the former transport museum at Saint Mande. Now closed I understand with no clear idea for a replacement. I posted the following in April to misc.transport.urban-transit. I don't have time right now to look and see if there is any newer news. [End of new text] * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * In March 2005, James Robinson and I (Mark Brader) wrote: Any idea when the Urban Transport museum near Paris will reopen, or what the problem is? They no longer give a date on their web site. Indeed, I don't think a date has been given since back around 2000 when they actually started moving the collection to the new site. It seems to be a funding problem. ... And in June 2006, I posted a followup: ... I rechecked the web page I cited above, and it's been changed since I last looked. (I can't tell how recently...) It now mentions *another* problem, one that they never admitted to before, but which they now say has existed since 2002 -- a new municipal government dead set against the museum! (They don't say why.) The upshot is that with the federal government on their side, they do expect to reopen, but they'll need a new site, so who knows when? And they're now thinking in terms of a mixture of a full-time museum with paid staff and a weekend one with volunteers. Just now I checked again, and it seems that agreement was reached on a new location the same week that I posted that. This is in a suburb called Chelles, one of the eastern endpoints of RER Line E. Here's the web page where they announce that the municipal council has approved it: http://www.amtuir.org/01_musee/01_musee_projets.htm And here's a PDF copy of the museum's periodical from September, with more details about the site: http://www.amtuir.org/02_amtuir/bulletin/info269.pdf The periodical says it's a bimonthly publication and the link that took me there claims to lead to issue 271, which would be January; but actually it seems that issue 269, from September, is the only one online. One thing I immediately noticed in it was that they were hoping to have the museum open again on a weekend basis in 2008 -- but at this point I'll believe that when I see it. Anyway, it's forward movement. I'll probably translate some of the material about the museum later, but I thought I'd post this now while I have the URLs handy. -- Mark Brader "Sixty years old and still pulling a train! Toronto That's more than I can say about most people I know." -- Frimbo My text in this article is in the public domain. |
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