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I agree, but how do you control it? If couriers could use bus lanes I'd buy a van and keep a few boxes down the back of it!!Indeed taxis are a public transport but I don't see that this a reason why others such as those indicated in my last post should be excluded from using the bus lanes.
Jeeps - Are you sure? I've seen the Merc vans/mini-bus taxis, but not the jeeps (i.e. Lexus RX300 or Merc ML series).Huge variance in quality of cars - not uncommon to see 15 year old imported Carinas with 200k miles, side by side on the rank with a brand new Lexus jeep / Mercedes. Taxi hardship panel my backside...
But wouldn't minimum hours breach the gospel of the 'free market economy? If it is worth the driver working nights, then he/she will do so. If not, he won't. I don't see how cosying will really help matters either - Does it matter if the cosy is driving someone else's car or his own car?Lack of availability - I know the retort is 10,000 taxis in Dublin, but this is inadequate. Not in terms of number, but there should be a mandatory minimum of the hours worked by the taxi. Not much use if the driver decides he doesn't want to work nights/Sundays etc. Tough. The car should still be on the road. A defence against privatisation of the bus service is that operators would only run the choicest routes. This is already the case with taxi drivers who work when it suits them. The car should not be off the road on a whim. Cosying should be mandatory. This would also stop the rampant issuing of licences, giving the taxi lobby ammunition aganst further cars.
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