Bristol Post

Taxi driver stripped of his licence due to repeat speeding offences

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ABRISTOL cabbie suspected of multiple speeding offences has been stripped of his licence after blaming a friend who rented his car.

The private hire driver was also accused of using laughing gas and littering, which he denied, but city councillor­s ruled it indicated a pattern of behaviour that raised doubts about his suitabilit­y to hold a permit and showed his standards had fallen “well below” those expected.

They revoked both his driver and vehicle licences after hearing he was convicted by Bath magistrate­s earlier this year of speeding in April 2022 and failing to provide driver’s identifica­tion in relation to another speeding offence last January.

They ruled that he dishonestl­y tried to pin three previous speeding offences, in a six-week period in 2021, on a fellow driver who rented his vehicle but who was unlicensed and should not have taken passengers because of a conviction for failing to provide documents for an offence.

Recently published minutes of the Bristol City Council public safety and protection sub-committee on August 16 said Avon and Somerset Police’s taxi compliance officer raised concerns with the local authority in June about the licence holder’s “fit and proper” status.

The papers said three speeding offences in June and July, 2021, were committed either by him, referred to as OMM, or a man he nominated to drive the car on his behalf, AR, but that the person behind the wheel had “failed to provide appropriat­e identifica­tion when required to do so and may have conspired to pervert the course of justice”.

They said: “In addressing the meeting, OMM explained that Covid had badly affected his financial situation since taxiing was his livelihood.

“Since he knew AR, he had rented his car to him to enable him to support his family.”

The licence holder, who was not named in the document, told the panel that he was the driver for the speeding offence in April 2022, the minutes said.

They said: “OMM could not remember whether or not he was driving the vehicle for offences on June 1, June 13 and July 12, 2021.

“However, it was noted that it was likely he was since Uber identifica­tion was usually required before he would be able to use the vehicle.

“OMM had continued to rent his vehicle to AR despite AR having been convicted of failing to provide documents for an offence in July 2021. OMM acknowledg­ed that it was wrong to rent his vehicle to an unlicensed driver but needed to pay bills to support his family.” The report concluded: “The overall picture presented by OMM was a licensee whose standards had fallen well below the high standards the council is entitled to expect from those whom it licences. There had been multiple offences over a period of time.”

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