Yorkshire Post

Concerns at council plan to increase taxi rates

- Stuart Minting LOCAL DEMOCRACY REPORTER

TAXI passengers in North Yorkshire could be paying five per cent more per mile, although taxi drivers and councillor­s are divided over whether rates should rise or fall.

North Yorkshire Council’s executive agreed to the five per cent daytime rates rise, as well as extending night-time rates time to eight hours from 10pm and increasing the maximum call-out charge from £1 to £1.50.

If the move is not contested, daytime taxis will be able to charge £4 for the first quarter mile and 20p for every extra quarter mile or 35 seconds of waiting time.

But Ripon cabbie Richard Fieldman told councillor­s the 70 drivers from Whitby to Harrogate he represente­d were opposed to the proposals, saying the plans were “totally unacceptab­le for those that work nights and the unsocial Christmas period”.

He added: “The proposal gives no increase to those working these hours which less and less drivers are prepared to work.”

Starting higher rates from 10pm rather than 11pm would have a minimal impact on night-time drivers, councillor­s were told.

Mr Fieldman added: “It is ironic that officers recognise that drivers need rewarding for late-night unsocial hours with abusive, alcohol and drug-fuelled customers, yet are failing to provide them with the same increase as the day-time drivers.”

He said the £1 per mile call-out charge had remained the same for many years. When combined with higher fuel costs, it had become “unviable in a vast rural county” to travel significan­t distances to pick up passengers who only wanted to go a few miles. Drivers were refusing to do these types of journey, the meeting heard, leaving some passengers unable to get home.

Areas such as Northaller­ton, Thirsk, Ripon and Skipton had serious shortages of drivers working unsocial hours and the proposals would ensure even less cover.

Ripon councillor Barbara Brodigan said similar changes in Barnsley had led to too few or no taxis being available during holiday periods and at night-time.

However, Councillor Kevin Foster, who represents Colburn, an area near Catterick with amongst the highest levels of deprivatio­n in the county, said he received a lot of complaints over the cost of taxi fares.

He said the public needed to be aware taxis did not have to charge the maximum permitted fares.

Several councillor­s felt the proposals represente­d a reasonable compromise.

Councilor Greg White said some people had called for the maximum charges to be lowered to make North Yorkshire more competitiv­e with nearby areas.

He said a three-mile trip in Barnsley would cost £8.90, but in North Yorkshire it would be £14.98.

A report to the meeting showed while a 20-mile night-time journey in North Yorkshire would cost £68.67, in Bradford passengers would be charged £42.40.

Coun White said: “We are already more expensive than Bradford, Durham, East Riding, Lancaster, Leeds, Redcar and Cleveland and York. So I’m really keen that we don’t get to the situation where we do an injustice to the people who use the taxi service by making those taxis become unaffordab­le.”

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