The City-County government's been licensing cabs since Day One and prior to that, the former city government did it, too. It was all about keeping us safe, right? Oh, sure there was a nice, fat fee, but the cab operator received Official Documents and all was right with the world, no?
...Not so fast. Here's the money quote, from Adam Collins, Esq., licensing administrator for the city's Code Department: "By aligning the city's licensing function with an inspection and enforcement arm for the first time, the city will be able to hold cab drivers more accountable." [emphasis mine]. Yep. Ipse dixit, mind you; maybe they've had some rules and some sort of enforcement thereof all along, but it certainly sounds as if it's been a straight-up swap of money for Official-Looking Paper since they first started makin' hack-drivers get a special permission slip. (Yet when Uncle Ned did the very same thing, on the very same paper and in matching type, they said it was wrong and made him go stamp out license plates).*
But it's all better now; why, we've even got a "Passenger Bill Of Rights," complete with assurances that we're entitled to a clean ride, no matter our hue, faith, accent, crutches or twitch or who we're makin' out with, and no extra miles, even; drivers have even gotta have a local version of The Knowledge, though there doesn't look to be an official exam thereof.
Alas, 'tis all in vain. We may be right out of of the taxi-riding biz; there's a poison pill in Article Six that's doomed the entire enterprise: not only does the driver have to know the city, he's required to speak English.
Sigh. There they go, the whole lot of them. That's a whole lotta people with chauffeur's licenses to throw out of work at once.
But hey, shiny-new goofy fake Bill of Rights! Wowie!
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* He must have failed. We still have license plates.
What are the chances that some hack politician's relative recently got swept halfway to Speedway on a trip up to, say, Fishers?
ReplyDelete...and they say your average Joe Citizen is the dim one?
ReplyDeleteSame deal with drivers licenses. The fee is a tax, no more and certainly no less. One of my first memories is my Dad going to the courthouse to pay his "drivers TAX." No test, just pay your tax.
ReplyDeleteYep, one great big dollar bill, in exchange for the privilege of driving a motor vehicle for one year. In candy bars, that is the equivalent of about $24.00 a year today.
When I was ten, Roosevelt got in the deal with a $5.00 a year tax on private vehicles. That's about $220 a year to drive in 2010 microbux.
My first commercial license cost a fiver - with no exam. Another tax. And so on and so forth.
Stranger