Author Topic: FREE NOW St.Patrick's Week  (Read 3341 times)

Offline Rat Catcher

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Re: FREE NOW St.Patrick's Week
« Reply #60 on: March 23, 2025, 12:44:17 pm »
One only has to open the Free Now app in London to see the price difference between a clapped out Prius and a black cab in those parts, MfH. Similarly, in Spain the locals seem to check the price on both Uber and Bolt before ordering a cab. Seemingly there can be considerable differences in price at any given time but both are generally cheaper than hiring a licensed taxi on the street or at a rank. A lady from New York was telling me that Uber fares are significantly lower there than here - not that she gave a fuck as she was on expenses - but the tipping culture ensures that drivers are adequately rewarded and promotes good customer service.

I guess factors such as the lack or traffic, distances folk might have to travel to the bar, store, school or station, lack of other public transport options are all relevant, Ken. I daresay any publican who tried to charge over a tenner for a pint wouldn't last long in any rural backwater. Historically i.e. before entry liberalisation and implementation of the National Taximeter Area local authorities set taxi rates appropriate to their requirements. Similarly we had a healthy hackney (private hire) sector with taxis being a rarity outside of the big cities where folk might have more refined desires including access to bus lanes. In Dublin, for example, the hackney sector was probably one of the best examples of what the capitalists like to call the market finding it's own level as existed in any trade. In the city centre there were firms focussed on corporate trade (e.g. Metro, City Cabs) who charged fares comparable or, in some cases, higher than taxi fares. Then in the working class suburbs you had the likes of Checkers offering a local for less than what would be on the taximeter with no extras before the car moved. Such firms also offered budget fares in to the city. Then out in the sticks you had the likes of Swords cabs with similar local fares to Checkers and set fares to other North County towns at rates significantly lower than a licensed taxi would charge.

The problem with not having a non-premium service, particularly in rural areas, is that we have lost an entire sector of the market. Put simply, taxis aren't a viable alternative to owning a car in the same way as hackneys were prior to entry liberalisation. The more "premium service" fees the multinationals help themselves to the more our market contracts.
« Last Edit: March 24, 2025, 10:20:35 am by Admin »
If it doesn't have a roof sign and door stickers it's not a taxi.

Offline silverbullet

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Re: FREE NOW St.Patrick's Week
« Reply #61 on: March 24, 2025, 01:12:08 pm »
.... . We also have a situation where rural folk are being charged city prices to get home from the bar or down to the station... for the most part their needs are less refined than their city cousins ......
You have mentioned this before Stephen and I don't understand how you reckon a Rural TAXI should be less expensive than a City taxi ?
Poor farmers obviously...and their propensity to drink drive, often with the support of Healy-Rae type representatives.

Offline Rat Catcher

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Re: FREE NOW St.Patrick's Week
« Reply #62 on: March 24, 2025, 01:55:49 pm »
Poor farmers, housewives bringing the kids to the doctor, etc, etc...

NTA doesn't give a flying fuck about anyone outside of Dublin city centre. Less than one tenth of one Local Area Hackney plate has been issued per county per year since those plates were introduced in 2014 in conjunction with implementation of the current temporary moratorium on the issue of saloon hackney plates. That just about sums up their contempt for the stereotypical bachelor, struggling to make ends meet on some remote small holding, while being denied any prospect of social intercourse from one end of the year to the other.
If it doesn't have a roof sign and door stickers it's not a taxi.

 


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