Late-night London black cab fares to be slashed under TfL plan

Taxi fares could be slashed at night under the plans
Shutterstock
Mark Chandler11 January 2017

London’s black cab drivers have lashed out at plans to slash fares for longer journeys late at night.

Transport for London (TfL) has launched a consultation on the proposals which would reduce the higher late night tariff, running from 10pm to 5am, by 26p a mile.

A rate for longer journeys, which is currently imposed after six miles, would only kick in after 12 if the proposals go ahead.

However, the minimum price for a journey would actually increase from £2.60 to £3.

Transport chiefs hope the proposed alterations, which are a long way from being implemented, will actually increase the number of people using black cabs in the capital at night with the lure of a reduced price.

But angry drivers claim the changes will hit them in the back pocket while they are still forced to share the roads with cheaper private hire firms like Uber.

Taxi drivers have been vocal on the threat to their incomes from groups such as Uber
EPA

Others hit out on social media at being made to pay the price for the capital’s congestion, calling it a “race to the bottom”.

One taxi driver told the Standard the minimum price rise of 40p would irritate customers who would not even realise their rides were cheaper later at night.

He said: “The cut of 26p per mile is so minute customers won't notice but, ultimately, cab drivers will.

“Over a week-long period night drivers could lose easily £70 to £80.

“With rising costs in fuel, third party app charges, credit card charges and certain private hire apps I can only see this as another dig at the London taxi trade as this will not win any work back.”

Cabbie Alan Goudge tweeted: “We can't compete with the likes of Uber on price, our trading models are totally different.

“Reduce our tariffs and the job will become unviable based on current running costs.”

TaxiMash complained: “Our running costs are significantly higher than so called competition, any reduction will impact earnings and or working hours.

“Traffic is the cause of high fares not the meter. TFL are the major cause of congestion would rather see them trimmed back!”

"I think that should be Renamed the Final Nail in the coffin of London’s Taxi Trade,” wrote Uberfail Luddite. “We Shall FIGHT THIS ALL THE WAY!”

Other proposed changes include ramping up the soiling charge – where people vomit or cause a mess in the back of taxis – from £40 to £60.

A door would also be left open for future fixed or capped fares from Heathrow to central London.

The proposed changes are based on a review ordered by the TfL board last February to see if taxi fares were viewed as too high by the travelling public.

Helen Chapman, TfL’s General Manager for Taxi and Private Hire, said: “Our annual public consultation on taxi fares is underway.

"This consultation aims to strike a balance between meeting the increased costs faced by taxi drivers while ensuring services remain competitively priced and attractive to customers.”

Research cited by TfL from 2015 showed 61 per cent of people surveyed thought black cabs were took pricey.

The consultation, available online, is open to the public for response until February 19

Create a FREE account to continue reading

eros

Registration is a free and easy way to support our journalism.

Join our community where you can: comment on stories; sign up to newsletters; enter competitions and access content on our app.

Your email address

Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number

You must be at least 18 years old to create an account

* Required fields

Already have an account? SIGN IN

By clicking Create Account you confirm that your data has been entered correctly and you have read and agree to our Terms of use , Cookie policy and Privacy policy .

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged in