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Presentation to Queensland Taxi Council forum

12 September 2006, Toowoomba

Graeme Innes
Human Rights Commissioner and Commissioner responsible for Disability Discrimination
Speaking notes only

Graeme Innes

Disability Standards for Public Transport

Content of standards 

Main features for taxis:

Taxis are not subject to the same requirements as other modes, because at least in 1995-96 when drafting the standards it was thought that requiring 100% taxi fleet accessibility would be too onerous given

Key requirement:

Other key features:

Like the DDA the standards reflect an expectation that some additional service may be required for passengers with a disability as a reasonable accommodation.

It might be discussed though whether they set the line clearly enough about what accommodations are required and when any additional service for this purpose must be expected as part of the standard fare and whether and when operators can expect some additional payment.

Review of the Standards

It was recognised at time of drafting that the Standards would need review in the light of experience.

A provision was included requiring the Federal Minister for Transport in conjunction with the Attorney-General to conduct a review after 5 years of review of the efficiency and effectiveness of the Standards within 5 years after they take effect, including  whether discrimination has been removed, as far as possible, according to the requirements for compliance set out; and any necessary amendments to the Standards.

If the Standards had entered into force in 1996 as most of us expected of course, we would now have already had the first review and be coming up for the second. But they didn't .

The process and the timing of the first review are still being discussed by Ministers and among the Accessible Public Transport national Advisory Committee, which again includes representatives of each transport regulator, the disability community, the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission and of course from industry including the taxi industry.

What the Commission has been saying for a while now both to industry and community representatives is that while the two Ministers and their Departments are the ones with responsibility for conducting the process of review, the content really has to come from the people who know most about public transport, as those who deliver and use the services.

Possible issues for review:

HREOC inquiry

HREOC conducted an inquiry back in 2003 on taxi response times to promote discussion of some of these issues. This was not a comprehensive review but it was intended to promote discussion of ways of improving outcomes.

The inquiry found

Recent industry input

Industry participants made the following points at a forum conducted by the Taxi Council earlier this year in Brisbane:

Not all of these issues necessarily fit within the framework of a review of the Disability Standards for Accessible Public Transport, apart from the need for debate on what should be done with the issues which do. In particular the Standards clearly cannot dictate what incentives State governments choose to provide, and probably cannot prevent them imposing more demanding requirements of their own - such as a requirement to provide two allocated spaces or to provide additional services without payment as part of license conditions which the Standards might not require.

Despite this the review of the Standards offers an important opportunity for a look nationally at what regulatory changes might better promote provision of accessible taxi services and we encourage industry and community organisations to bring forward ideas for this purpose .