From: garry sayed [garrysayed@yahoo.com.au] Sent: Monday, 2 July, 2001 23:42 To: disabdis@humanrights.gov.au Subject: wheelchair accessible taxis 2nd July,2001 Attention Mr Mason Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission Dear Mr Mason Thank you for the opportunity to send my submission on the issue of wheelchair accessible taxis. I am an operator of a wheelchair accessible taxi in Sydney, and I am pleased to be in a situation where I can voice an opinion from a different perspective. I have given the matter considerable thought and I will maintain my objectivity. On the issue of response times I can confirm that some people in wheelchairs wait considerably longer periods than able bodied passengers, with the number and variety of available vehicles this should not be the case, these vehicles belong to various networks in Sydney, and as a licensing requirement they must be connected to the 0200 network operated by Taxis Combined Services, who are responsible for delivering the service. It is widely known in the taxi Industry that if you belong to TCS you will get priority on the work, therefore receive better quality work. Yet if you belong to other networks ie; Legion, Premier, etc. you are automatically down towards the end of the queue, and therefore will only be offered work that is of a lessor monitory value. By offering inducements to TCS drivers only, incense drivers of the remaining networks, as a result of this unfair practice or treatment of non TCS driver, passengers in wheelchairs suffer the consequences by waiting considerably longer periods. This is a problem that cannot be ignored, and can be solved by simple strategies: 1/ To distribute the work fairly 2/ Global Positioning System to be used in allocating a hiring to a suitable vehicle ( this is not the case at the moment ) 3/ Disallow private booking arrangements 4/ To offer reasonable inducements to every completed hiring regardless of the driver's association or affiliation to networks Finally it is my opinion that increasing the number of wheel chair accessible taxis would not translate in better service levels, but rather would serve as an avenue for more drivers to enter the wheel chair taxi industry as a cheaper option with absolutely no regard to the needs of the community they ought to dealing with. Therefore the only way to improve service is to provide fair incentives to the current drivers without prejudice. Garry Sayed _____________________________________________________________________________ http://messenger.yahoo.com.au - Yahoo! Messenger - Voice chat, mail alerts, stock quotes and favourite news and lots more!