QLD MINISTER DENIES UBER FREE RIDE

Qld minister denies Uber free ride

Queensland’s transport minister insists the government is already cracking down on illegal ride-sharing services like Uber.

Stirling Hinchliffe’s comments come after a parliamentary committee this week recommended he take urgent action to ensure the current regulations, which deem Uber to be an illegal taxi service, are enforced.
But Mr Hinchliffe says that is already happening, denying suggestions the government had issued a directive for Department of Transport and Main Roads officer to stop fining drivers.

“No, there’s been some 17,000 hours of enforcement put in by the department of transport in relation to these regulations,” Mr Hinchliffe said.

“That’s an important thing and I want to see that continue and make sure that we continue to work on how we can enforce our appropriate transport regulations.”

Mr Hinchliffe said some Uber drivers had been fined over the past few days, but conceded that had been due to driving unsafe vehicles, not for operating without a taxi licence.

The Infrastructure, Planning and Natural Resources Committee’s report found that Uber was using technology to actively avoid transport officers, making enforcement difficult.

The report was looking into a bill that Katter’s Australian Party MP Rob Katter introduced calling for Uber drivers to be issued with demerit points.

The committee didn’t support the bill, arguing Uber’s tactics to avoid punishment would mean it would take too long for the points to appear on drivers’ records.
​Mr Hinchliffe also had reservations about the demerit points plan, given demerit points were only used to punish unsafe road practices, like speeding.

“That’s why the government will have to look at this very seriously and cautiously,” he said.

Despite not having the government’s backing, Mr Katter on Thursday pushed ahead with his bill, arguing demerit points were needed because fines weren’t doing enough to deter Uber.

“If Uber and the likes were going to pay the fines for their drivers and barrage their way through the laws with money, then we had to look at alternative ways to fix this,” he said.

Mr Katter on Thursday afternoon successfully moved a motion to fast-track his bill, which means it would now be debated next month.

Uber’s director of public policy, Brad Kitschke, insisted the service wasn’t illegal in Queensland and said drivers weren’t being taken to task over unpaid fines.

“They are not doing anything wrong,” he said.

But the Taxi Council Queensland disagreed, calling for the government to urgently act and uphold the law.

“The law is the law, and at the moment we have an uneven playing field,” the council said in a statement.

The government will release its taxi strategy in August, which will detail how ride-sharing services will fit into the state’s transport landscape.

Read more at http://www.9news.com.au/national/2016/03/17/14/53/urgent-need-for-uber-crackdown-katter#cVwb3RgUwbrDGGBw.99

Statement from Taxi Council Queensland

Media Statement
17 March 2016

Taxi Council Queensland (TCQ) welcomes the report from Queensland parliament’s Infrastructure, Planning and Natural Resources Committee calling on urgent enforcement action against illegal taxi services.

There is one law for all in this state, and for too long, illegal taxi operators have been allowed to ignore the law with no ramifications. This breakdown of the rule of law has widespread consequences and has negatively impacted thousands of law abiding small business operators across Queensland. For this lack of action, legislators should be ashamed.

However, the State Government now has another opportunity to be decisive and uphold the law and we urge them to do so immediately.

TCQ is an active participant in the current government review process and is working with all sides of parliament to achieve the right outcome. However, in the meantime the law is the law, and at the moment we have an uneven playing field, with taxis abiding by regulation while illegal operators do not, giving them an unfair business advantage.

This should not be acceptable in any jurisdiction that values the rule of law. Regulations exist for a reason and the taxi industry in Queensland is proud of our record and the service we offer millions of customers ever year. We operate around 250,000 trips every day across the state, providing the safest and most reliable form of door to door transport.

Taxi Council Queensland
ENDS

TAXIS CALL FOR MORE SECURE LATE NIGHT RANKS

Media Release
February 17, 2016

The peak body representing Queensland’s taxi industry has called for more secure and better resourced taxi ranks while vowing to do all it can to ensure the expected new lockout laws are workable and sustainable.

Taxi Council Queensland Chief Executive Officer Benjamin Wash says earlier lockout times will generate greater demand for taxi services and this is one of the many issues that require a consultative approach moving forward.

“Earlier lockout and last drinks times mean more patrons will need taxi services at the same time, so more cabs need to be on the road to effectively service peak demand.

“The challenge now for the taxi industry, governments and police is to make these precincts as safe as possible.”

Mr Wash said more secure ranks will be needed in entertainment precincts state wide to handle the increased volume.

“The incidence of violence is likely to fall if people can walk to a rank just metres from where they last exited and that means we need ranks established right outside all late night venues – the less time people are on the street, the less alcohol-fuelled violence we are likely to see.”
ENDS

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​Interview about Taxi Council calls for mandatory sentencing following ambo attacks.

JAIL TERM CALL FOR QLD DRIVER ASSAULTS

By AAP, 1:07pm January 27, 2016

Queensland’s taxi lobby is calling for mandatory jail terms for people who assault professional drivers.

The Taxi Council of Queensland’s plea comes after a spate of attacks on paramedics in the state’s southeast.

“Whether it is a taxi driver, police officer, bus driver, paramedic, firefighter, railway employee or anyone who is carrying out their job of transporting or attending to the public, they deserve a level of protection from the law that is currently not there,” chief executive Benjamin Wash said.

Mr Wash said mandatory sentencing would send a strong message to offenders and a warning to others that transport workers should be treated with respect.

“This is their workplace and they are faced with issues most of us will never be faced with in our workplace, so there needs to be special consideration given to their specific roles,” he said.

Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk said her government would be open to discussing the idea.

“I’m not aware of those concerns, but my (Transport) Minister Stirling Hinchliffe will be more than happy to sit down with the taxi council about those issues,” she said.

There has been a recent spike in assaults on Queensland paramedics, including three incidents on Sunday alone.

One saw a 21-year-old woman allegedly bash a paramedic in the back of an ambulance after she had earlier passed out in the toilets of a Brisbane hotel.

TAXI COUNCIL CALLS FOR MANDATORY SENTENCING FOLLOWING AMBO ATTACKS

Media Release
27 January 2016

Taxi Council Queensland (TCQ) has called for mandatory sentencing for anyone found guilty of assaulting a person who is providing an emergency or transportation service to the public.

The call comes after a spate of attacks against paramedics in south east Queensland.

TCQ chief executive officer Benjamin Wash says his industry stands with ambulance officers and others who are dealing with the public 24/7, as taxi drivers have also been victims of violence.

“All of the talk in the world won’t change things unless courts start sending a strong message, and at this moment sentencing is far removed from community expectation,” he said.

“Whether it is a taxi driver, police officer, bus driver, paramedic, firefighter, railway employee or anyone who is carrying out their job of transporting or attending to the public, they deserve a level of protection from the law that is currently not there.”

Mr Wash said that all too often offenders get no jail time and walk away from court laughing.

“The law doesn’t need to be changed, as the penalties are already there; it just needs to be enforced.”

The Taxi Council believes that mandatory sentencing will send a strong message to offenders and a warning to others that the people engaged in these vital industries must be treated with respect.

“This is their workplace and they are faced with issues most of us will never be faced with in our workplace, so there needs to be special consideration given to their specific roles.”
ENDS

7 NEWS – “WE NEED MORE SECURE RANKS”: FOOTAGE BACKS FIGURES ON OUT-OF-CONTROL VIOLENCE AT BRISBANE TAXI RANKS

Seven News has gained access to footage of violence in Brisbane, as new figures confirm assaults around taxi ranks in the city’s south-east are out of control.

Taxi Council Queensland has called for more secure ranks to make sure people make it home unharmed.

A video released to Seven News under Right to Information shows a fight between several men and taxi supervisors in January last year.

At a crowded cab rank in Fortitude Valley, it only takes seconds for violence to break out.

What starts as pushing and shoving quickly escalates.

Police are quick to respond but the attackers are not fazed by their presence.

“From what we’ve seen in terms of coward punches and the tragedies that have happened in recent times, we don’t need less secure ranks we need more secure ranks operating more often,” chief executive of Taxi Council Queensland Benjamin Wash said.

There have been 309 assaults around taxi ranks in the Valley and city, over the past three months.

VIDEO: https://au.news.yahoo.com/a/30603047/footage-shows-out-of-control-violence-at-brisbane-taxi-ranks/#pause
​On average, there are about 10 assaults a week at cab ranks in Brisbane and on the Gold Coast.

Trauma surgeon Dr Richard Lewandowski said: “For every one person that gets killed certainly fifteen more have brain injuries and I would suggest that hundreds more don’t even make it on to the radar”.

Night chaplains deal with the drunken behaviour first hand.

Night chaplains deal with the drunken behaviour first hand. Photo: 7 News
They do their best to get people home safely but when the night is over, there is a rush to the ranks.

“I think that there is coming a time where we need to just rethink their locations so they are more strategic,” night chaplain Lance Mergard said.

To help control crowds on the weekend, every taxi rank in the Valley is patrolled by security guards and supervisors.

Some, on Wickham Street for example, are even fitted with security cameras being watched by police.

The Taxi Council wants more ranks with more patrols in better locations to ease the violence.

“These things are happening on the street and they’re happening from the venue to the ranks,” said Mr Wash.

To help make the journey home safer, he said, ideally, “there should be a rank outside every major venue and outside where people gather to eat at the end of the night”.

SHORT AIRPORT TAXI FARES A THING OF THE PAST

December 14, 2015

Media Release

Short airport taxi fares a thing of the past

The days of a taxi driver waiting in the queue at Brisbane Airport’s Domestic Terminal only to get a fare to the International Terminal – and being disadvantaged because of the ‘luck of the draw’ – is over, thanks to an innovative new scheme successfully being implemented by Brisbane Airport Corporation (BAC).

In fact it has worked so well, the working group responsible for the initiative was recently recognised at the annual Taxi Council Queensland (TCQ) Industry Awards.

Brisbane Airport Corporation’s Adam Hazell received the prestigious industry Innovation Award at the recent ceremony in Brisbane and paid tribute to the hard work achieved by the Airport Working Group (AWG) looking in to the short fare system.

“The research between the AWG and taxi drivers who work from the airport was consultative and thorough and we know we have come up with a fairer system for cabbies who take short fare jobs within the precinct which continues to grow.”

The Brisbane Airport precinct implemented a system in which drivers who complete a short fare within a 15 minute time allowance are now allowed to return to the start of the feeder queue at the various ranks outside the terminals, meaning drivers are happier to do the fare knowing they can quickly return and not have to line up again.

The short fare system has also been upgraded to avoid drivers speeding through their jobs, with technologies like real-time distance based clocking and licence plate recognition now being used.

TCQ chief executive officer Benjamin Wash paid tribute to Mr Hazell and the Brisbane Airport team saying the new system and subsequent upgrades have had a major impact on the efficiency of airport taxi operations, dramatically decreasing complaints and improving overall customer safety and service.

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