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Illegal taxi operation

Illegal taxicabs, sometimes known as pirate taxis, gypsy cabs, or jitney cabs, are taxicabs and other for-hire vehicles that are not duly licensed or permitted by the jurisdiction in which they operate. Most major cities worldwide require taxicabs to be licensed, safety-inspected, insured as for-hire vehicles, and to use taximeters, and there may also be requirements that the taxi driver be registered or accredited. However, many unlicensed cabs are in operation. Illegal cabs may be marked taxi vehicles (sometimes referred to as "speedy cabs"), and others are personal vehicles used by an individual to offer unauthorized taxi-like services. Illegal cabs are prevalent in cities with medallion systems, which restrict the number of legal cabs in operation. Since their introduction in 2009, vehicles affiliated with ridesharing companies have been classified as illegal taxicabs in some jurisdictions.

Terminology edit

A variety of terms are used in the industry to describe legal and illegal transportation providers. Hacks or hackers is a common term that originated with the hackney horse, a breed of horse typically offered for hire in the 19th century. Other terms used are livery cab, car service, or jitney cab.[1][2][3][4][5][6]

The phrases vary by locality and often refer to different classes of licensed transportation providers.

In mainland China, illegal cabs are referred to as black taxis or black cars (黑车), or alternatively blue-plate cars (蓝牌车), referring to the colour of the licence plates for private vehicles, rather than yellow for public service vehicles.[citation needed]

In Lagos, Nigeria, illegal cabs are usually referred to as kabu kabu.[7]

In Hong Kong, illegal cabs are usually referred to as white card, due to the different licence plate appearance between commercial and non-commercial vehicles.[citation needed]

In Malaysia, illegal taxicabs are called prebet sapu (sweep privates).[8]

In the Philippines, illegal taxis operating as Public Utility Vehicles (PUVs) without proper franchise are called colorums.

In Madrid, Spain, illegal taxicabs meant for carrying drug addicts to the meeting point with drug dealers are called cundas (singular, cunda).[9]

In Argentina, illegal taxicabs are called remises truchos (false taxis).[10]

In Norway and Denmark, an illegal cab is called pirattaxi (pirate taxi).[11]

In Gabon they are called clandos.[12]

In the Netherlands they are called snorders; the term derives from the Yiddish verb snorren, to scrounge, cadge.[13][14]

In Turkey, an illegal taxicab is known as a "korsan taksi".

Types and exceptions edit

Unlicensed cabs may be found cruising the residential streets of a city, typically in the working-class neighborhoods. Sometimes, drivers will also wait at a location where taxi service is in demand, such as airport or train station arrival areas or shopping centers, asking arriving passengers if they need a ride. Unlicensed taxis often do not have meters, so the fare is usually agreed to at the beginning of the ride. The car itself is usually large, similar in feel to a licensed taxi.

In New York City, Baltimore, Philadelphia, and other cities non-medallion car services (also called livery cabs) lawfully exist but are only supposed to respond to telephone dispatch. They cannot legally pick up street hails or enter taxi stands at airports. However, outside of the core Manhattan business district, livery cabs are ubiquitous and will respond to street hails. Some areas also have sedan services, which likewise respond to telephone dispatch.

There are also non-taxicab based unlicensed transportation providers. Examples include "dollar vans" plying city bus routes in New York City, and van services that offer rides between major cities. In some places, providing a ride in a personal vehicle as a part of another job, such as caregiving, may be legal, sometimes with regulation of certain factors, such as insurance coverage.

Medallion systems edit

In some large American cities, and in Hong Kong, a medallion system is used to license cabs. The city issues a fixed number of medallions, and only medallion taxis are allowed to pick up fares. In general, this leads to medallions becoming ever more expensive—a New York City corporate medallion can sell for up to $1 million each.[15] Medallions are transferable, and while some cab drivers own their own medallion, most must lease one on a daily or weekly basis from a fleet owner.

The medallion system has several effects upon the illegal transportation market. By acting as a barrier to entry to the taxi market, it has the consequence of creating a market for unlicensed cabs, especially in areas that tend to be underserved by medallion cabs. Taxi medallions tend to increase in value over time, and their owners and lessees tend to be very eager to protect their exclusive rights, for example, by lobbying for stricter enforcement against unlicensed cabs.

In working-class neighborhoods edit

In America, there is significant anecdotal evidence that unlicensed cabs are mostly found in working-class neighborhoods of large cities.[16]

In Baltimore, United States, supermarkets in working-class neighborhoods frequently have "courtesy drivers" who, although not employed by the supermarket, have shown identification to management and are allowed to wait in front of the store for fares. Unlike licensed cab drivers, these courtesy drivers will also help to carry groceries up to one's apartment.[16] "Hacking" in Baltimore has grown grass-roots style to a region-wide phenomenon, originating from "Hack Clubs", organizations usually operating in converted rowhouses where "hacks" made their cars available, distributed business cards with a central number, employed a "dispatcher", and hung around the rowhouse waiting in line for calls. This practice continues today, but hacking has evolved to the point where people nowadays just wag a finger toward the street, and wait for anyone to stop. This new way of getting around remains popular, despite being potentially dangerous, due to disillusionment with the city transit service, and the fact that licensed cabs seldom stop for fares in the most dangerous parts of town. There are plenty of willing drivers, and competition can be fierce. The fare is negotiated and paid upfront. Police maintain this is illegal, and sometimes enforce with $500 tickets, and a trip to the courthouse.

In Pittsburgh, jitneys are unlicensed cabs that specialize in areas underserved by traditional taxis and public transport, particularly the historically Black Hill District. This is the inspiration for August Wilson's play Jitney, which is set at a Hill District car service office.[17]

In Chicago, raiteros are drivers who take immigrant workers to distant farms and factories. They sometimes function also as temp agency.[18]

Amish taxis edit

Unlicensed cabs are also found among the Amish of rural Pennsylvania. An Amish taxi is typically an illegal taxicab operation run on an informal basis by an individual who is not specifically running a taxi service, but who has been propositioned by an Amish person to transport them for shopping or business purposes.[citation needed] Old Order Amish do not drive, but will hire a van or taxi for trips for which they cannot use their traditional horse and buggy transportation.[19]

In most rural locations with a low-density Amish population, it would be impractical for an Amish person to hire a commercial taxi from a metropolitan area since the taxi would have to drive long distances just to pick up the Amish person. It is therefore more convenient and less expensive to find an unlicensed non-Amish neighbor willing to act as a "taxi".

Normal individual automotive insurance is not intended to insure driving a vehicle for hire for business purposes. A paratransit license from the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (PUC) is required to operate an Amish taxi legally in Pennsylvania. This applies to anyone who transports people for a fee. The vehicle cannot hold more than 15 passengers, and must display a PUC identification number on both sides of the vehicle.[20]

Crowdsourced taxis edit

 
A protest against Uber by taxicab drivers in Budapest

Crowdsourced taxis are run by ridesharing companies.[21][22] Since Uber's launch, several other companies have emulated its business model, a trend that has come to be referred to as "Uberification".[23][24]

Many governments and taxi companies have protested against Uber, alleging that its use of unlicensed, crowd-sourced drivers was unsafe and illegal. Uber operates and functions as a taxi service company for the public by dispatching drivers to provide transportation services to passengers who pay Uber mileage-based fees and surcharges through credit card information kept on file by Uber. The taxi industry has pushed to have Uber treated the same as taxi companies, who face public safety requirements under the law ranging from how old vehicles on the road can be to how much they can charge or how many passengers allowed per vehicle and how much insurance they must carry.[25]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Dalzell, Tom (2007). The new Partridge dictionary of slang and unconventional English (Reprint ed.). Routledge. p. 943. ISBN 978-0415259378.
  2. ^ Merriam-Webster's pocket guide to English usage. Springfield, Mass.: Merriam-Webster. 1998. p. 178. ISBN 0877795142.
  3. ^ Garner, Bryan A. (2009). Garner's modern American usage (3rd ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. p. 405. ISBN 978-0195382754.
  4. ^ Wedeck, H.E. (1973). Dictionary of gypsy life and lore. with the assistance of Wade Baskin. New York: Philosophical Library. ISBN 0806529857.
  5. ^ Garner, Bryan A. (2011). A dictionary of modern legal usage (3rd ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. p. 400. ISBN 978-0195384208.
  6. ^ Bolaffi, Guido (2002). Dictionary of race, ethnicity and culture (1. publ., [Nachdr.]. ed.). SAGE Publications. p. 291. ISBN 0761969004.
  7. ^ Akoni, Olasunkanmi (August 17, 2016). "Lagos to enforce regulation on 'Kabu kabu', others". Vanguard Nigeria. Vanguard Media Limited. Retrieved 19 September 2022.
  8. ^ Mohamad Fahd Rahmat (7 January 2011). "Prebet sapu makin ligat" (in Malay). Berita Harian. Retrieved 23 January 2013.
  9. ^ How cundas, taxis of drugs, work. Telemadrid.
  10. ^ "Advierten que cada vez hay más remises "truchos"". Diario El Sol Mendoza (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2020-09-05.
  11. ^ "Pirate taxis cruise streets". Copenhagen Post. 3 April 2007. Retrieved 23 September 2012.
  12. ^ "Gabun; Improvisation, Korruption: Die Offiziellen Schwarzmarkt-Taxis – les taxis "clandos" de Libreville bientôt tous en jaunes "comme à New York"". Archiv Afrikanews 2009-2014.
  13. ^ Nicoline van der Sijs, Chronologisch woordenboek (in Dutch). Retrieved 2022-06-17 – via Digitale Bibliotheek voor de Nederlandse Letteren (DBNL).
  14. ^ "Wat is een snorder?". Amsterdam.nl (in Dutch). Retrieved 2022-06-17.
  15. ^ Michael M. Grynbaum (October 20, 2011). "2 Taxi Medallions Sell for $1 Million Each". The New York Times.
  16. ^ a b "Feature: A Baltimore Way of Life". 2004-04-21.
  17. ^ Mendelson, Abby (July 22, 2015). "For some neighborhoods, jitney is the only way to travel". Pittsburgh City Paper. Retrieved 21 April 2021.
  18. ^ Grabell, Michael (2013-04-29). "Taken for a Ride: Temp Agencies and 'Raiteros' in Immigrant Chicago". ProPublica. Retrieved 2023-10-01.
  19. ^ Pa. Officials Cracking Down on Unlicensed 'Amish Taxis'
  20. ^ Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission press release January 10, 2005.
  21. ^ Rusli, Evelyn (June 6, 2014). "Uber Dispatches trips". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved November 7, 2014.
  22. ^ Goode, Lauren (June 17, 2011). "Worth It? An App to Get a Cab". The Wall Street Journal.
  23. ^ "Apple Pay's Real Killer App: The Uber-ification of Local Services". The Huffington Post. December 2014. Retrieved January 5, 2015.
  24. ^ . Schlaf. Archived from the original on February 10, 2016. Retrieved January 5, 2014.
  25. ^ Shontell, Alyson (15 November 2014). "Uber Is Generating a Staggering Amount of Revenue". Business Insider. Retrieved 25 May 2015.

illegal, taxi, operation, illegal, taxicabs, sometimes, known, pirate, taxis, gypsy, cabs, jitney, cabs, taxicabs, other, hire, vehicles, that, duly, licensed, permitted, jurisdiction, which, they, operate, most, major, cities, worldwide, require, taxicabs, li. Illegal taxicabs sometimes known as pirate taxis gypsy cabs or jitney cabs are taxicabs and other for hire vehicles that are not duly licensed or permitted by the jurisdiction in which they operate Most major cities worldwide require taxicabs to be licensed safety inspected insured as for hire vehicles and to use taximeters and there may also be requirements that the taxi driver be registered or accredited However many unlicensed cabs are in operation Illegal cabs may be marked taxi vehicles sometimes referred to as speedy cabs and others are personal vehicles used by an individual to offer unauthorized taxi like services Illegal cabs are prevalent in cities with medallion systems which restrict the number of legal cabs in operation Since their introduction in 2009 vehicles affiliated with ridesharing companies have been classified as illegal taxicabs in some jurisdictions Contents 1 Terminology 2 Types and exceptions 3 Medallion systems 4 In working class neighborhoods 5 Amish taxis 6 Crowdsourced taxis 7 See also 8 ReferencesTerminology editA variety of terms are used in the industry to describe legal and illegal transportation providers Hacks or hackers is a common term that originated with the hackney horse a breed of horse typically offered for hire in the 19th century Other terms used are livery cab car service or jitney cab 1 2 3 4 5 6 The phrases vary by locality and often refer to different classes of licensed transportation providers In mainland China illegal cabs are referred to as black taxis or black cars 黑车 or alternatively blue plate cars 蓝牌车 referring to the colour of the licence plates for private vehicles rather than yellow for public service vehicles citation needed In Lagos Nigeria illegal cabs are usually referred to as kabu kabu 7 In Hong Kong illegal cabs are usually referred to as white card due to the different licence plate appearance between commercial and non commercial vehicles citation needed In Malaysia illegal taxicabs are called prebet sapu sweep privates 8 In the Philippines illegal taxis operating as Public Utility Vehicles PUVs without proper franchise are called colorums In Madrid Spain illegal taxicabs meant for carrying drug addicts to the meeting point with drug dealers are called cundas singular cunda 9 In Argentina illegal taxicabs are called remises truchos false taxis 10 In Norway and Denmark an illegal cab is called pirattaxi pirate taxi 11 In Gabon they are called clandos 12 In the Netherlands they are called snorders the term derives from the Yiddish verb snorren to scrounge cadge 13 14 In Turkey an illegal taxicab is known as a korsan taksi Types and exceptions editUnlicensed cabs may be found cruising the residential streets of a city typically in the working class neighborhoods Sometimes drivers will also wait at a location where taxi service is in demand such as airport or train station arrival areas or shopping centers asking arriving passengers if they need a ride Unlicensed taxis often do not have meters so the fare is usually agreed to at the beginning of the ride The car itself is usually large similar in feel to a licensed taxi In New York City Baltimore Philadelphia and other cities non medallion car services also called livery cabs lawfully exist but are only supposed to respond to telephone dispatch They cannot legally pick up street hails or enter taxi stands at airports However outside of the core Manhattan business district livery cabs are ubiquitous and will respond to street hails Some areas also have sedan services which likewise respond to telephone dispatch There are also non taxicab based unlicensed transportation providers Examples include dollar vans plying city bus routes in New York City and van services that offer rides between major cities In some places providing a ride in a personal vehicle as a part of another job such as caregiving may be legal sometimes with regulation of certain factors such as insurance coverage Medallion systems editIn some large American cities and in Hong Kong a medallion system is used to license cabs The city issues a fixed number of medallions and only medallion taxis are allowed to pick up fares In general this leads to medallions becoming ever more expensive a New York City corporate medallion can sell for up to 1 million each 15 Medallions are transferable and while some cab drivers own their own medallion most must lease one on a daily or weekly basis from a fleet owner The medallion system has several effects upon the illegal transportation market By acting as a barrier to entry to the taxi market it has the consequence of creating a market for unlicensed cabs especially in areas that tend to be underserved by medallion cabs Taxi medallions tend to increase in value over time and their owners and lessees tend to be very eager to protect their exclusive rights for example by lobbying for stricter enforcement against unlicensed cabs In working class neighborhoods editIn America there is significant anecdotal evidence that unlicensed cabs are mostly found in working class neighborhoods of large cities 16 In Baltimore United States supermarkets in working class neighborhoods frequently have courtesy drivers who although not employed by the supermarket have shown identification to management and are allowed to wait in front of the store for fares Unlike licensed cab drivers these courtesy drivers will also help to carry groceries up to one s apartment 16 Hacking in Baltimore has grown grass roots style to a region wide phenomenon originating from Hack Clubs organizations usually operating in converted rowhouses where hacks made their cars available distributed business cards with a central number employed a dispatcher and hung around the rowhouse waiting in line for calls This practice continues today but hacking has evolved to the point where people nowadays just wag a finger toward the street and wait for anyone to stop This new way of getting around remains popular despite being potentially dangerous due to disillusionment with the city transit service and the fact that licensed cabs seldom stop for fares in the most dangerous parts of town There are plenty of willing drivers and competition can be fierce The fare is negotiated and paid upfront Police maintain this is illegal and sometimes enforce with 500 tickets and a trip to the courthouse In Pittsburgh jitneys are unlicensed cabs that specialize in areas underserved by traditional taxis and public transport particularly the historically Black Hill District This is the inspiration for August Wilson s play Jitney which is set at a Hill District car service office 17 In Chicago raiteros are drivers who take immigrant workers to distant farms and factories They sometimes function also as temp agency 18 Amish taxis editUnlicensed cabs are also found among the Amish of rural Pennsylvania An Amish taxi is typically an illegal taxicab operation run on an informal basis by an individual who is not specifically running a taxi service but who has been propositioned by an Amish person to transport them for shopping or business purposes citation needed Old Order Amish do not drive but will hire a van or taxi for trips for which they cannot use their traditional horse and buggy transportation 19 In most rural locations with a low density Amish population it would be impractical for an Amish person to hire a commercial taxi from a metropolitan area since the taxi would have to drive long distances just to pick up the Amish person It is therefore more convenient and less expensive to find an unlicensed non Amish neighbor willing to act as a taxi Normal individual automotive insurance is not intended to insure driving a vehicle for hire for business purposes A paratransit license from the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission PUC is required to operate an Amish taxi legally in Pennsylvania This applies to anyone who transports people for a fee The vehicle cannot hold more than 15 passengers and must display a PUC identification number on both sides of the vehicle 20 Crowdsourced taxis editMain article Ridesharing company nbsp A protest against Uber by taxicab drivers in BudapestCrowdsourced taxis are run by ridesharing companies 21 22 Since Uber s launch several other companies have emulated its business model a trend that has come to be referred to as Uberification 23 24 Many governments and taxi companies have protested against Uber alleging that its use of unlicensed crowd sourced drivers was unsafe and illegal Uber operates and functions as a taxi service company for the public by dispatching drivers to provide transportation services to passengers who pay Uber mileage based fees and surcharges through credit card information kept on file by Uber The taxi industry has pushed to have Uber treated the same as taxi companies who face public safety requirements under the law ranging from how old vehicles on the road can be to how much they can charge or how many passengers allowed per vehicle and how much insurance they must carry 25 See also editTaxicab regulation Share taxiReferences edit Dalzell Tom 2007 The new Partridge dictionary of slang and unconventional English Reprint ed Routledge p 943 ISBN 978 0415259378 Merriam Webster s pocket guide to English usage Springfield Mass Merriam Webster 1998 p 178 ISBN 0877795142 Garner Bryan A 2009 Garner s modern American usage 3rd ed New York Oxford University Press p 405 ISBN 978 0195382754 Wedeck H E 1973 Dictionary of gypsy life and lore with the assistance of Wade Baskin New York Philosophical Library ISBN 0806529857 Garner Bryan A 2011 A dictionary of modern legal usage 3rd ed New York Oxford University Press p 400 ISBN 978 0195384208 Bolaffi Guido 2002 Dictionary of race ethnicity and culture 1 publ Nachdr ed SAGE Publications p 291 ISBN 0761969004 Akoni Olasunkanmi August 17 2016 Lagos to enforce regulation on Kabu kabu others Vanguard Nigeria Vanguard Media Limited Retrieved 19 September 2022 Mohamad Fahd Rahmat 7 January 2011 Prebet sapu makin ligat in Malay Berita Harian Retrieved 23 January 2013 How cundas taxis of drugs work Telemadrid Advierten que cada vez hay mas remises truchos Diario El Sol Mendoza in European Spanish Retrieved 2020 09 05 Pirate taxis cruise streets Copenhagen Post 3 April 2007 Retrieved 23 September 2012 Gabun Improvisation Korruption Die Offiziellen Schwarzmarkt Taxis les taxis clandos de Libreville bientot tous en jaunes comme a New York Archiv Afrikanews 2009 2014 Nicoline van der Sijs Chronologisch woordenboek in Dutch Retrieved 2022 06 17 via Digitale Bibliotheek voor de Nederlandse Letteren DBNL Wat is een snorder Amsterdam nl in Dutch Retrieved 2022 06 17 Michael M Grynbaum October 20 2011 2 Taxi Medallions Sell for 1 Million Each The New York Times a b Feature A Baltimore Way of Life 2004 04 21 Mendelson Abby July 22 2015 For some neighborhoods jitney is the only way to travel Pittsburgh City Paper Retrieved 21 April 2021 Grabell Michael 2013 04 29 Taken for a Ride Temp Agencies and Raiteros in Immigrant Chicago ProPublica Retrieved 2023 10 01 Pa Officials Cracking Down on Unlicensed Amish Taxis Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission press release January 10 2005 Rusli Evelyn June 6 2014 Uber Dispatches trips The Wall Street Journal Retrieved November 7 2014 Goode Lauren June 17 2011 Worth It An App to Get a Cab The Wall Street Journal Apple Pay s Real Killer App The Uber ification of Local Services The Huffington Post December 2014 Retrieved January 5 2015 Uberification of the US Service Economy Schlaf Archived from the original on February 10 2016 Retrieved January 5 2014 Shontell Alyson 15 November 2014 Uber Is Generating a Staggering Amount of Revenue Business Insider Retrieved 25 May 2015 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Illegal taxi operation amp oldid 1215068681, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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