Taxi fare increase backed

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Friday, 27 May 2022 19:38

By Christian Barnett - Local Democracy Reporter

A five per cent rise in taxi fares in Malvern Hills has been backed by councillors.

The increase will see basic fares for hackney cabs across the Malvern Hills district rise from £4 to £4.20 for a one-mile trip with two-mile journeys costing £6.72, a five-mile trip rising to £14.28 and a ten-mile journey will now cost £26.88.

Late-night and Bank Holiday journeys will also increase by five per cent.

It is the first time taxi fares have risen in Malvern Hills since 2014.

Fares could have risen by more than 22 per cent across the board under the proposals put forward by the district’s cab drivers.

Alistair Smith from Smiths Taxis, who has made the request on behalf of the district’s hackney carriage drivers, said the cost of a two-mile trip would need to rise to £8 just to match the rise in inflation over the last eight years.

Mr Smith added that fuel prices had risen by 35 per cent since the last request in 2019 and that the living wage had risen by 50 per cent during the same period while taxi earnings “remained static.”

“The net result, of course, is that drivers are leaving the trade, and those that are left concentrate on the most profitable times,” Mr Smith said in a letter to the council.

“Far from ensuring the financially vulnerable have access to taxis, the current tariff policy of MHDC is simply ensuring a lack of availability for all taxi users, a situation repeated nationwide.”

Three options were put to councillors in total including five per cent and 22 per cent blanket increases – with the smaller five per cent increase put forward by the council – as well as a third option which contained a mix of increases including a 22 per cent and 17 per cent rise in one and two-mile journeys and 13 per cent and 10 per cent increases for five and ten-mile trips.

Cllr Beverley Nielsen, portfolio holder for environmental services, said taxis were important for vulnerable people and those living in rural communities and a five per cent rise was “reasonable.”

Cllr Whatley said the five per cent rise was “justifiable” as the country was in “unusual times” at the meeting of Malvern Hills District Council’s executive committee on Tuesday (May 24).

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