Andrew today signed EDM No. 142, supporting London's black cab drivers against the encroachment of their trade by Uber.
EDM 142 mirrors the sentiments expressed in EDMs 762 and 910, which Andrew signed during the 2010-15 Parliament.
The text of the EDM is as follows:
This House is concerned that smartphone apps such as Über are circumventing the law governing the taxi and minicab industry; supports the existing regulations whereby private hire vehicles (PHVs) may only pick up passengers when pre-booked rather than from a rank or in response to being hailed; recognises that such regulations provide passengers with important safety protections against unregulated drivers who have not undergone extensive criminal record and medical checks or had to pass a formal taxi driving assessment like licensed taxi drivers; welcomes Transport for London's (TfL) public opposition to any move to confuse the distinction between the two services; notes with concern, that in spite of this, TfL is failing to carry out its licensing and enforcement functions and is allowing PHVs to operate within the immediate hire market; believes that this is primarily due to the absence of a statutory definition of plying for hire; further believes that this will undermine public confidence in a safe and secure licensing regime and will ultimately undermine the viability of the current taxi service; further notes that the number of people applying to study The Knowledge, the geographical training for licensed taxi drivers, fell from 3,326 in 2012 when Über started operating in London, to 2,159 last year; and calls on the Government to bring forward urgent legislation which provides a clear statutory definition to protect the distinction between taxis and PHVs.
After signing the EDM, Andrew said:
"I'm pleased to have signed EDM 142 today. Since the arrival of Uber in London in 2012, the black cab trade has suffered so much. It is important we defend what is a fantastic institution, and a hallmark of our great city.
In addition to the ideas mentioned in EDM 142, I support the proposed move by TfL to reduce the number of new licenses being given to new PHV drivers, and the I look forward to the ruling expected from the High Court this summer on whether Uber's fair-calculation method constitutes a 'taximeter'.
In the meantime, I will continue to support the black cab trade, and I sympathise with everything black cab drivers are going through at the moment."