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Philly Taxi Drivers Protest Use of GPS Tracking Plan
NPR has an audio listen on the taxi situation in Philly, where cab drivers are protesting a plan to place GPS (Global Positioning Systems) in their vehicles. The GPS devices would allow the cab dispatchers to know and pinpoint the exact location of a driver, but the driver's are saying this is a violation of their privacy. Hmm... Personally, I think it is a great plan. I don't catch cabs too often, but it peeves me to high heaven when I call one and wait decades for them to arrive. I start imagining all the stops or personal errands they decided to run in route to picking me up for my very important flight or meeting. (Violation of privacy - ha!) When you phone into the dispatchers it's as if they are in a whole different world from the drivers. They always say something like this: "Yes, he will be there in five minutes. He said he is nearby." Sometimes I just want to cough bull sh--, but I always keep my cool. Not to say all cab drivers taking the scenic route to get where they need to be or that they're not stuck in traffic, but it would do dispatchers a great deal of wonder to be able to say something more specific and a little less generic.
Hope a plan like this works out in Philly for the greater good of people who actually have to get to important places or meetings.
Filed under: Stories, North America, United States













Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
NightWolfVa Aug 20th 2006 5:39PM
Makes you wonder what they are doing on company time that makes them "protest" this new policy. I for one am for the GPS. I hope the companies use it to get rid of the slackers and hire people who will make them money.
Holly Aug 20th 2006 7:57PM
Very few taxi drivers work for a company; most are independent contractors who own their own cabs and pay a lease to the company for use of the dispatch service.
The newbies use a company vehicle and as such are technically company employees. Those who stick with it end up buying their own vehicles and go to the independent contractor status.
At least it's that way here....I dunno about Philly. Maybe they are all company slaves and as such are overbooked and in that case, blame the corporate greed factor, not the driver who actually has EVERY reason to hustle and get in as many long-distance calls as he can.
Taxi drivers are like bike messengers; slackers don't survive long. Every call is money in their pockets. The problems start when corporations take charge and siphon off as much as they can into their own pockets, leaving the dregs to the drivers.
Then the drivers quit caring.
Money is a big motivator:-)