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Cuomo Still Not Sure About NYC Livery Cab Bill, Which Would Generate $1 Billion In Revenue

201101_liverybig.jpg
(via Rachel Pincus' flickr)

Mayor Bloomberg's proposed plan to legalize livery cab hails in the outer-boroughs is being held up by Governor Cuomo, who feels there are still some unresolved questions (like how many livery and taxi cabs are handicap-accessible, how many get to go to the airport). Cuomo's sudden indecisiveness is curious to the Daily News, given that he did, after all, steamroll tax reform.

The News editorial says Cuomo has to sign the bill:

The bill targets a ridiculous status quo in which yellow cabs exercise a monopoly on picking up passengers in the street. They stay in Manhattan and often refuse to go to the boroughs.

The result is that livery drivers accept street hails an estimated 10,000 times a day — disrespecting the law because it plainly does not work.

The fix on the table, as pushed by Mayor Bloomberg, calls for giving livery cars special permits that would allow them to pick up passengers in the street — but only in northern Manhattan, the Bronx, Queens, Brooklyn and Staten Island.

Another part of the deal would auction yellow cab medallions to address the shortage of available taxis citywide — and raise an estimated $1 billion for a city that could sorely use the extra cash.

The News even says that Bloomberg's responses to objections have been reasonable (!!) and News columnist Juan Gonzalez also points out, "Street hails are strongly opposed by the powerful yellow cab industry, and one of its big players, Medallion Financial, happens to count Mario Cuomo, the governor’s father, as a director." (Cuomo's people deny that his father has anything to do with his stance.)

Some of the problems are rumored to be stemming from personal conflicts between Cuomo and Bloomberg, who had different opinions of tax reform. A source for the city tells the Post that negotiations are in the "sixth inning" while a Cuomo source claims they are in the "fifth inning." Cuomo has until December 21 to vote on the bill or veto it; if he does nothing, the bill automatically passes into law.

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Comments [rss]

  • Guest

    What a joke. In Brooklyn we have had street pickups by livery cars for twenty years or more. NYPD, &TLC enforcement hardly ever bother these guys so why not just pass the law already?

  • matteus

    How does this bill affect me as a passenger living in Brooklyn? I hail "livery" cabs all the time. I can only imagine it will make it easier to find cabs... pass it already. Enough of this cronyism

  • Trustafarian

    it really pisses me off that the yellow taxi commission is so opposed to it.  yellow taxis don't want to have anything to do with picking up street hails in outer boros!!  as soon as they drop their fare off they turn on their off duty light and head back to manhattan asap, maybe stopping for a passenger also going over the bridge. 

  • SFNY

    Oh, so NOW they're going to suddenly be concerned about accessibility.  Not when selecting the Taxi of Tomorrow that's a big FU to the mobility impaired, only when it might eat into their own profits.  Gee, what a surprise.

  • They should also consider a way to get these guys to not drive like complete assholes.

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