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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
30.10.2007
Are Taxi Meters That Bad? (Maybe!)

Today's Washington Post reports that cab drivers in D.C. may strike over the mayor's new plan to replace our odd, zone-based taxi-fare system with one based on meters (i.e., the set-up you see in every other city). Matt Yglesias wants to know why, specifically, D.C. drivers—nearly all of them independent contractors—are so worried about the change. Like this guy:

Wegen Tadesse said the 900 members of the Ethiopian Ethio-American United Cab Owner Association plan to strike. "It's not just about the meters now," he said. "There are no guarantees for any of our jobs. The big companies are going to take over the business."

It's a good question. I've got two guesses. One is that, right now, it's very hard for big cab companies to enter the D.C. taxi market in the absence of meters, since there's no easy way for a large company to monitor its drivers under the zone system and see how much they're making. That has partly helped independent cab drivers flourish. Scrap the zone system, and suddenly the big boys will start moving in.

Another possible rationale comes from this old Post piece: "The concern about meters might seem an overreaction. But many see meters as the ultimate regulatory tool, the first in a series of bureaucratic demands that would strip them of their autonomy. Like many small-business owners, the drivers prefer less government meddling. They wonder, what's next? Limited work hours or caps on taxi licenses?" Fair enough.

OK, a third, more cynical explanation is that some drivers think they can rip off tourists more easily under the current, confusing zone system. But I don't know if that's the main concern here, and anyway, it seems like it's just as easy to hornswaggle unsuspecting tourist under a meter-based regime—just take the long, roundabout way to any destination, no? Any other theories?

--Bradford Plumer

Posted: Tuesday, October 30, 2007 5:41 AM with 5 comment(s)

Comments

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scottminkoff said:

1.  My understanding is that the reason independent cab companies have been successful is that the taxi licensing system in the District awards lots of companies with a few licenses rather than a single company with many licenses (i.e. Barwood in Montgomery County).

2.  In talking to several cab drivers over the years, the zone system was seen as benefiting dishonest cab drivers and injuring honest cab drivers.  The impression that I got was that honest cab drivers should benefit from a meter system.  My suspicion is that those most actively opposed to the switch are those who think their incomes will decline under the meter system and the honest cab drivers are staying quiet.  The zone system is confusing to residents, but particularly confusing to tourists.  It seems to me that those residents who were confused by the zone system (and as a result easily cheated) are less likely to be cheated under a meter system.  The meter system may be a net loss for dishonest cab drivers.  

October 30, 2007 1:02 AM

willpastor said:

My only exposure to a zone based system was in Cold Spring Harbor, on Long Island. There was a very good rationale there. Cabies wouldn't just drive around picking up random people and dropping them off, the area wasn't densely populated enough for that, they would wait in stations until they got a call. If a cabbie had to drive three towns over to pick you up and drive you a few minutes, it wouldn't be fair or economically prudent for them to charge you for the few minutes they actually drove you.

Either that or the cabbie was lying to me. I had a fever and needed to get to a pharmacy, so I was no position to argue.

That said, it would certainly seem to me that DC is pretty densely populated, so a zone based system has no real justification on those grounds.

October 30, 2007 1:23 AM

dbhuff said:

I lived in NY for 5 years with meters, and if you were local or tourist, the route would magically be different almost every time!  And that market with its medallion system has been way over regulated.  

With zones, you can fairly easily determine if you are being ripped off, although you have to make the effort.  Happened once on a trip from the zoo to national, but the argument is simple if you want to make it.  

October 30, 2007 8:09 AM

ratnerstar said:

I beg to differ on it being easy to figure out if you're being ripped off.  Admittedly, I don't take cabs much, but the whole system confuses the hell out of me (and I grew up in DC).  And it's not just a question of dishonest cabbies: cross the wrong street when you hail the cab (or get dropped off) and suddenly you're in another zone.  It doesn't make a damn bit of sense.

It's much easier to tell if you're being cheated with a meter.  You have to know the city, sure.  But that's better than now, when you have to know both the city and the insane zone system.

October 30, 2007 9:25 AM

stgla said:

I stand to lose when they change over.  I can commute from home to work in one cab zone as long as I walk two blocks and cross the boundary first.  It's probably the longest single-zone trip you can make in DC.  I'll miss that.

As for the drivers, I think explanation #1 is the correct one.  The independents are going to get crowded out by big companies.  

One positive change for DC will be that it will get much more reliable to call a cab.  I can never get a dispatched cab to show up on time.

I just hope they'll revise the rules about cab-sharing.  The current rules are very anti-environmental.

October 30, 2007 4:40 PM