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July
2008
IT
COULD BE SHOCKING
By the
time this edition of Taxi Talk is released, the VTA will have
responded to the draft report of the Essential Services Commission
(ESC) into taxi fares for the next three to five years.
The VTA
response will have expert input from Professor Clarke and
Dr Shannon of the La Trobe University School of Economics,
as well as from taxi operators who provided the VTA with operating
cost information. The VTA project manager for this matter
is David Samuel, and he would welcome comments from taxi operators
and drivers.
Apart
from the level and structure of fares, the ESC terms of reference
required them to report on a range of issues including licence
assignment fees, driver bailment, the MPTP, and WAT services.
Three
draft recommendations made by the ESC to address the perceived
deficiency in MPTP and WAT services were to increase several
fold the annual cap on MPTP usage, increase the trip cap subsidy
to $50, and issue 330 WAT licences in Melbourne to bring the
proportion of WATs up to 15 percent of the fleet.
Other
draft recommendations were to reduce the flag fall and increase
the booking fee, and to apply the 20 percent late night loading
across the whole State and remove fixed surcharges. Both these
recommendations will (if adopted) have a significant negative
impact on drivers and operators who service taxi ranks and
operate in country towns.
But enough
on the ESC draft report for now as most readers will be more
interested in the final outcome rather than the path taken
towards it, noting though that the ESC has indicated that
there probably shouldn’t be a fare increase in September
this year.
Whilst
not related to the current fare review, but a matter that
will most certainly have an impact on taxi operating costs
and hence fares going forward, is the hot topic of the proposed
Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS).
When ETS
is introduced (planned by 2010), it will add to the price
of most things. How much will depend upon what price is set
for carbon and whether or not energy is included in the scheme.
It has been suggested to the VTA that fuel prices alone could
increase by 10 percent or even more.
Whatever
change ETS brings, one thing is for certain – the very
nature and structure of Australia’s economy and industry
will be changed forever. This change could be so extreme that
there will probably be years of restructuring and readjustment
and through this period Australia’s economy could well
go into recession.
You might
be thinking; then why introduce ETS if it’s going to
be so shocking.
The answer
given is simply that CO2 emissions are making our planet sick
and the sicker it gets the worse it will be for future generations.
Then there is the other answer; that is, we need to design
and build for the future when fossil fuels run out.
Whether
you or I understand it or not or whether we agree or not,
the fact is that a new era of economic and industrial change
is about to engulf us, and there is no escape.
Neil Sach
VTA CEO
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