Professional Driver Magazine July 2021

Page 8

news

Industry anger as PHV cars are set to be hit by Heathrow’s £5 charge from October Mark Bursa Heathrow Airport is planning to introduce a new £5 drop-off charge for all vehicles – including taxis and private hire vehicles – from this October. The move – another blow to the beleaguered travel sector – will apply to any vehicles entering any of the terminals. The airport says the charge is designed to “improve air quality and reduce congestion”, though the airport’s management admits it is a way of clawing back some of the estimated £5 million a day that the airport has been losing during the Covid-19 pandemic. Indeed, the annual revenue from the charge could be as much as £100m, which could almost double the airport’s annual parking revenue, which amounted to £126m in 2018. Taxi associations have argued against the move. Dave Lawrie of the National Private Hire and Taxi Association said: “With the Covid situation, I think our industry should be exempt.” He said the charge would be passed

on to customers, putting up the cost of travel. The charge is in line with other airports, including Gatwick and Manchester. Gatwick introduced a £5 charge at both its terminals earlier this year. Manchester Airport introduced a charge in 2018 and has since increased its prices from £3 to £5 for five minutes, with ten minutes costing £6 and more than ten minutes a whopping £25. The Heathrow drop-off charge must

be paid online or over the phone, with ANPR cameras being used to enforce the charge and fines for those who do not comply. A free drop-off option will remain at long-term car parks, where passengers will have to take a free bus transfer to the terminal. There will be no exemptions for zero-emissions vehicles. Indeed, the only exemptions will be for Blue Badge holders and emergency vehicles. In a statement, the airport said: “We have always said that we would

Take Me moves into West Country with £1.8m acquisition of Plymouth’s Tower Cabs Ambitious taxi group Take Me has added another company to its growing portfolio, with the acquisition of Plymouth-based Tower Cabs. The £1.8 million deal has been funded by Take Me managing director David Hunter and fellow director John Gardner. It is not part of the ongoing funding agreement with MBH Corporation, which has bankrolled much of the Take Me expansion over the past few months. Tower Cabs was established in the 1980s by Peter Bresland (pictured right, with Take Me’s John Gardner), and currently has around 160 cars. Describing the deal as “an exciting new development in the Tower Cabs’ story”, Bresland said: “To enable us to move forward and face the

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challenges of the post-Covid world, we are joining forces with the Take Me group of companies.” In a letter to staff, Bresland continued: “The group offers driver incentives, including cheaper insurance and car replacement finance. This collaboration

consider introducing a form of road user charging and several other approaches to improve air quality and reduce congestion at Heathrow. This charge forms part of our updated Surface Access strategy and sustainable travel plans.” It continued: “We updated these plans after reviews were conducted of all airport projects in light of the collapse in passenger numbers experienced at Heathrow due to the impacts of the pandemic and the subsequent loss of £5million a day.” The airport had earlier proposed a £15 fee for drop-offs under its nowdefunct Heathrow Vehicle Access Charge (HVAC) plan, which included a Heathrow Ultra-Low Emissions Zone (HULEZ) from 2022. Heathrow said: “This move will not impact passenger pick-up, which should continue via the car parks, as picking up passengers is not permitted on the terminal forecourts. More details on the scheme, registering your vehicle, and making payments will be published in due course.”

will enable us to reach new heights and take Tower Cabs to a new level while reestablishing our position as the premier cab company in Plymouth. There will be lots of exciting developments in the next few months and we want you all to be part of the journey.” David Hunter said: “The company has more acquisitions in the pipeline to be announced in the near future, following the additions already this year to the group of ADT Taxis, Steve’s Taxis, VGT Taxis, Westside Taxis, Intercity Private Hire, and TC Cars.” He added: “It is exciting times at Take Me as we keep adding brilliant local businesses to our network fleet. Together we can bring our skills and infrastructure from being a national brand but build on the local expertise of these amazing, wellestablished taxi operators. It seems to be a great combination, and we are already working on adding to the network over the summer.”

JULY 2021


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Articles inside

iCabbi to offer operator stakes in new jointly-owned dispatch business

1min
page 9

Take Me moves into West Country with £1.8m acquisition of Plymouth’s Tower Cabs

1min
page 8

the insider Loitering within tent

6min
page 35

the negotiator: Eric’s minimum wage mystery

4min
page 34

the advisor Word of the week:CONTINUALITY

2min
page 33

the knowledge Dr Michael Galvin

4min
page 32

A shortage of drivers is causing a new crisis to thwart the taxi trade’s post-Covid-19 revival

8min
pages 28-29

Professional Driver Magazine Car of the Year Judging Days

1min
pages 24-25

Bolt launches in Newcastle as part of ten-city target for 2021

1min
page 18

Uber accelerates Local Cab service rollout with operators in four more UK cities

2min
page 18

UK pricing and specification revealed for S-Class PHEV and new Mercedes Maybach ahead of late 2021 deliveries

2min
page 16

Local authorities frustrated as Government removes legal backing for public transport face masks

3min
page 15

Wakefield taxi drivers protest against council rules that make them “third-class citizens”

3min
page 14

Gridserve plans to create nationwide new high-speed EV charging network

4min
page 11

Greater Manchester’s Clean Air Plan offers city’s taxi and PHV drivers a new £21.4m vehicle upgrade fund

3min
page 10

Bolt under pressure to fall in line with Supreme Court Uber ruling

2min
page 9

Industry anger as PHV cars are set to be hit by Heathrow’s £5 charge from October

2min
page 8

London taxi numbers fall to lowest level in 40 years

1min
page 6

Leading Insurers threaten Uber with CMA investigation over new document system

2min
page 6

Charming Chabé

6min
pages 1, 22-23

News Analysis

6min
pages 20-21
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