NYC cracks down on cabbies' violations
The city has begun cracking down on rogue cabbies, increasingly suspending or revoking the hack licenses of those with multiple driving infractions, amNewYork has learned.
Within the past six months, the Taxi & Limousine Commission switched to an automated system to monitor the cabbies' moving violations, allowing the agency to better track offending drivers. So far this year, a whopping 1,132 of the city's 48,600 taxi drivers had their licenses suspended or revoked, compared with 32 in 2009.
"There were plenty of holes in the system," said TLC Commissioner David Yassky, referring to how the agency had to comb through the infractions by hand. "We're more capable than we were a year ago."
For some cab riders it's a welcome change late in coming.
"There should be some sort of quality control," said Simon Horwith, 35, of Park Slope. The TLC's "purpose is to regulate drivers and maintain safety."
However, advocates for the drivers argue that police may be too trigger-happy with ticketing. David Pollack, editor of a taxi industry publication, said cabbies have been punished for minor offenses.
"Enforcement is a good thing," Pollack said. "But over-enforcement can break one's spirit."
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