RMT says "use Taxis to create a fifth emergency service"

RMT calls on government to mobilise Taxis as a fifth emergency service for isolated families

Taxi drivers’ union RMT is calling on the government to use Taxis to create a fifth emergency service during the Coronavirus crisis, to mitigate the isolation of families facing increasing levels of lockdown.

As the government closes schools and imposes more restrictions on movement to control the spread of the virus, families are facing increasing isolation.
Older and vulnerable people are struggling to travel to shops, while pharmacies face difficulties in delivering the volume of prescriptions needed.

Official advice is urging people not to use public transport.

There is an urgent need for a trusted, high quality ‘drop off’ service able to connect people from their front doors to shops, pharmacies and other critical services.
RMT is calling on the government to use the Licenced Taxi trade to create a vital lifeline between isolated people and services during the coronavirus crisis by creating an emergency public service staffed by Licenced Taxi drivers paid a temporary government salary.

This measure would throw a vital economic lifeline to more than 75,000 self-employed taxi drivers who are facing the collapse of their trade.

The measure would also echo the kind of mobilization of taxis that took place during the Blitz, with many vehicles and drivers drafted into the Auxiliary Fire Service.
RMT General Secretary Mick Cash said:

“This is a win-win idea for the government. At this time of crisis, we have increasingly isolated communities and families needing door-to-door contact with shops and critical services, being advised not to use public transport, and we have more than 75,000 highly skilled, trusted Licenced taxi drivers who need a lifeline to survive.

“This is a time for government to show imagination and resolve and match a highly skilled resource to an increasingly desperate need”.

> RMT National News

Thursday, 24th July
RMT has today backed the call from the London Assembly Transport Committee for Transport for London (TfL) to publish the review which led to the removal of blue light status from Emergency Response Unit (ERU) vehicles, and is calling for the reinstatement of this vital emergency capability.
Friday, 18th July
London to Essex train company c2c will come into public hands on Sunday but outsourced cleaners, will remain with a private contractor, RMT has said.
Thursday, 17th July
RMT has written to Metro Mayor Steve Rotheram calling for Merseyrail to be taken into public ownership, citing excessive profiteering by private operators and the overwhelming role of public investment in the service’s success.
Friday, 11th July
A new RMT survey of Tyne and Wear Metro cleaners has laid bare the devastating impact of outsourcing, with the vast majority of staff reporting poverty pay, lack of sick pay, and rising workloads under private contractor Churchill.
Monday, 7th July
On the 20th anniversary today of 7/7 London Bombings on July 7, 2005 Tube union RMT remembers those who were killed and injured in the attack.