[NYTr] "We Salue NYC Taxi Drivers" - Workers World Edit'l

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Thu Sep 6 13:28:28 EDT 2007


Workers World - Sep 5, 2007
http://www.workers.org/2007/editorials/taxi-0913

EDITORIAL

We salute NYC taxi drivers

To the general public, taxi users and organized labor:

Workers World Party and newspaper hail the heroic effort made by tens
of thousands of New York City taxicab drivers who went on strike Sept.
5 to keep from being forced by the Taxi and Limousine Commission to
accept global positioning systems and touch-screen monitors for credit
card payments in the cabs they drive.

The New York City Taxi Workers Alliance, which represents more than
10,000 of the city’s 44,000 licensed drivers, says the GPS amounts to
spy-ware, since the TLC can use it to track every trip the cabbies make.

Bhairavi Desai, executive director of the NYCTWA, says her members
describe GPS as robbing cabbies of their privacy. One driver compared
it to the ankle bracelets used in house arrest. They also oppose the
credit-card system because, they say, paying fees for card processing
would deprive them of hard-earned cash. She characterized the strike as
“a resounding success” and said the majority of drivers stayed home.

The drivers work for franchise owners who own medallions--a metal plate
issued by the city that shows the taxi is licensed. These medallions
are selling for as high as $600,000 apiece.

The Taxi and Limousine Commission, billionaire Mayor Michael Bloomberg,
franchise owners, and the Wall Street banks and brokers that profit
from financing the purchase of taxi medallions are all determined to
have the new system installed beginning Oct. 1.

The cost of the GPS will be added to the exorbitant fees franchise
owners charge the drivers, who must also pay for gas and maintenance.
It all adds up to hundreds of dollars out of their pockets each day
before they even pick up their first fare. The drivers work long hours
in health-threatening conditions for poverty-level wages and no
benefits.

The NYCTWA has been fighting the law that defines the drivers as
independent contractors. They are workers, like those in transportation
and every other service industry, and deserve the right of collective
bargaining to negotiate decent contracts with health care, pensions and
other benefits.

The NYCTWA voted for a two-day strike, but the struggle is part of an
ongoing campaign that the labor movement, community organizations and
other groups must continue to support. The majority of the drivers are
immigrants from many different lands. When they win economic and social
justice, all workers, organized and unorganized, will win. An injury to
one is an injury to all. 


Articles copyright 1995-2007 Workers World. Verbatim copying and
distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without
royalty provided this notice is preserved.

Workers World, 55 W. 17 St., NY, NY 10011
Email: ww at workers.org
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