State police at Logan International Airport are tightening their enforcement of taxi regulations after a recent series of Boston Globe articles exposing several types of current violations.
At issue in the crackdown are cab drivers who take advantage of peak airport periods to carry multiple fares at flat rates to the downtown area. Massachusetts Port Authority regulations prohibit both multiple fare trips and the setting of flat rates without metering.
The cab drivers maintain that peak crowds at the airport necessitate multiple fares due to cab shortages and that charging a flat rate eases the burden on each customer.
Independent Taxi Association President Max Dobro yesterday defended the overflow practice and noted that "it's not done all the time."
A meeting between taxi companies and the Port Authority will take place sometime next week to discuss the issue, but it will not be the first time the question has come up.
"This is not a new problem," said Port Authority Director Edward J. King, "and it will take eternal vigilance by the Port Authority, the police and the taxi-using public to keep it under control."
Dobro took a more skeptical view of the problem. "You get some overzealous guy from the Globe and he doesn't know what the hell it's all about, anyway," he said.
Read more in News
AUSCHWITZ AND BUCHENW ALDRecommended Articles
-
Warm Welcome For Cheap ShuttleC ambridge has never been kind to the free market. From strict zoning laws to the aggressive efforts of Harvard
-
City Denies Permit to Logan ShuttleThe Cambridge Licensing Commission on Tuesday again denied a request by a Boston-based shuttle service to provide transportation between Cambridge
-
Boston Harbor: Facing an Uncertain Future While Nostalgic for Grandeur Long PastBostonians can point with pride to the fact that Boston as a port predated the United States as a nation
-
The CRR Empty EvidenceTWO hundred students rallied at Memorial Church on April 9 and then rushed toward the Center for International Affairs (CFIA).
-
What's Fare Is Fair?Students who opted for cabs back to the Square from the airport this weekend may have noticed an extra $4.25