NEWLY PASSED FARE AND LEASE CAP RULES

Rules will increase the rate of fare, increase fleet lease caps to offset cost shifts, and increase DOV lease caps to better reflect costs of different industry segments.

On July 12, 2012 the New York City Taxi Limousine Commission approved a 17% increase in taxi fares, the first change since 2006. The Taxi and Limousine Commission voted six to two in favor of the fare hike plan with one abstention.

TLC Chairman David Yassky and Mayor Michael Bloomberg had publicly supported the proposal as a means to assist drivers recover from higher gasoline prices and cost of living expenses. The TLC estimates that the average take home pay for a New York cab driver is presently approximately $130 for a 12 hour shift. It will rise to over $150 as a result of the new fare increase.

Taxicab owners and drivers will be able to charge the new fares as of Tuesday, September 4, 2012, provided that they have recalibrated their taximeters and updated their door decals. Owners MUST make these changes no later than Sunday, September 30, 2012.


Rate of Fare


The average fare would increase 17%; the unit charge for each 1/5 mile traveled, or each 60 seconds in stopped or slow traffic would be increased by $0.10 from $0.40 to $0.50.


Set-aside for driver healthcare: to provide healthcare services (plan navigation and enrollment) and disability coverage, $0.06 from each trip will be deposited into a fund.


Fleet Lease Caps

Fleet lease caps are increased to offset shift of credit card processing costs to medallion owners, and an optional lease cap gas surcharge has been implemented where fleets choose to provide gas to drivers.

The TLC also eliminated a 5% charge that fleets had been permitted to deduct from each driver’s credit card sales at the end of each shift. The charge was designed to cover the costs for credit card processing and was made mandatory in 2008. Drivers will now pay a flat $10 fee every shift to cover card related costs.


DOV Lease Caps

Current medallion only lease caps are increased and a new “all-in” medallion-and-vehicle rate to better reflect current practices, and to put DOV agents on comparable footing to fleet operators has been created.

Driver income has declined 15% since the last fare increase


Inflation has (and will continue to) erode real driver earnings

Historically, taxi fares have very closely tracked the consumer price index. However, since the last fare increase in 2006, CPI has outpaced taxi fares.

 

Other transportation costs have risen

MTA fare is a key benchmark for taxi fares. Recent (and upcoming) MTA fare increases have outpaced taxi fares.

 

Taxi fares in comparison cities

(Calculated using typical NYC trip: 2.8 miles traveled and 4.77 minutes waiting time; weekday at 5:00pm)

 

Fleet profits

At the May 31 lease cap hearing, MTBOT presented estimates of fleet revenue and expenses per medallion.
Based on additional data available to it, TLC staff has also estimated fleet profits.



Fleet operation – competitive rate of return


Credit card processing

Proposed rules raise lease caps to change the way in which fleets/agents collect credit card processing fees.

Credit card processing



Optional fleet gas surcharge

Optional gas surcharge


Revised lease caps

Weekly lease caps — the weekly lease cap rate will be the most that a fleet can charge an individual driver over
any consecutive seven-day period. This will assure that drivers get the reduced rate for weekly leases and provide
a better enforcement mechanism for the agency.


DOV lease caps

 


Industry Notice #12-24

TLC LAUNCHES NEW, MORE USER FRIENDLY WEBSITE

Taxi/For-Hire Riders and TLC Licensees to Benefit from New Portal Approach

The New York City Taxi and Limousine Commission (TLC) is pleased to announce that its new website is live and ready to serve licensees throughout its regulated industries as well as the riding public.

The new, streamlined, and user friendly website takes a portal approach offering site visitors more direct access to sought after information by first identifying who they are (Driver, Base Owner, etc.) and then what they are there to accomplish (Renew my license, Learn more about TLC rules, Schedule an inspection, Check my license status, etc.).

The updated site also offers visitors a window into the TLC’s latest initiatives from pilot projects to Requests for Proposals such as the smartphone payment app project, to name a few.

Licensees can use the site to pay online for license renewal transactions or to check their licensing status. Base operators can schedule vehicle inspection appointments and confirm that their affiliated vehicles are driven by drivers in good standing.

(Industry Information link www.nyc.gov/html/tlc/html/industry/licenses_main.shtml).


As always, site visitors may also look forward to frequent updates to keep the content fresh and responsive to their needs.

NOTE: Those who visit the web site regularly should clear their cache to be assured the new pages will load. This is especially important for those who rely on the Current Licensees listings or access the website to submit appointment requests!