Thanks to a taxi ride up to Stop & Shop in the Watchung Square Mall, I got to experience what car owners are dreading this winter - potholes and snow-clogged streets that make driving a nightmare due to fear of accidents and expensive repairs.
City streets were bad enough, but as the taxi crossed Route 22 to the mall entrance, cars slowed to avoid a big pothole, leaving the last ones trailing across the highway.
The ride home was hectic and hair-raising for even more reasons, as the driver detoured east to Terrill Road and attempted to pick up fares at Sears and Popeye's. Extreme honking produced no fares, however, and we were off - not to Park & Seventh, but around various streets to pick up more fares. The first was on Front Street, where two men emerged with huge laundry bags that they started to wedge in over our groceries. The driver had them reload the bags into the front seat, with one guy alongside and the other in the back of the van.
Another stop, more honking, and out came a couple who jammed in. The driver had meanwhile turned down a woman, with a baby and a toddler, who tried to hail the taxi from the street. He told her to call the dispatcher, but she said she had no telephone.
All this took a lot longer than we expected, but finally we got home and the helpful driver managed to drop one bag into an icy puddle in the driveway.
"It's only water," he said, handing over the dripping bag.
The whole thing reminded me of how taxi regulations are honored in the breach in Plainfield. Drivers are supposed to ask passengers whether they mind having additional fares, for one thing. I have had the experience of catching a taxi in time for an appointment straight down Park Avenue, only to have someone else get in and then finding myself sitting in the parking lot of a totally unfamiliar mall in another town. The extra passenger hopped out and then the driver realized he had a flat tire. A Good Samaritan helped him out, as he didn't have the right equipment to change a tire. I finally arrived at my destination, more than a bit flustered.
It seems all the taxis charge a flat $4 fare to go anywhere in Plainfield, even though the rate card lists senior discounts and differentials depending on the distance within the city. But perhaps because the taxis largely serve a low-income population that depends on them, few patrons bother with sticking up for the rules.
From the Municipal Code:
الأحد، 16 فبراير 2014
On Taxis and Winter Traveling
Sec. 9:15-45. Carrying passengers by direct route.
A driver shall carry a passenger to his or her destination by the most direct and expeditious route available unless otherwise directed by the passenger.
(MC 1988-6A, §1, April 25, 1988.)
See. 9:15-54. Additional passengers.
(a) Unless the person first employing the taxicab shall consent, no additional passengers shall be picked up or permitted to ride in a taxicab on the same trip.
(MC 1988-6A, §1, April 25,1988.)
I wrote about taxi rules way back in 2008 after I gave up my car (see post here). Interesting that nothing much has changed since then.
--Bernice




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