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Venue: Council Chamber, Guildhall
Contact: Democratic Services Committee Manager
No. | Item |
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Apologies Minutes: Apologies were received from Councillors
Dryden, Flaubert and McQueen. |
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Declarations of Interest Minutes: No declarations of interest were made. |
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Minutes: The minutes of the meeting held on 31 January 2022 were approved as a
correct record and signed by the Chair. |
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Public Questions Minutes: Members of the public asked a number of questions, as set out below. 1.
Kamil
Winek raised the following issues:
i.
The Council required taxis to become electric vehicles before
infrastructure was in place to facilitate these.
ii.
Issues drivers faced: a.
Licensing fees had increased in the last few years. b.
Increasing operating costs. c.
Unstable customer demand.
iii.
The Licensing Committee were responsible for regulating the taxi trade.
Fit and proper regulations were needed so it could be a sustainable and
accessible service.
iv.
Please be mindful of taxi business running costs. Requiring CCTV
implementation could impact on these and lead to drivers’ hourly rate dropping
below minimum wage levels. The Environmental Health Manager responded: i.
She was speaking to the taxi trade
about issues raised this week. ii.
She was also liaising with
Councillors. iii.
Issues were being picked up. iv.
As a business, it was the taxi
trades’ responsibility to manage running costs. 2.
Afzal
Aslam raised the following issues:
i.
Expressed concerns about privacy in
taxi vehicles if CCTV was installed. CCTV would operate even if a vehicle were
not being used as a taxi ie for social and domestic reasons. This conflicted
with GDPR and Human Rights Acts.
ii.
Referred to Warrington Council
system where taxi CCTV was turned on when the meter was running, but off when
not.
iii.
Suggested Cambridge City Council
subsidised the installation of CCTV in taxis and delayed its installation for
two years. The Environmental Health Manager responded: i.
Once a vehicle is licensed as a
Hackney Carriage or Private Hire vehicle, the licence applies 24/7. Even is a
licensed vehicle is being used for social and domestic purposes, it is still a
licensed vehicle. ii.
CCTV should stay on for the safety
of the driver and passengers. iii.
Not all vehicles have meters to
link a camera to. iv.
Whatever measures are introduced,
they will comply with GDPR and Human Rights Legislation. Afzal Aslam reiterated:
Please look at the Warrington Council model so taxis can be used for social and
domestic purposes. The Environmental
Health Manager responded: i.
Reiterated that once a vehicle is
licensed as a taxi, it remains a taxi, ie a licensed vehicle/premises. ii.
Undertook to review practice from
other councils. |
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CCTV in Hackney Carriage and Private Hire Vehicles PDF 163 KB Minutes: The Committee received a report from the Environmental Health
Manager. Under the powers conferred to Cambridge City Council under
the Town Police Clauses Act 1847 and the Local Government (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 1976, (as amended), Cambridge City Council has responsibility
for licensing Hackney Carriage, Private Hire and Dual Licence Drivers as well
as vehicle proprietors and Private Hire Operators within the City. The mandatory installation of CCTV within Hackney Carriage
and Private Hire vehicles was agreed by Members in October 2017. Members of the Licensing Committee in September 2020 agreed
an implementation date of 1st April 2022 whereby all taxi and private hire
vehicles will have had CCTV installed. Due to delays in the identification of an approved supplier
and the Covid 19 pandemic, the 1st April 2022 implementation will not be met,
and further consideration is required following the statutory guidance for
Hackney Carriage and Private Hire Services. The Committee made the following comments in response to the report:
i.
Could points raised by the public speakers at
today’s committee be looked at and officially addressed as part of the review?
Noted they were responded to verbally today. In response to public speaker and Members’ questions the
Environmental Health Manager said the following:
i.
Drivers would not be required to install CCTV until
the review was complete.
ii.
South Cambs District Council had not deferred CCTV
work until 2023. They were undertaking procurement now. The City Council and
SCDC would undertake joint work. There was no implementation date set in the
report as the review needed to be completed first. Details on what is
feasible/legal would be reviewed then a recommendation proposed for
implementation. Councillor Bennett proposed an amendment to the
officer recommendation that Licensing
officers return to Licensing Committee in October This amendment was
unanimously accepted. The Committee: Resolved
(unanimously) to:
i.
Approve that Cambridge City Council conduct a
review of the requirement of CCTV in licenced vehicles to demonstrate: a.
necessary to meet a pressing need; b.
and proportionate need.
ii.
Approve that Cambridge City Council continue to work
with South Cambridgeshire District Council to identify appropriate supplier.
iii.
Approve that Licensing officers return to
Licensing Committee in October 2022 to present outcome of review and proposed
implementation dates, if pressing need and proportionate need is met. |