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Taxi Stories
 

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Vacation Is Over

The heat wave is breaking and the world will soon be back at work...At least those of us who keep the peddle to the metal in New York City Taxicabs.... It has been many years since I sat on the seat of a taxicab, plying the trade of NYC Yellow Transporter. Why so Long??? Well a funny thing happened on Thanksgiving Eve 1992.

As I prepared to drive my taxi the phone rang......A part time job offer through the Taxi And Allied Workers Union, to help political refugees train to pass the New York City Taxi Operator Exam, which soon became a full time job. After a few years of being in the right place at the right time the work evolved into the The Master Cabbie Taxi Academy. The first and only privately held taxi driver training center in New York City..

Today The Academy is located at 24-29 Jackson Ave. in Queens County. In between the entrance of the Queensboro Bridge and the Queens Mid Town Manhattan Tunnel. We provide training and tutoring services to a few thousand people each year.

Our Academy is an unusual universe of personalities. Most coming from across the globe to The Big Apple in search of discretionary income. Hoping for a way of life that will support the dream of a future.....With the proverbial hat in hand asking for help to obtain the coveted NYC Hack License which will allow them to operate the iconic New York City Yellow Cab, it is a small thing to ask for, but a big thing to receive. A small piece of plastic with your picture on it offering a gateway to America for many, salvation in times of financial need to others, or a way to grind out a responsible living for those who invest and build taxi companies. Many of whom will become Master Cabbies.

Which one are you?

 

Dailey Newsie Busted Texting @ Ground Zero

 

There she was. Stopped at the light reading the messages on her Blackberry when Marie McGovern noticed a Motorcycle cop looking at her. To her credit she did not start screaming and saying how she had a sick child in the trunk on her way to the hospital.   She just followed police instructions pulled over right at Ground Zero and accepted her $130 summons.

According to the Daily News, New York City issues 530 cell phone tickets per day....Do the math and all of a sudden financial solvency becomes a possibility through good police work.

Hands free is still OK. Unless you are licensed by the New York City Taxi & Limousine Commission. That's right. NY City Yellow Cabs must be legally parked for the driver to engage in cell phone activity..... like talking. So Cabby's, if your lips are moving and there is no passenger in the back seat, you can expect to pay $130 to Mr. Bloombergs Finance Dept. And of course lets not forget that the TLC can also levy a taxi specific fine, but you would have to be given a TLC summons for this. Who issues the TLC summons? NYPD. Twofers?

A member of the NY City Taxi Commission, The late Marvin Greenberg, once responded to a rep from AT&T who was making the pitch for cell phone use as a good thing. In his wisdom Mr. Greenberg, an orighinal member of the New York City Taxi & Limousine Commission made a statement similar to the following  "Son, you remind me of the tobacco execs who claimed that they did not believe cigarettes cause cancer. I vote no"

At that point he and the entire NY City Taxi Commission voted to ban cell phone use by taxi drivers unless the cab was legally parked.....It should be noted that this was done more than ten years ago. Well ahead of the curve.

So, unplug New York City, the call can wait.

 

Cell Phones, Taxicab’s and NY City Taxi Drivers

By: The Cabby Prince

 

All alone in the City, it’s late at night, in fact the wee lonely hours between midnight and dawn. As times slides by less and less traffic and more and more distance between the driver and the last passenger. Who knows how long before the next fare.

 

I NEED SOMEONE TO TALK TO.  Flip, press and connect. The conversation begins to a girlfriend or boyfriend in the outer boroughs or a relative in a distant country or a fellow cabby hoping to set a meet for a coffee…..but for now, I am not alone and I need to talk to someone.

 

We have recently seen the worst of cell phones and automobiles as a young boy’s life was cut short in Harlem when a car, driven by a man on his cell phone, ran the boy down. The cars driver has been accused of talking on his cell phone at the time of the accident and also accused of attempting to leave the scene…

 

So who might he have been talking to? What could be more important than watching where he was going?

 

Why is it we, the people talk so much on these 21st century devices. What are we missing in our lives that, has us on the phone so much of the time….Before cell phones what did we do?? I remember public pay-phones. I liked them much more than cell phones.

 

A cell phone might be the equivalent of the 24 hour news channels that play the same news over and over again and present it as if it is new. We listen but do not hear the banter between the hosts who are experts at being unobtrusive, and well dressed, reading copy as if it is the Word.

 

I do not know the exact number but I am sure that cell phone related fatalities is documented someplace. As well, the number of injuries connected to cell phone abuse while operating a motor vehicle, all of which will lead to teary eyed defendants waling before judges of “HOW SORRY THEY ARE….And of course “It will never happen again you honor”.

 

But what of the eight year old boy in Harlem? Who weeps for him? The defendant? For a while there fates are entwined…. and then the cell phone will ring again. He will listen, ponder and then tell his conscience he has to take the call.

The Legend of the Cabbie Prince.

T. Butler Gelber © All rights reserved 1/11/06

A shiny yellow checker cab slowly rolled to the curb and stopped.  The passenger handed the driver a twenty and a ten and asked �??Let me have five back�?� With only nineteen dollars on the meter the driver was pleased but, did not over-thank his customer.

Although the passenger had been in the taxi for almost twenty minutes, he did not get a glimpse of the drivers face. His license was not in the frame as it should be. The passenger was not worried. He could see he was a tall man, probably thin. He wore a denim jacket and what he believed were glasses with a cord that fit behind his large ears.

What he found most unusual was the cab. It was an old checker car. The back seat was big enough for an off Broadway play, with two jump seats. The straps were in place at both doors for the passengers to hoist themselves in and out of the car. There were bright white doilies on the head rests, and the cab was very clean. Not just clean, but almost new. �??How unusual the man thought�??. He hadn�??t seen a checker cab for many years.

The passenger, a man in his mid, to late thirties exited the cab, and walked into the vestibule of his building. The driver saw the man fumble with his key ring, and move toward the mail boxes.

Content to have delivered the passenger, the driver eased off the break. The cab began to roll. Turning his attention toward the road in front of him, from the corner of his eye the driver noticed a shadow on the wall of the dimly lit vestibule. He didn�??t think much of it other than to notice it. He assumed it was the passenger moving from the mail box to the inner door. The cab driver felt unchallenged as he began planning his trip back to Manhattan.

The flash in his minds eye was less than a full thought, but more than a passing dream. He realized that the shadow could not have been the passenger because it moved toward the back of the vestibule into the interior entrance. The passenger was half way to the back already, so the shadow would have been ahead of him not behind him.

In a world where legends and myths are needed to help explain coincidence, what took place will be forever hard to explain.

Stepping out of the taxi, the driver, dressed in denim and black thick heeled motor-cycle boots, took giant steps toward the building. As he had suspected, in the vestibule was a man, wearing a ski mask, pointing a gun at his former passenger, who was kneeling on the vestibule floor with hands raised.

The robber, yelling commands at the man on his knees, looked up at the sound of something tapping on the glass door. There, to his surprise was a man dressed in denim wearing a Zorro mask.

The robber felt his stomach turn sour, as his body produced even more adrenalin than the act of robbery. �??Was he now about to be robbed�??? He thought to himself. He pointed the gun at the window and fired, but the man in the Zorro mask disappeared before the glass shattered into a thousand pieces on the sidewalk. 

The robber slowly stepped toward the door, gun in hand. As he peered out into the street a silver Billy Club, coming toward him, was visible for a millisecond, and then he was unconscious. The passenger quickly got to his feet but not without cutting his hands on shattered glass. He looked out the window and saw nothing. Then a sound of an engine broke the silence and far off, down the street, he could see an old checker cab gleaming under the street lamp as it moved farther and farther away. 

Was it the same taxi that he had been in? He may never know. As he explained what happened to the police, the hardened law enforcement professionals listened quietly. They were sure the victim was a crazy man, or a wise guy, but there was an unconscious masked man on the ground with a broken nose, gun still in hand. 

When the robber regained consciousness he was asked what happened. As he wiped blood from his chin all he could say was �??A guy in a mask, a guy in a mask�?�. A haggard police detective asked �??What kinda mask jerk-off? Halloween? Ski mask? Or was it Zorro?�?�  The robber looked at the cop in astonishment�?? That�??s it. It was a Zorro mask�?� The old detective gave a belly laugh and walked away. 

As he walked through the doorway of the vestibule he saw something on the ground. It was a business card.  It had one name in bold print. �??Cabbie Prince�?�. Under the name was a logo of sorts. �??My blood runs yellow�?�. 

�??What is it asked a patrolman?�?� �?? �??Nothing�?� the detective replied. Pointing to the robber he said �??Take this guy in�?�.

 


 

 
 
     
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