Harman Patil (Editor)

New York City Taxi and Limousine Commission

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Jurisdiction
  
New York City

Annual budget
  
$68.8 million (2016)

Formed
  
March 2, 1971 (1971-03-02)

Headquarters
  
33 Beaver Street, New York, NY

Commission executive
  
Meera Joshi, chairwoman and chief executive officer

Key documents
  
New York City Charter Local Law 12 of 1971

The New York City Taxi and Limousine Commission (TLC or NYC TLC) is an agency of the New York City government that regulates the medallion taxis and for-hire vehicle industries, including app-based companies. This includes medallion (yellow) taxicabs, green or Boro taxicabs, black cars (including both traditional and app-based services), community-based livery cars, commuter vans, paratransit vehicles (ambulettes), and some luxury limousines.

Contents

Structure

The chair of the TLC, Meera Joshi, presides over the agency's board of nine commissioners during regularly scheduled public Commission meetings. Eight of the commissioners are unsalaried and appointed by the Mayor, with the advice and consent of the City Council. Five of the commissioners – one seat for each borough—are recommended for appointment by a majority vote of the councilmembers within each borough. Commissioners serve a seven-year term. The agency's regulations are compiled in title 35 of the New York City Rules.

The TLC chair, who is salaried, also heads the agency, which has a staff of about 600 employees assigned to various divisions and bureaus, i.e., Uniformed Services, Licensing, Legal, Policy, Public Affairs, Safety & Emissions, among others. The Uniformed Services Bureau has more than 200 inspectors.

Operations

The TLC establishes the larger public transportation policy that governs for-hire transportation services in New York City. The agency's powers include issuing and regulating licenses, setting and enforcing rates of fare, limiting taxi lease rates, and overseeing the sale of medallions.

The TLC licenses about 146,000 unique drivers, with some drivers working in multiple industry sectors.

The Uniformed Services Bureau includes the Vision Zero squad, which focuses on safety-related enforcement like moving violations, which include failing to yield to pedestrians and cell phone usage while driving. Mayor Bill de Blasio's Vision Zero Action Plan is the City's initiative to end traffic fatalities, and the TLC is one of the agencies involved, along with the NYC Department of Transportation and the NYPD. The TLC is testing new vehicle safety technologies in licensed vehicles as part of a safety pilot, which began in 2015, according to the agency's website. Technologies include electronic data recorders, speed governors, and driver-alert systems. The pilot looks at how safety technologies affect driving behaviors, collision rates, the experience of drivers and passengers, and the expenses of drivers.

The city's goal is to have the Medallion Taxicab fleet reach 50% wheelchair-accessibility by 2020. The number of wheelchair-accessible taxis in New York City has tripled from 238 in 2013 to 850 taxicabs on the road in 2016. Almost 300 new wheelchair-accessible medallion taxicabs went into service in the first six months of 2016, according to TLC data.

Since September 2015, taxicab medallion owners may purchase the Taxi of Tomorrow (a Nissan NV200 Taxi), a TLC-approved wheelchair-accessible vehicle, or a hybrid vehicle. The first Taxi of Tomorrow began providing service in October 2013. Its features include a large cabin, a passenger charging stations and reading lights, independent passenger climate control, yellow seatbelt straps, grab handles to assist stepping in and out, a clear panoramic roof, and sliding doors to prevent injuries from dooring. The NV200 taxicab is the first taxi vehicle to be equipped with Hearing Loop technology.

Controversies and criticisms

TLC inspectors may seize vehicles suspected of operating as an illegal cab, and DNAinfo reported in 2014 that the city Office of Administrative Trials and Hearings' Taxi and Limousine Tribunal dismissed 1442 of the 7187 accusations over 1.5 years. The TLC said in a statement that "while the vast majority of cases—more than 80%—are prosecuted as written, the fact that there are a certain number of cases that are dismissed means that the system works for everyone." Owners can't retrieve their impounded cars unless they plead guilty and pay a fine, or until their hearing before a city administrative judge.

In April 2015, the TLC posted a notice in the City Record proposing the "Licensing of For-Hire Vehicle Dispatch Applications", requiring mobile app operators to apply for approval of certain changes to any app used to arrange vehicle rides for hire, widely considered to be targeted at ridesharing company Uber, causing a controversy.

History

Mayor John Lindsay created the TLC in 1971 to regulate the taxi and for-hire vehicle industries. Before the creation of the agency, the NYPD's "Hack Bureau" regulated the taxicab industry, starting in 1925.

References

New York City Taxi and Limousine Commission Wikipedia