New cab services begin at JWA
Paul Clinton
JOHN WAYNE AIRPORT -- Orange County airport managers yanked the rug
out from under a Costa Mesa cab company Wednesday, installing a
consortium of new cab operators.
John Wayne Airport Director Alan Murphy brought in the three new
companies, operating under an interim agreement as John Wayne Yellow Cab
Service, after American Taxi informed the airport it would cease
operations at 3 p.m. Wednesday.
By 2 p.m., the distinctive natural gas-powered American Taxi cabs --
white, with red roofs -- were nowhere to be found on the airport’s lower
level.
The airport had granted an exclusive right to the taxi company to pick
up arriving passengers. Any cab company is free to drop off travelers at
the airport’s upper deck of the Thomas F. Riley Terminal.
“Airport staff made every effort to ensure a seamless transition for
our patrons during this adjustment period,” Murphy said in a statement.
“The commencement of service by the new operator went as planned and was
completed quickly, with no disruption to the traveling public.”
The consortium of three firms -- Yellow Cab of North Orange County,
Taxi Systems and Cabco Yellow -- will provide service for the term of a
six-month agreement. They are required to have at least 50 cabs at the
airport during regular days and 110 on holidays and other peak periods.
The firms will be paid a minimum of $39,000 or 13 cents per arriving
passenger each month, whichever is higher.
“We’re happy to be here,” said Larry Slagle, the president of Yellow
Cab of North Orange County. “It’s unfortunate that one of the cab
companies had to cease service, but that’s an opportunity for us.”
By Wednesday afternoon, American Taxi had cleared its cars out of the
holding lot at the airport. New cabs were lining up at the airport’s
Grand Transportation Center, a staging area where greeters help travelers
find a cab.
Drivers from other companies with cabs buzzing around the airport
Wednesday said they welcomed the chance to secure the permanent contract
at the airport.
Kuldeep Sing, a driver with A Taxi Cab, said his company was unfairly
chased out in March 2000, when airport managers picked American Taxi over
his firm.
A Taxi began operating at the airport in 1996.
“For no reason, they kicked us out,” Sing said. American Taxi drivers
“were inexperienced people, always dropping people off at the wrong
hotels.”
Airport spokeswoman Ann McCarley said A Taxi was removed for other
reasons.
“They failed to provide acceptable proof of insurance,” McCarley said.
“In the best interests of the traveling public, they were no longer
authorized to operate at the airport.”
American Taxi filed for bankruptcy in April after the company became
embroiled in an ownership dispute. After struggling to pay off creditors,
Ford Motor Credit Co. threatened to repossess the fleet. Ford said it
would seize the 142-car fleet Wednesday.
* Paul Clinton covers the environment and John Wayne Airport. He may
be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail ato7
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