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CHINA> Regional
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Chongqing reduces cab management fees following strike
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2008-11-19 21:14 CHONGQING - Taxi companies agreed to reduce management fees for drivers in the southwestern Chongqing Municipality, following a strike earlier this month. The companies promised drivers they would pay 50 yuan (US$7.31) less per day in fees.
The agreement is retroactively effective since November 5, two days after the strike broke out in the downtown area of the country's fourth largest city. It comes with a stipulation. Drivers will only have their fee reduced after performance evaluations. According to Li, the federation invited 10 cab company representatives and 21 driver representatives to negotiate management fees. The driver still must pay the company even if he or she fails to earn the daily fee. Cabbies showed support for the new agreement. "I'm happy to hear the news, but we deserve it (the reduction), " said Liu Rencheng, a taxi driver from the privately-owned Yuqiang taxi company. Yuqiang is one of the eight major taxi companies in Chongqing. It owns more than 1,000 cabs. Under the new policy, Yu and his partner, who run the same taxi in two shifts, can earned an extra 25 yuan a day if neither have serious traffic violations or passenger complaints. "Usually, taxi drivers in Chongqing work for 10 to 20 days a month and many of them share a taxi," said Liu. "Theoretically, the new policy could bring in another 250 yuan to 1000 yuan, which is inspiring, especially when the economy is suffering." Known as the "mountain city", Chongqing, unlike other Chinese cities, has very few bicycles. Cabs are the most common mode of transport after buses. The municipality has 16,000 licensed cabs, with almost 9,000 in main urban zones. |
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