Union Cab Members Pack City Hall Credit: Nathan Gilles
Union Cab Members Pack City Hall

After more than four years of effort, members of the cabbie-run start-up Union Cab Cooperative finally got the thumbs up they needed from city hall: Yesterday, November 7, Mayor Sam Adams and Portland City Council approved the creation of a new cab company and added new permits to Portland’s taxi fleet for the first time in over a decade.

The decision increases Portland’s taxi fleet by 35 percent to 514 cabs and grants the cooperative Union Cab 50 permits to get their business started.

Correction, Nov 9, 11:40: The decision is part of a larger plan on the cityโ€™s part to increase Portlandโ€™s taxi fleet by 35 percent to 514 cabs. So far only Union Cabโ€™s 50 permits have been approved. The Private for Hire Board, which regulates cab permits, plans to vote on whether to add an additional 28 cabs for three existing Portland cab companies at its December 12 meeting. And tentatively plans to add the 54 remaining permits following an assessment on the economic impacts of the new permits after one year.

The process to allow new taxis in Portland has been surprisingly controversial and has divided the city’s roughly 900 drivers. During yesterdayโ€™s council meeting, wearing orange t-shirts and buttons displaying their new companyโ€™s name, members of Union Cab and their families packed the council chambers in anticipation of the cityโ€™s decision. Following over two hours of public testimony, Mayor Adams and council unanimously rubber-stamped the new company andโ€”breaking from the normal rules about keeping quiet in the council chambersโ€”Adams let the gathered crowd clap and cheer when the permits were approved. These permits will be phased in over the next three years, with a promise by the city to study whether the new permits are helping or hurting the cityโ€™s drivers. But, as we reported earlier, not every cab driver is happy with Union Cab and the city’s plans to add 132 new permits to the city.

The lead critic of the new permits is Portland cab driver Red Diamond. At yesterdayโ€™s meeting, Diamond testified that he felt the 35 percent increase would โ€œover-saturate the market,โ€ making it harder for him and other cab drivers to earn a living. To bolster his argument, Diamond submitted a petition to the council signed by 300 Portland cab drivers concerned about the increase. And, true to an earlier statement he made to the Mercury about taking legal action, Diamond has lawyered up.

Diamond is getting legal help from the law firm Dolan and Griggs. At yesterdayโ€™s meeting, lawyer Martin Dolan testified alongside Diamond that the city broke its own rules by not giving the drivers enough time to adequately respond to the proposed new permits. Dolanโ€™s argument for Diamond gets a little wonky, but basically it says that drivers were denied due process because the city did not follow correct steps to notify drivers of the proposed permit process.

But Portland’s City Attorney says the city followed the right steps and is in the clear, so Diamondโ€™s effort to hardball the council with legal arguments didn’t get much traction yesterday. Despite the unanimous sign-off on the permits, Diamond says he will continue pursuing the city on legal grounds.

Saddened by the approval of the new cabs, Diamond told the Mercury heโ€™s seriously considering leaving Portland and heading north to his cabin near Olympia, Washington. โ€œIโ€™ll be around for maybe ten weeks,โ€ said Diamond, โ€œI donโ€™t know when the new cabs will hit the streets, but, like I said, my lease is up at the end of January.โ€

Now the big question becomes whether in fact the new permits will indeed make things harder for Portlandโ€™s 900 cab drivers. The controversy Diamond stirred up revolves around data collected by the city showing that Portland has far fewer taxis per person than other comparable cities (see the graph below). Diamond has claimed the Revenue Bureau, which performed the study, cherry-picked these stats to argue its case for more permits. This most likely isnโ€™t true, given that most of the cities on the Bureauโ€™s list are the same cities the city auditor compares Portland to time and time again. But Diamondโ€™s seed of doubt found fertile soil in at least one city commissionerโ€™s mind.

Portlands taxis compared to other cities
  • Portland’s taxis compared to other cities

During yesterdayโ€™s meeting, Commissioner Dan Saltzman went on the record saying, โ€œI support these changes, but I do have a nagging concern about market saturation.โ€

In September, Saltzman also expressed that same concerns about taxi market saturation in a letter to the Private for Hire Transportation Board which, along with the Revenue Bureau, regulates the cityโ€™s taxi permits. Saltzmanโ€™s letter says Portland has a unique public transportation system that isnโ€™t comparable to other cities.

Mayor Adams, a staunch supporter of taxi reforms and Union Cab, took pains to rally against the we-don’t-need-more-taxis argument during Wednesdayโ€™s meeting.

But while Saltzman’s letter expressed concerns about making an โ€œapples to apples comparisonโ€ with other cities, to his credit, Saltzman did not attack Union Cab. He even suggested the new company receive its permits before the existing taxi companies receive theirs, a suggestion the Private for Hire Transportation Board is now following.

This kind of subtlety is something Diamond’s campaign has sorely lacked in its attack on the new permits. In fact Diamond, who represents all the cityโ€™s drivers on the Private for Hire Transportation Board, has gone out of his way to vilify Union Cab as a group of outsiders eager to take jobs away from Portland drivers. That led to a backlash of Union Cab supporters saying Diamond was staging a covert racist attack on the co-opโ€™s largely Ethiopian membership. And thisโ€”as well as Diamondโ€™s lukewarm support for a series of arguably commendable reforms of Portlandโ€™s cab industry (also passed at yesterdayโ€™s meeting)โ€”could be why Diamond and his arguments havenโ€™t managed to catch the ear of city hall.

So when will the new cabs hit the streets? Looks like this winter.

โ€œYou will see us soon on the road,โ€ says Union Cab chairman and Ethiopian immigrant Kedir Wako, โ€œI would say at a minimum at the end of February.โ€ Wako told the Mercury that he and the other 49 drivers are currently looking for a place to set up shop. Wako says he hopes very soon to start hiring workers to run the companyโ€™s dispatch service. โ€œThis is a country where if you work hard you can achieve whatever you want. Iโ€™m glad to be in the United States.โ€

6 replies on “Portland Will Get New Taxis for the First Time in 10 Years”

  1. If this increase in the number of taxis means that there’s an increase in my chances of finding a cab driver who knows how to navigate to fairly major intersections like 39th and Division without my having to give turn-by-turn instructions, then I welcome it. Criminy, people, it’s not even a large city!

  2. Apparently council also bumped up the per-mile rate from $2.30 to $2.60. One might have hoped that an increase in competition would yield lower fares.

  3. @tODD’s first comment: Last time I took a cab home from PDX, dude straight up handed me his GPS and had me type in the address, didn’t even ask where we were headed.

  4. Belmont, those are maximum rates, not required rates. There is nothing stopping a taxi company from setting lower rates. They tend not to, of course, because there is so little competition.

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