Taxi and private hire drivers to face enhanced criminal record checks

Taxi queue at night

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Taxi and private hire drivers could have to pass enhanced criminal record checks before being granted a licence.

Under the proposals, every council in England would be told to carry out checks on all applicants.

Current guidelines allow councils to set their own driver standards, including whether to make the checks.

The plans also include introducing national minimum standards and a database to stop applicants applying to councils after being refused elsewhere.

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Currently, councils in England and Wales are “encouraged” to check criminal records and take a “strong stance” on offences such as sexual assault or rape.

The new proposals go further, saying the enhanced criminal checks “should” be carried out on drivers applying for licences.

Those with specific previous convictions would be face minimum bans “in all but truly exceptional circumstances”.

Proposed guidance for previous convictions

Conviction relating to: Minimum length of ban
Crimes resulting in death Banned for life
Exploitation (includes slavery and child sexual abuse) Banned for life
Sex and indecency offences Banned for life
Offences involving violence +10 years after sentence ends
Drugs Supply: +10 years after sentence ends Possession: +5 years after sentence ends
Dishonesty +7 years after sentence ends
Possession of a weapon +7 years after sentence ends
Discrimination +7 years after sentence ends
Drink driving/driving under the influence of drugs +7 years after sentence ends
Using a hand‐held telephone or hand held device whilst driving +5 years after sentence ends
(Multiple) Motoring convictions To be considered by licensing authority

The Department for Transport is also considering whether cabs and private hire vehicles should have to be fitted with CCTV.

The cameras would be fitted with an encrypted system so footage could only be accessed if a crime was reported.

It might also bring in rules to stop taxi drivers from operating hundreds of miles away from where they are licensed.

In Scotland, private hire vehicles can already only pick up fares within the local authority area which gave them their taxi-operating licence.

Powers to regulate taxi drivers are devolved to the Scottish Government, Welsh Government and Northern Irish Assembly.

The proposed guidelines would therefore apply only to England, but they are also expected to be applied in Wales until the devolved Welsh Government sets its own statutory guidelines.

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Taxis minister Nusrat Ghani said: “While the vast majority of drivers are safe and act responsibly, we have seen too many cases where taxi and minicab drivers have used their job to prey on vulnerable people, women and children.

“These rules would make sure that drivers are fit to carry passengers, keeping people safe while stopping those with bad intentions from getting behind the wheel of a taxi or minicab.”

Saskia Garner, of the anti-violence charity the Suzy Lamplugh Trust, told Radio 5 Live she was “encouraged” by plans to update safety checks guidelines but said new laws – not just guidelines – were needed to protect passengers.

Reality Check: What checks are in place for taxi drivers?

In 2017, according to the Department of Transport, 85% of local authorities in England required potential taxi or private-hire drivers to undergo a Disclosure and Barring Service (DBS) check for a criminal record as well as a check on whether they were on lists prohibiting them from working with children or vulnerable adults.

The remaining 15% of local authorities required a criminal record check, but not a check on whether they were able to work with vulnerable people.

Just 4% of authorities required CCTV cameras to be fitted in cabs.

Transport for London releases statistics on sexual assault by taxi and private hire drivers. In 2017, there were 7 convictions of drivers for sexual offences in London. In 2017, there were 137,000 taxi and private hire licence holders in the capital.

The proposals follow the case of “black cab rapist” John Worboys, who police believe may have carried out more than 100 rapes and sexual assaults on women he picked up in his cab in London between 2002 and 2008.

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Media captionVictim: ‘The police assumed I was some drunk’

He was jailed in 2009 for 19 offences including rape, sexual assault and drugging his victims and his case made headlines after the High Court overturned the decision of the Parole Board to release him after 10 years of his sentence.

Last year it emerged that taxi licences were being issued during private hearings to drivers convicted of crimes including child sex offences and reckless driving.

The consultation will run until 22 April.