I totally agree with you on the taxi plate . They call it mum and dad investor . How it is mum dad investor . The majority of these plate owner are corporation who made million Already by renting it out to taxi drivers .
this misinformation about big corporations owning all the taxi plates and milking taxi drivers into the ground was first promoted by Uber in the early days when they were trying to get a foothold ... it was a convenient angle to push for their ends but it was, and has been proved, false.... and like all mud, it seems to have stuck .. despite there being a Commission on point to point transport that actually easily assessed the owner statistics from the Dept Transport records and readily developed an ACCURATE profile of ownership ...
for those who are interested in their findings rather than speculation, anecdote and hearsay ... the report found that while a small but significant proportion of plates were owned by the bigger taxi companies like Taxis Combined etc. (who claimed they needed to maintain a significant number to ensure security of service supply .. (but also to regulate lease prices)), the report also confirmed that there were, indeed, very few 'Mum & Dad' investors ... so, in part, Uber spoke the truth ... well, kind of ... of course "mum & Dad" investors would not normally have cash available for the high cab plate prices being asked and, besides, cab plate prices were prone to volatility (but not quite the drastic volatility that occurred in 2015) .. so 'Mum & Dad' investors would lean to real estate for long term capital gain .... Capital Gain was never an attraction for cab plate investors I suspect.
Rather, the report found that the bulk of plate owners were in fact retirees .. usually self-funded .. often ex-blue collar and also commonly originally born overseas. For them, capital gain was less of an issue but rather they needed a regular income from the plate lease to maintain some independence from social security... unfortunately, what they got from the government action was neither. The commission found that the government's conceding to ride sharing has caused a lot of angst amongst these pensioner constituents ...
the review has led to the proposed legislation ... it recognises the dichotomy in the cab plate ownership (taxi companies vs pensioner/super investors) and has tried to discriminate accordingly in the compensation allocation by limiting compensation to owners with less than 2 plates (thereby excluding the "big corporations"??) ..and also making available additional funds for 'hardship' cases... this seems a fair and thoughtful approach ..
The government ( and supported by opposition) wants a fair system for all and is trying to compensate the impacted stakeholders adequately, and then move on with clear conscious, with the new model that incorporates ride sharing and that is obviously supported by the broader community.
The political parties seem united in this approach unlike some of the emotive witch hunts bandied about on social fora .. umm?... like here ...
Uber (and its successors) are here to stay ... we as a community just need to sign off on those that have been trodden over in the stampede .. and evolve together as transport community .... if individuals cant see that then, fortunately, politicians do ...
viva democratica!