Why do Taxis get to charge a "fuel surcharge" fee and the airline industry gets to whine about the price of gas but delivery services like UPS haven't hiked their prices? I know pizza places have a "delivery fee"--well, some of them anyway--but to me that's just transferring the cost of hiring drivers onto the customer, not a reaction to the fuel economy. I don't know, seems like the transportation industry is getting a free pass, especially on wealthy services. The CTA would never get away with razing its fare prices due to "gas costs".
6/6/2008 8:39:54 PM
I thiink its bullshit. If taxis (in NYC) have a problem with it, well they should all switch to hybrids. I know they aren't free, but they'd work well to change things up here.
6/7/2008 3:17:56 AM
6/7/2008 10:32:42 AM
uh, UPS has hiked its prices. You probably don't ship enough to notice it, but I promise you companies that do are feeling the pinch right now.
6/7/2008 11:09:14 AM
[Edited on June 7, 2008 at 11:55 AM. Reason :
6/7/2008 11:54:29 AM
UPS have absolutely raised their prices. Furthermore, almost every vendor, shipper, or courier service I work with has added a 2-3% fuel surcharge to basically any deliveries.
6/7/2008 12:03:07 PM
^^^^Thanks, I'm aware of that. I basically just meant sooner.^^exactly, even if its leading other cities they're still behind IMO. Lets be honest here, a Crown Vic in Manhattan stop and go, and the way these guys drive them, probably gets 10mpg.
6/7/2008 12:21:50 PM
I'm wondering how stringent these mileage standards are going to be. Come on, you're not going to see the Prius become the backbone of the NYC taxi fleet, it's just not big enough. While a hybrid Tahoe does exist now (they've sure been hyping it in the commercials) it's still a 5000 lb. Tahoe and if the mileage standards make any sense it won't make the grade. An Escape/Mariner hybrid can carry bags, but you can't seat 3 across in the back. The only thing that makes sense the way I see it is the Camry hybrid, as it's the only hybrid of decent size that isn't either a truck or a luxury car. Maybe 2012 will see an all Toyota NYC cab fleet, which just kinda rubs me the wrong way. If Ford has half a brain in its corporate head, they'll bring out a hybrid version of the Crown Vic's replacement. I think 2010 is supposed to be the last year for that platform, so they'll have time to keep their foot in the door.
6/9/2008 10:22:57 AM
Diesel is hurting even more than unleaded. It is killing trucks and bus fleets.
6/9/2008 10:29:13 AM
6/9/2008 10:30:14 AM
^ ding ding ding
6/9/2008 10:33:49 AM
I may be wrong, but I think that most taxi drivers pay for gas out of their own pockets. Meaning a cabbie who made $20.00 in tips in one hour while paying $3.00 per gallon in 2007 is still making the $20.00 in tips while paying $4.00 per gallon in 2008. If there wasn't a surcharge, a lot of cabbies would probably look for work somewhere else or strike.
6/9/2008 11:06:05 AM
^they do and they're bitching to no end, trying to get a gasoline surcharge approved.^^^^^Besides the Camry the Nissan Altima hybrid would also do a good job. The Ford Escape hybrid is a joke and is utterly worthless. I couldn't fit in the back of one of those without splaying my legs out to the side b/c there was no room. How a 4000lb automobile has no interior space is beyond me. I'm 6'2" but thats not much of an excuse.
6/9/2008 12:50:34 PM
The Camry hybrid has no trunk space. Half the trunk is used for batteries.
6/9/2008 12:59:49 PM
still better than a Escape!Hybrid Tahoes wouldn't be that bad to replace the crown vics. They'd get better gas mileage (almost double at 20mpg) but they're expensive as hell and too large (clog up the roads even more).
6/10/2008 12:18:30 PM