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Rome poised to end taxi dry spell, mayor says

After an 18year wait, Rome is lastly going to get thousands of brand-new taxis, the city's mayor said on Friday, seeking to end a drought of cabbies that frequently leaves tourists and locals stranded in the sunsoaked streets.

Rome and other Italian cities have far less cabs than numerous European peers, with the effective taxi lobbies resisting efforts to increase numbers or fully embrace the arrival of ride-hailing rivals such as Uber.

Nevertheless Rome Mayor Roberto Gualtieri informed that his office would next month concern tenders for 1,000 new taxi licences and 2,000 new Uber licenses which would be active by December when the Roman Catholic Holy Year starts.

The Vatican has actually predicted more than 30 million pilgrims will go to the Italian capital next year, threatening to overwhelm its already strained services.

We have actually been paralysed by the bureaucracy, however things are finally moving. The situation ought to be far better by November, Gualtieri said.

At present, Rome has just 7,800 taxis, without any brand-new licences issued since 2006, and an additional 1,000 executive private hire cars and trucks, which also act as top-end Uber cars.

By contrast, London has some 19,000 taxis plus 96,000 private hire lorries, according to 2020 information, while Paris has 18,500 taxis and at least 30,000 licences for personal vehicles.

Social network websites are regularly flooded with horror stories of individuals left queuing for an hour or more at Rome's main train station, while taxi apps at peak time battle to discover cabs and calls to taxi dispatch numbers are left on an interminable loop.

Cabby cooperatives state the real issue is that Rome's. public transportation system is irregular, suggesting they need to pick up. the strain. They also say that outside the tourist high season. there would not be enough work to go around if the city council. provided more licences.

Gualtieri said his workplace would push ahead with new. licences regardless of cab driver' protests. We can not wait any. longer, he said.

Under Italian law, 80% of the proceeds from licence sales. have to be handed over to existing cab driver as a type of. settlement due to the fact that the worth of their own licences, which they. can offer on, might be depressed by the arrival of new motorists.

The new licences are expected to cost around 70,000. euros ($ 74,830) each, officials predict.

However, Eugenio Patane, head of mobility at Rome municipal government,. said having more taxis on the streets would not fix all the. sector's issues.

We need a comprehensive overhaul at a nationwide level of the. laws on taxis. The existing one was presented in 1992, a. various period, before there were smartphones or apps, he stated.

(source: Reuters)