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Hong Kong society
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Editorial
SCMP Editorial

Taxi rank volunteers will help keep fares fair in Hong Kong

  • The scheme that will see volunteers provide taxi passengers with an estimated fare before their journey is a small but meaningful step in deterring gouging by unscrupulous drivers who damage the image of both the industry and the city

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Deputy District Commander Terry Law (second from right) has said some volunteers will be from a non-Chinese background. Photo: Eugene Lee
Editorials represent the views of the South China Morning Post on the issues of the day.

Everyone seems to know someone with a horror story about hailing a taxi after a night out in Hong Kong only to wind up being gouged for a fare four or five times what should be on the meter.

For tourists and business travellers unfamiliar with fares and distances it can lead to an unsavoury experience that tarnishes the city’s reputation and leaves them less inclined to visit again.

So when Hong Kong police set out to fight the practice, we can only welcome the move.

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For three months, police plan to station volunteers at taxi ranks in Wellington and Stanley streets near the city’s bustling Lan Kwai Fong district, a hotspot for drinking and dining and a prominent destination for tourists.

From midnight to 5am on Saturdays and Sundays, a volunteer will help passengers hailing taxis at those ranks fill out a card with the vehicle registration number, destination and the estimated fare before their journey.

If passengers have complaints about the taxi driver, they can use the information on the card to support their case, said Terry Law Kwok-hoi, deputy district commander of the Central police district.

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