Vonciel Hill and Michael Morris Join Forces and Seek Delay on Car-Service Regulations

YellowCabsFlickr-thumb-565x282.jpg
Jack Keene
Would be first among equals.
You could see the dark clouds gathering Monday morning. Word had come down from somewhere near Michael Morris' Arlington compound that someone from the North Central Texas Council of Governments was going to make a contribution to the city's interminable discussion about regulating Uber, Lyft, Yellow Cab and any other transportation-for-hire service.

See also: Never Try to Take Public Transit to DFW Transportation King Michael Morris' House

That person, it turned out, was Morris himself, who showed up at the Dallas City Council's transportation committee meeting to regale Vonciel Jones Hill and her charges with the dangers of the city going it alone in the fight to protect citizens from any car service that isn't Yellow Cab.

It's about continuity, Morris said. Having different regulations throughout North Texas -- the way we do now -- might lead to customers being dropped off by a service that couldn't pick them up for the return trip. The airport might descend into a morass of privateers scurrying to pick up confused visitors to our world-class city.

The adoption process for Dallas' regulations -- arduously drafted over the better part of a year by a work group led by Councilmember Sandy Greyson -- needs to be slowed, Morris said, so the NCTCOG can catch up. Uniform regulations can be drawn up and all services can be treated equally, especially Yellow Cab.

Yellow Cab isn't just a company that provides an inferior service at a higher price than Uber or Lyft, it's also the only segment of the transportation-for-hire community that has major problems with the draft regulations Greyson and her committee came up with. Coincidentally, Morris' arguments -- and those of others who've tried to muck up the process, like Mayor Pro Tem Tennell Atkins -- sound similar to those put forward by Jack Bewley, Yellow Cab's president.

Cabs, you see, are an extension of public transit. They provide, according to Bewley, a well regulated, fixed-price option for those who can't or simply don't wish to drive. Uber and Lyft, unless their drivers are required to mark their cars, offer fixed prices and carry insurance 24 hours a day, are a dangerous alternative.

Hill, the transportation committee's chairwoman, seems to be into what Bewley and Morris are selling, as she agreed Monday to let NCTCOG into the process, with the idea that regulations may get passed sometime after the start of the new year.

Dallas, her fellow City Council member Scott Griggs says, is missing a chance to lead.

"The marketplace in other cities will follow Dallas' lead; we're showing leadership here, if we pass an ordinance," he says. "Uber and Lyft are very urban products. They target cities, so with these emerging technologies Dallas residents and the Dallas City Council have more experience than anyone."

Yellow Cab, Griggs speculates, is getting a second bite at the apple, one that could lead to Lyft and Uber being permently kept out of DFW airport and the imposition of 24-hour insurance requirements, under which Uber and Lyft drivers would be required to be insured as transportation-for-hire operators even when using their car as a personal vehicle.

Doing that would stymie innovation, Councilmember Philip Kingston says.

"[Transportation-for-hire] should be regulated as lightly as possible," he says. Imposing 24-hour insurance or things like fixed rates gets things "exactly backwards."

My Voice Nation Help
25 comments
Anon.
Anon.

I posted a link previously from a recent Regional Transportation Council meeting where Vonciel stated outright that she didn't want to hear from the public about this process. She also said the proposed Dallas ordinance was 107 pages long. Sandy jumped in and corrected her by saying it is about 20 pages long.

Vonciel does not want input from the public, but she will stop on a dime when Mr. Morris tells her to. My question is, what makes him think dozens of other city councils will just roll over and do what he says?

I think Dallas should indeed take the leadership role here and pass the ordinance Sandy worked hard to produce. Instead Vonciel seem like she is willing to abdicate her responsibility as an elected official to an unelected bureaucrat.

Shame on you, Vonciel.

wcvemail
wcvemail

I get the image of Morris descending upon meetings somewhat like the Middle Ages masters showed Moses, accompanied by cherubim, descending to bestow truth. Or in the more updated version, ex-Monty Pythoner John Cleese is said by his own fellows to arrive like the QE II, with tugs and tenders and many, many people.

raymondmcrawford
raymondmcrawford

I keep asking Griggs and Kingston on Facebook why Michael Morris(an unelected official) is allowed to determine our quality of life, what transportation issues are important and what are not, economic effects on the population, and last but not least why Interstate 35 and Hwy 67 are being rebuilt with toll lanes without public notification or input within the central Dallas core. I've yet to hear an answer from either.

TheCredibleHulk
TheCredibleHulk topcommenter

LOL

 ". . . especially Yellow Cab."

Funny stuff, Stephen.

mavdog
mavdog topcommenter

Vonciel Jones Hill has proven before how good she is at taking orders from others, and how she is incapable fo thinking for herself.

Michael Morris is not an elected official and his opinion should carry no more weight than any other citizen. the fact of the matter is he isn't a Dallas citizen and our City Council should just show him the door. 

ryan762
ryan762

I guess they don't get the news in Arlington if the NTCOG is just now hearing about this and belatedly wanting to get involved.

OxbowIncident
OxbowIncident

NCTCOG vs. Google...git yer popcorn ready!

In all this time, Yellow Cab has not made an app for themselves yet? Maybe stop spending money on bribes, payoffs, and lawyers and more on research?

lakewoodhobo
lakewoodhobo

Once again, NCTCOG and Morris show their disdain for Dallas leadership in the region.

ozonelarryb
ozonelarryb

Continuity? What a load of bollocks. Users have moved on, adopted the new paradigm. This is ATT crying about losing landline phone leases.

Or buggy whip mfrs cryin about iron horses.

We can only hope this unholy alliance disintegrates of its members' differences.

How do we stpp Morris?

AeroRazavi
AeroRazavi

So would the NCTCOG, if it is drafting new regs, would it be the licensing body?  And does it have the authority to be that licensing body?

ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul
ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul topcommenter

@raymondmcrawford 

And you won't as Michael Morris is the one who decides how federal transportation dollars, specifically highway and road funding, is to be spent in the North Central Texas area.

ScottsMerkin
ScottsMerkin topcommenter

@ryan762 Well Yellow wont go to Arlington unless there is a Cowboy game or big event at Jerry World.  I know, Ive tried to get them to pick me up only to be left sitting on a curb outside a bar for 2 or 3 hrs.  Thank god for Uber theses days

mavdog
mavdog topcommenter

@OxbowIncident 

not trying in any way to defend or support yellow cab, but..they do have an app.

however, as an example of how much they just "don't get it", the app isn't free.

AeroRazavi
AeroRazavi

@lakewoodhobo It would be interesting in hearing what McKinney has to say.  McKinney envisions its airport with commercial service.  I cannot imagine McKinney wanting to be stuck with byzantine transportation rules that only benefit DFW.

WylieH
WylieH

@AeroRazavi No, but they could mess with stuff out at DFW Airport, since it is run by an unelected board of directors and has its own rules and police force.


Theoretically, they could attempt to implement some sort of rules to ban Uber, Lyft, etc. from operating there, then use the DFW Airport Police as the "muscle," to chase the innovators from the premises and serve as protection for Yellow Cab.

raymondmcrawford
raymondmcrawford

@ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul 

Well, well, well......I love how the media talks all around that NCTCOG for months and never addresses his role as succinctly as you have done. So thanks for that information. So we have a duo of sorts holding our future in their hands, Robert Chereck of the Dallas Citizens Council and Morris.

aljessie
aljessie

Yellows app is free. They actually have two apps Yellow Cab DFW and they partner with Curb formerly Taxi Magic both are free. Offered for clarification.

jmckee3
jmckee3

@mavdog @OxbowIncident But do they even pick you up? It costing money might be an improvement over the old app which was free but 90% of the time when you requested a cab it didn't even bother showing up. And I don't mean to South Dallas, they wouldn't even show up to a call on McKinney Ave.

OxbowIncident
OxbowIncident

@mavdog Ahhh, Then I guess they should allocate some more money for advertising because I never heard of it. Nor would I pay for it. 

ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul
ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul topcommenter

@raymondmcrawford @ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul 

The whole concept of the COGs is that they were to be regional transportation planning organizations where a group of local municipalities would come to an agreement on how the federal dollars would be spent in a region.  One of the underlying thoughts was that the federal government would have to spend less time reviewing competing proposals from neighboring municipalities and that transportation needs between neighboring municipalities would be coordinated.

But like all good ideas it has become corrupted due to that old, old observation that absolute power corrupts absolutely.  As a result each municipality in the NT area has to be nice with Morris or risk losing out on federal transportation dollars.


hth

Now Trending

Dallas Concert Tickets

From the Vault

 

General

Loading...