Taxi Services

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For bike taxis, see pedicabs

Taxi rates among cabs in Chico are very competitive due to having so many companies. In fact, they are some of the cheapest cab rates in the entire country. See also Driving in Chico and Transportation

  1. Taxi companies
  2. Taxi Services
    1. Former Taxi Companies
  3. Taxi drivers
  4. Tips for getting a taxi
  5. Taking a cab
  6. Taxis
  7. History
  8. Regulation

Taxi companies

Taxi companies are regulated by the City of Chico, and the Public Utilities Commission. The vehicles are inspected regularly, and a $1million insurance policy is required. These companies maintain the leased vehicles and offer dispatch services. Drivers are not employees of the taxi leasing company, they are self-employed under a private contract. Most cab companies in Chico have a twelve hour 6 to 6 shift for the day and night shifts.

Taxi Services

Former Taxi Companies

Taxi drivers

Taxi drivers are required to have a "Driver for Hire" permit issued by the Chico Police Department.

Some drivers lease their vehicle per night or per week, and some are "owner/operators". The lease drivers pay a lease on vehicles, and pay for gas. They recieve calls from the dispatcher on a first-come first-served rotating basis. The owner/operators own their own vehicle, and only pay for dispatch services. However, owner/operators are responsible for the maintenance of their own vehicle.

Tips for getting a taxi

Taking a cab

Taxis

History

One of the first automobiles in Chico was a Studebaker used by the Hotel Diamond to shuttle guests to and from the railroad.

Yellow Cab is the oldest known cab company in Chico, existing before 1947, operated by Charles Risher. Risher had also appeared as an archer in The Adventures of Robin Hood, when it was filmed in Chico. At the time Risher boasted the "Smoothest ride in town".

Over the course of the 1990s, Hubert Beaver, the proprietor of American Taxi was able to grow a solid call base by providing a high quality radio dispatched service. American became the prevailing cab company in Chico. This was before there was any regulatory pressure from the city, the IRS, or the EDD, etc. Up until this point Hubert had been able to run American as if the drivers were employees. When a driver picked up a "16" (a passenger flagging a cab off the street), the driver moved to the bottom of the line-up of drivers waiting for calls. Also, American drivers were not allowed to build their own call base using a cell phone. Eventually these practices came to an end after American got in trouble over it.

At the turn of the millennium, there were only three taxi companies in Chico: American Taxi, Yellow Cab, and Chico Independent Taxi, with American being the largest. This was the "hey-day" for cab drivers, when one could expect to clear upwards of forty calls in a shift. At some point several drivers realized that pretty much anyone could get a car out on the road on Thursday, Friday and Saturday night and make money. There were enough people flagging down cabs to sustain them without a large institutional call base, and without a 12 hour shift. The number of companies then proliferated, including several one-man operations.

At some point Hubert decided to sell American to one of the drivers, a woman named Kris Flock. At some point some term of the agreement allowed Hubert to take American back over. The transfer of assets was not a smooth affair. At midnight of a particular Thursday night, the whole American fleet was off the road without insurance, but the American phone number was still active. Kris was making plans to start Chico Cab in response to the situation, and she tried to retain as much of the call base as she could. Then, for a time, the American number was forwarded to Yellow Cab, so as to prevent Liberty from getting those calls. Kris would have to start over from scratch with Chico Cab.

Regulation

The City of Chico has at times considered regulating Taxi ("Vehicle for Hire") fares. The City Council in March of 2007 asked staff to report on cab fares "as compared to other cities". The Internal Affairs Committee recommended that November to not regulate fares as that "such fares continue to be dictated by the free market." The IAC recommendation was accepted by all members of the city council with exception of Steve Bertagna. He was disqualified because of a "business conflict." 1

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