Let's face it Pirates, we all would love a cheeky mini-break to Marbs, right? Well, why not grab this deal by the horns and indulge yourself with 4 nights at the 5* Guadalpin Banus that sits right next to the beach! This hotel makes a great base for you and the special shipmate in your… GemUK POSTS ARE NOT OUR ENDORSEMENT
Executive corporate taxi and car hire service for Towcester Town and surrounding villages,look no further for a relaible transport provider for your journey in England you will find every requirement you need with us
Monday, 16 July 2018
What's TFL's Connection With Baron Arbuthnot, Nothing To See Here...Mind The Gap!
Thales awarded London Underground Sub-Surface Lines resignalling contract
UK: Transport for London announced on August 3 that it had awarded sole bidder Thales a £760m contract to renew the signalling and train control systems on London Underground's Circle, District, Metropolitan and Hammersmith & City lines.
Collectively known as the Sub-Surface Lines, the four large-profile lines form a complex network of interlinked routes with numerous junctions which comprises 40% of the London Underground network and carries 1·3 million passengers/day.
Work is expected to begin later this year. The first increase in capacity would be on the Circle Line in 2021, with the ‘main benefits’ of the project to be delivered by 2022, when the peak train frequency would increase to 32 trains/h in central London. The final improvements would come in 2023, with an increase in peak and off-peak frequencies on the Metropolitan Line.
The deal replaces a £345m contract which TfL had awarded to Bombardier in June 2011. This was terminated in December 2013, with TfL saying the ‘complex nature of the railway’ meant Bombardier's programme ‘was simply not progressing and there was no guarantee it would have worked’. The contract with Bombardier had itself replaced a previous contract awarded by Metronet to Invensys under the London Underground public-private partnership.
The latest contract represents a significant increase in cost, but TfL said it would be 18% less per km than ‘the successful modernisation of the Northern Line which was around half the cost of the Jubilee and Victoria line modernisations delivered under the flawed public-private partnership arrangements, ended by the Mayor five years ago.’
'Once completed, 60% of the London Underground will have been modernised using Thales signalling technology’, said Thales Chairman & CEO Patrice Caine.
The overall budget for Sub-Surface Lines modernisation has been confirmed as £5·41bn, a reduction of £131m from an estimate announced on March 24. This total includes the cost of 191 S-Stock trainsets ordered from Bombardier, and related platform lengthening, track and depot works. The work is to be delivered within the existing TfL Business Plan, and the programme is expected to have a benefit-cost ratio of around 4·7 to 1.
The project ‘will transform the journeys of millions of our customers, significantly increasing service reliability and frequency’, according to London Underground Managing Director Nick Brown. ‘We have a very clear delivery plan and timetable for the work and, as we have done with the modernisation of the Northern Line, we will keep London moving and growing as we do it.’
Once the Sub-Surface Lines have been modernised, work would begin to introduce new trains and control systems for the Piccadilly, Central, Bakerloo and Waterloo & City lines.
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None So Blind As They Who Will Not See....The Debate.
An interesting conversation took place yesterday on Twitter.
One drivers was was giving it large to the gloom and doomers, saying another cracking night in a record breaking week.
His argument was that he didn’t recognise what the gloom and doomers were on about, finishing with a shrug of his shoulders.
The best reply came back from Anthony Minas, who said:
“There’s a difference between doom and gloom...and informative opinion and fact.
Lots of cabbies on here mistake both as the same.
Good way to look at it:
Does anyone think Uber would have been in question in the first place if everyone was just positive?
There needs to be a balance!
“Lots who have been labelled as D&G give up their time & money to try to expose illegality!
I’m all for positivity of course but if that was the only course of action, we’d be gone already!
Most who call out d&g wouldn’t sacrifice 10min for the trade let alone thousands of pounds!”
Lenny Etheridge also joined the debate with:
“Yep, I see loads of bods hacking away at informative tweets warning of how we're being f***ed over, as D&G.
I too have had a few good weeks.
But I know it won't last if we allow the status quo to continue.
They can't see the storm because their heads are in their lollybags.
“These dismissive drivers, whose elation at earning a fair day's wage drives them to post everything is great, obviously see no danger from Uber and others waiting in the wings, or unregulated apps, or TfL and the Government colluding to do away with the KoL and Taxis in general. (Operation Horizon ‘a one tier system’)
“I promise you, the biggest screamers -if our trade dies a death of a thousand cuts- will be those who couldn't tell the difference between Noah making a racket next door, and a spot of rain.
“Turn left, you get a roader.
Turn right you get a puncture.
That's the nature of the job!
“These blissfully dismissive drivers will be the first in line to demand "How did the Orgs let it happen?"
“But these (mostly) unpaid Org and Union reps will quite rightly reply "How did we? No! How did YOU allow it to happen?”
How did twenty thousand drivers allow it to happen?"
“Carry on happily selling all your tomorrows for the gift of today.
Dismiss those with foresight, as D&Gers.
Let them worry for you.
"Gather ye rosebuds while ye may,
Old Time is still a-flying;
And this same flower that smiles today,
Tomorrow will be dying."
None so blind ...
Sean Paul Day then joined the debate:
“Absolutely!
What policy has been put in place to ensure the viability of the cab trade? Fluctuations in work flows don’t count
Take a look at the link, and if it concerns you, then rest easy because Leon Daniels has secured a position of senior advisor”
The conversation was bought to conclusion by David, @blackcabLawyer...
“Hi Sean, good point. Hopefully we can keep the legal pressure up and commence a Judicial Review.
“Hopefully the taxi trade as a group will be in a position to decide the most appropriate way to proceed legally, in the next couple of weeks .”
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Sunday, 15 July 2018
Fly to stunning Ohrid, Macedonia, from £36 rerturn
Why not jet off somewhere a little different this autumn Pirates? Lake Ohrid lies on the border of Macedonia and Albania and offers stunning mountain views. We've discovered these incredibly cheap flights using our flight finder flying with Wizz Air and departing from London Luton. Flight Details Direct flights with Wizz Air Departures from Luton… GemUK POSTS ARE NOT OUR ENDORSEMENT
Cheap B&B week in Cape Verde from £443pp incl. flights & 4* beachfront hotel
Grab yourself some winter sun in Cape Verde this November with this week away at the 4* beachfront Murdeira Village Resort. Top up your tan in temperatures that can reach the high 20s! Much more favourable than the grey clouds of the UK. Breakfast is also included in this price, however, board upgrades are available… GemUK POSTS ARE NOT OUR ENDORSEMENT
Taxi driver fights for his life after being stabbed in Milton Keynes
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July 15, 2018 at 05:30PM https://ift.tt/2ufVjKI THESE POSTS ARE NOT OUR ENDORSEMENT
A taxi driver from Milton Keynes remains in intensive care after being stabbed during the early hours of Friday morning. The victim had to undergo emergency surgery at Milton Keynes University Hospital following the attack that took place on Pinders Croft in Greenleys.
(Image:Facebook)
Police are currently asking anyone who may of seen or know of any information to come forward to aid in finding the attacker. The attack is currently doing the rounds on social media, with many wishing the victim a speedy recovery. Full details of the attack are yet to be released. Milton Keynes F.Mhighlighted the stabbing which comes in the same week that a pregnant woman was punched in the stomach in the same area.
All inclusive break to stunning Sri Lanka: 7nts from £789pp incl. flights, hotel, 40KG bags & more
Sri Lanka is fast becoming a 'must visit' destination, shooting to the top of many a bucket list. See what all the fuss is about this autumn with an incredible all inclusive week to this tropical island. Staying at the 4* Club Dolphin, which is right on the scenic north-west coast of Waikkal. Enjoy the… GemUK POSTS ARE NOT OUR ENDORSEMENT
Life in the Lakes: Stunning 4* Lake Windermere spa hotel stay from £59pppn incl. breakfast
Why not whisk your favourite shipmate off on a romantic staycation to one of the UK's top spots, the Lake District. Take in the jaw dropping views of Lake Windermere from the4* Beech Hill Hotel & Spa and relish their top notch hospitality this autumn. Breakfast is also included in this deal and you can… GemUK POSTS ARE NOT OUR ENDORSEMENT
Reading Borough Council v. Mudassar Ali (Uber): Legal Analysis
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July 15, 2018 at 03:18PM https://ift.tt/2ufVjKI Stephen McCaffrey QC THESE POSTS ARE NOT OUR ENDORSEMENT

For the case facts and background, read my article “Uber driver has plying for hire charges thrown out”.
It was accepted by both parties that this will be a test case. It must be understood however that this was a Magistrates’ Court case and consequently at best it could be persuasive but by no means binding or authoritative.
Notwithstanding, the Chief Magistrate in this case has considered in some detail the relevant case law relating to what constitutes “plying for hire” and how the principles established through this body of case law can be applied to modern technology.
The central issue in the case was whether the Uber “model” using an app constituted solicitation, or in other words, plying for hire.
A licensed hackney carriage vehicle and driver must be licensed (as such) by the licensing authority relevant to the area where they are standing or plying for hire (section 45 of the Town Police Clauses Act 1847).
Reading Council’s case was that Mr Ali, the defendant, was in possession and control of his car which was not a hackney carriage, he chose to travel to and wait in Reading at a time when, and in a place where, members of the public were likely to wish to be immediately conveyed in a vehicle.
They also argued that he was logged on and shown as available on the Partner-Rider App and his location and availability were displayed to users of the Rider App by an icon on a map. This Reading Council contented constitutes “plying for hire”.
Mr Ali argued that the essence of the private hire contract was that the member of the public books the vehicle first and then meets the vehicle before the journey proceeds. This in the context of the Uber App, is that a user must book the journey using the app before they commencement of a journey. This, Mr Ali argued, is not plying for hire.
It was agreed between both parties that Mr Ali’s car had no markings indicating it was for hire (apart from two small TfL roundels), was parked lawfully, was not waiting in a taxi stand nor was he next to a bus stop or stand, was not available to a person hailing him on the street and his windows were closed.
Chief Magistrate, Emma Arbuthnot, found that there was nothing substantially distinctive about Mr Ali’s TfL licensed car, behaviour or location that could have led a member of the public to approach him unsolicited.
More importantly in relation to the use of the Uber App, Ms Arbuthnot said that passengers or riders come via the Uber App and consequently drivers are waiting to be contacted by Uber. The Uber App shows a number of licensed Uber vehicles, the drivers of which are logged on nearby. Drivers are not individually identified nor is a car. It is not the driver but Uber which gives a fare estimate depending on the vehicle type chosen by the passenger. Uber’s server tells the nearest driver about the request, he or she has 10 seconds in which to accept or reject the trip. If the driver accepts then Uber confirm the booking, records it and the trip is allocated to him or her. The rider cannot choose a specific driver or vehicle.
This was sufficient evidence for her to conclude that the defendant was not illegally plying for hire, consequently found him not guilty and dismissed the charges.
Legal Analysis
This was the first case of its kind specifically testing the functionality of the Uber App’s compliance with licensing legislation.
The case was principally decided on its facts but there are some general principles drawn that may be relevant in future litigation.
It reaffirmed principles established in previous case indicating that circumstances as a whole must be taken in account including the vehicle’s characteristics and the driver’s behaviour.
The added dimension in this case was the use of the Uber App. The Uber App’s operation did not offend the boundaries of relevant licensing legislation in the circumstances of the case.
This is by no means the end of the general matter. Ms Arbuthnot commented in her judgement: “I have no doubt that the technology will move forward and be susceptible to challenge in the future.”
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Winter blues cure: 4nt B&B Fuerteventura break from £364pp incl. flights & private villa & pool
"Wait a minute HolidayPirates..." we hear you cry "why would I go on holiday in December?" Well mateys, we're here to tell you that you can enjoy some of the top rated accommodation at low prices in the Canaries whilst enjoying temperatures in the high teens/ low 20s as well as avoiding those peak season… GemUK POSTS ARE NOT OUR ENDORSEMENT
Cruise from Italy to Sicily, Malta, Spain & France from £246pp - 6nts incl. full board
Pirates, cruises are getting more and more popular and are a great way to see multiple places in one go without having to break the bank. This cruise departs from Naples in Italy and visits Sicily, Malta, Spain and France before finishing in Genoa. Cruise details: Travel duration: 6 nights Departs from Naples on 12th… Lola POSTS ARE NOT OUR ENDORSEMENT
Stunning Koh Samui full board break from £969pp - incl. 7nts 4* resort, flights & spa discount
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Infinity pool envy in Majorca: 4nts half board from £279pp incl. flights & 4* hotel w/ rooftop bar
Spring into the Balearics in 2019 and call the stunning 4* HM Gran Fiesta Hotel home for 4 night (or 7 if that's not long enough for you). The Majorcan hotel boasts an amazing infinity pool atop it's roof. Surrounded by a funky sun terrace, this is a great place to catch some springtime sun… GemUK POSTS ARE NOT OUR ENDORSEMENT
Act now on Uber’s missing taxes suggests APPG report
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July 15, 2018 at 10:10AM https://ift.tt/2ufVjKI THESE POSTS ARE NOT OUR ENDORSEMENT

Uber is not paying its fair share of tax based on its real economic activity, according to a group of MPs headed by Dame Margaret Hodge.
But the app firm is not alone, and the government must act now to ensure all gig companies pay their dues, a report by the All Party Parliamentary Group on Responsible Tax says.
Uber alone could be taxed on over £1bn worth of annual turnover if tax laws were fairly enforced, the report suggests.
The UK’s gig economy has grown rapidly it says, with more than a million people in the UK working in it – around a quarter of them in transport networks, such as Uber, or carrying out food deliveries for Deliveroo.
The report highlights the complexities of the gig economy and the difficulties in taxing it.
Its authors say “the way that many companies within the gig economy are structured has serious tax challenges. These are becoming increasingly urgent as the gig economy grows.”
It highlights Uber and its estimated 3.5 million customers served by 40,000 drivers, collecting £1 billion in fares.
The company’s structure and business model allowed it to pay just £410,851 in corporation tax in 2015.
The report says “this is because of the way that Uber operates. Rather than describing itself as a transportation company that employs drivers and pays taxes like any other company, Uber describes itself as a digital intermediary that provides a ‘matchmaking’ service of drivers and users through its digital platform from the Netherlands.”
Labelling itself a digital company and being based in the Netherlands allows the company to make big tax savings.
However, EU’s supreme court disagrees and recently ruled that Uber is in fact a transportation company. Likewise, an employment tribunal upheld a claim by Uber drivers that they are workers who
should have rights as such, but Uber is appealing this decision, and a hearing is scheduled for the autumn.
In the meantime, the company escapes paying NICs on behalf of its drivers, saving it £150 million per year.
All fares are paid directly to the supposedly “self-employed” drivers and are distinct from company revenue. Therefore, Uber does not need to account for the £1 billion revenue it creates in the UK.
Uber also claims that because it runs and manages its critical digital platform from the Netherlands, this is where any revenue created through the charges it levies on drivers for using the platform should be attributed. This means that it does not have to pay UK corporation tax on revenue raised through drivers operating here.
The report says: “Taken together the tax savings for Uber alone are enormous. If Uber’s UK subsidiary was deemed to provide transportation services in the UK (as the courts have declared), Uber would have to account for £1 billion revenue in the UK. Furthermore, if those working for Uber as drivers were deemed to be employees for tax purposes, Uber would also have to pay an extra £150 million a year in NICs. We can find no formal calculation of what Uber’s tax bill would be under these circumstances, but it would likely be in the hundreds of millions of pounds. It would certainly be more than the £410,851 it paid in 2015.
“Uber is not paying the fair share of tax based on the economic activity it undertakes in reality in the UK.”
The MPs, who include Caroline Flint, Andrew Mitchell and Baroness Kramer conclude that “business models used by companies in the gig economy exploit the UK’s tax system and erode tax revenue.” They urge the government to call for international action to fairly tax revenue and to urgently come up with UK based solutions.
The HMRC, they say, “must be more robust in enforcing UK law.”
Cute Kentish glamping experience from £37pppn - August dates
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Saturday, 14 July 2018
Going, Going, Gone: Modified London taxis
Evening News.
For a while in the 1960s, they found favour with the publishers of the London Evening News as the basis for a newspaper delivery van, with the super-tight turning circle being particularly appealing.
FL2-Taxi-Hearse.
Later, the Birmingham-based Austin dealership and conversion specialists Startins offered an FL2-based hearse in limited numbers.
Below, you can take a look at some of the other conversions carried out on these models, plus an extraordinary pastiche model produced by a specialist Japanese manufacturer.
Nubar Sarkis Gulbenkian
Armenian petroleum magnet and socialite.
1896-1972
“I’ve had good wives, as wives go, and as
wives go, two of them went!”
“I wanted my taxi dolled-up, more comfortable inside
and more distinguished outside, without losing its mobility.
People recognize it. After a party or an opening they come and tell
me where it is and I don’t have to wait.”
The Gulbenkian taxis
Nubar Gulbenkian – odd name, and an even odder taste in cars. Usually described simply as an 'eccentric millionnaire', Mr Gulbenkian made his money in oil, and had a particular penchant for the London taxi, taking delight in reciting the well-rehearsed line: 'It turns on a sixpence, whatever that is!' to anyone who’d listen.
However, far from slumming it in a bog standard model, he used a relatively small amount of his vast wealth to have his own eclectic design of bodywork applied to the car. The result can be seen above, this being one of two FX4s he had converted by Battersea-based coachbuilders FLM Panelcraft Ltd (who also worked with Crayford on the BMC 1100 estate and P6 Estoura).
Unlikely as it may seem, these contraptions proved to be quite sound investments: the second of his two FX4s cost him £3500 when new in 1966 – for which he could have bought two 3.8-litre Mk2 Jaguars! – yet it managed to achieve £6300 at auction five years later. It came up for sale again in 1993, this time making £23,000…
Royal Mail van
This boxy FL2-based mail van underwent trials with the Post Office at the beginning of 1967, to see whether the car’s much-vaunted turning circle would make it a worthwhile basis for a delivery vehicle. It seems the idea was scuppered by the van’s tall rear bodywork, which while offering an impressive 200cu ft load capacity, was found to make the van unstable when fully loaded. Needless to say, it was consequently not adopted for service.
London Taxi Exports Laundalette
Bedfordshire-based taxi specialists London Taxi Exports offered this stylish laundalette as an after-market conversion. Externally, the well-integrated black 'Everflex' roof was set off by chrome bumpers (where available) and side trims, alloy-look wheel trims and a specially-designed front grille.
Inside, features for the driver include power steering, an Italian wood-rim steering wheel and an RDS radio, while rear passenger compartment benefited from re-upholstered seats, special side trimming and new carpets. London Taxi Exports also offered a range of other conversions, including a cabriolet (which retained the rear side windows and framework); a delivery van, with twin rear doors; and a ten-light stretch-limo, longer than either of the semi-official versions featured below.
Stretching it
The general design of the FX4/FL2, with the emphasis placed on space for the rear-seat passengers, readily lent itself to use as a limousine. During the 1970s, following the introduction of legislation which all-but killed the market for the FL2 as a hire car, Carbodies and Mann & Overton decided to market the model as a limousine, and in the mid-1980s Carbodies introduced the London Sterling limousine to the US market, but both those versions used the standard wheelbase and bodywork. Here we take a look at a couple of attempts to provide a limousine with even more space.
The Tickford limousine
Tickford and Carbodies had been rival coachbuilders since the 1930s, but in the mid-1980s they collaborated to produce this one-off long wheelbase FL2-based limousine. With the extra length achieved by the fairly simple expedient of inserting a windowed fillet panel between the front and rear doors, the extra space liberated in the rear compartment was quite remarkable.
Fitted out with a couple of walnut-veneered cabinets – housing the obligatory cocktail set, sound system, TV and video player – there was still generous accommodation for four passengers, with the seats set facing each other. Sacrificing the cocktail cabinet would have allowed five to be carried, while also fitting an extra rearward-facing seat in place of the entertainment cabinet would have increased the passenger count to six.
The Coleman Milne limousine
In 1986, Carbodies commissioned this conversion from coachbuilders Woodall Nicholson (also responsible for building the Maxi-based Aquila) to see whether it might provide entry to a new market niche. The conversion – handled by WN’s limousine-and-hearse division, Coleman Milne – involved rehanging the rear doors so that they were forward-hinged, and then adding a further pair of forward-hinged doors, as well installing an extra row of seats in the retrimmed rear compartment.
The car gained some exposure ferrying special guests to and from the 1986 British Motor Show but no further examples were built, presumably due to the high costs involved in comparison to the production cars which Coleman Milne were used to converting. It has to be said despite the extra length of this car over the Tickford conversion – and indeed, its extra doors – the Coleman Milne’s rear compartment looks rather cramped and uninviting by comparison.
Faking it…
The Mitsuoka Yœga
Around a year after the FX4 had been replaced by the TX1, Japanese company Mitsuoka came up with this extraordinary pastiche (call it a tribute if you must) in 1998. Based on the home-market only Nissan Cube (itself a development of the March, or Micra), the Yœga did at least have one feature the FX4 could never boast – a hatchback. Quite what the PCO would have made of it, however, is anyone’s guess…
When production of the Yœga ceased, Mitsuoka became the official Japanese importer and distributor for the TX1′s replacement, the TXII, which used the Ford DuraTorq engine in place of TX1′s Nissan unit.
Zombie proof TX4
From the imagination of London based designer Donald O Keeffe with his love of horror films.
Part Sourced: Honest John.
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Chase the Northern Lights: 3nt Iceland break from £170pp - incl. hotel & flights
Pirates, sometimes you just have to travel like a viking! A short break to Iceland is super affordable when you find a flight & hotel deal at Expedia. We've gone for 3 nights at the Reykjavik Lights Hotel, with flights included from a variety of UK airports. The cheapest options depart in January, great months… Samcana POSTS ARE NOT OUR ENDORSEMENT
African sun escape: All inclusive 7nt Morocco waterpark break from £281pp incl. flights & hotel
Sack off the cold UK winter this December and instead get a healthy injection of African sunshine. Spend an all inclusive week in the 3* waterpark resort of Aqua Mirage Club in Marrakech, Morocco, soaking up the rays and enjoying the numerous on site waterslides. Indulge in the all inclusive board over 7 nights and… GemUK POSTS ARE NOT OUR ENDORSEMENT
Spring into Turkey in 2019: 7nts all inclusive break from £238pp incl. flights & 4* hotel
Whilst everyone else is frantically looking for their ideal 2018 holiday, beat the crowd and plan ahead for 2019. There are a number of early bird bargains out there for next year including this Turkey getaway. Departing in spring, you can jet off to Antalya and stay at the 4* Kleopatra Atlas which is not… GemUK POSTS ARE NOT OUR ENDORSEMENT
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