Come October 11th and the minimum fare of taxis
in Mumbai are going to increase again; this time by 2 rupees. A commuter will
now have to pay Rs. 19 as a minimum fare instead of the previous Rs. 17. We all
know that this translates to a minimum fare of Rs. 20 because the Taxi drivers
will inevitably never have change.
What makes this an even more ludicrous situation is that
this has been the third fare hike in a
year! Third! How uncertain were they about their own demands that they had
to make them thrice? And how are we to know that it’s not going to stop at
this? Who’s to say that the Mumbai Metropolitan Region Transport Authority (MMRTA)
won’t ask for another hike next week because the price of pani puri went up and it
had a direct effect on the diet of Taxi drivers and hence a direct impact on
the fare?
It seems that all the taxi driver’s union had to do to get
the increased fare is threaten to go on strike. I’m surprised that this strategy
hasn’t caught on among the over-worked corporate soldiers. How come the smart people
who work in offices aren’t loosening their ties, bringing out their placards
and refusing to come to work unless they get a 25% increase their salaries?
Maybe they just might now that half their existing salaries are going to go in simply
getting to office.
The Chief Minister, in a move to calm the frothing angry masses,
said that though the fares will increase the service too will get better. It
had better get better. For a minimum of Rs. 19, I’d at least expect seats that didn’t
smell of every single person that had sat on it for the last 15 years. Also I
expect less damage to my tailbone because with the increased earnings, the Taxi
drivers can’t cite money as a constraint for not getting their suspension
fixed. But most of all, I hope the increased fare makes them slow down on their
refusals. More disheartening than having to pay Rs. 19 as a minimum fare is
having to pay Rs. 19 as a minimum fare AND still hearing, “klik, klik, nahi jaaeyga” every time you want to go to Dadar.
This is going to be a terrible blow for the commuting
Mumbaikar. The trains and buses are already crowded to such a degree that by
the time you get off you’ve been standing so close to the person squashed next
to you that you may as well get into a relationship. Add to that another few thousand people who won’t
be travelling by taxis anymore and it’ll be like stuffing too many woollens into
a small suitcase. Eventually the suitcase pops open and there’s a mess all
around.
The only people who are happy about the situation – apart from
the Cabbies, of course – are old people. They’re rubbing their wrinkled palms
with glee thinking of how they’ll mock their grandchildren and the terrible
modern age by constantly bringing up the golden, non-inflationed, taxi fares of
their time. I can already see pensioners rehearsing their lines which will
start with, “humaare zamane main 2 rupees 50 paise main...” and end on a note
of contempt for how Bollywood music just doesn’t sound as good and lyrics don’t
make much sense either.
Well I would have written some more but I won’t unless I’m
paid a minimum of 2 rupees more per word.
3 comments:
HAHA!! great stuff! Loved the uncertainity, pani puri and the last line! write more please! :-)
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