Lately, there has been huge confusion surrounding
Hence,
“We had filed the petition for the enforcement of fares as notified by the government of Delhi and against surge pricing, both being violation of section 67 of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988,” said Rakesh Agarwal, Director & CEO, Magic Sewa.
If an autorickshaw overcharges even by Rs.10, it has to pay a fine of Rs.5,000 but the Unlicensed
Section 67 also says that a taxi cannot charge lower than prescribed fare because it will cause uneconomic competition among holders of permits. However, Unlicensed Taxi Aggregators routinely advertise fare as low as 40% of the government notified fares.
“But they often manipulate the figures in such a way that a passenger ends up paying 4-5 times as much,” he said.
The court directed Delhi Government to file a status report. This essentially means two things. One, if it is true that nothing lower or higher than prescribed fares can be charged. Two, if it is true that Unlicensed Taxi Aggregators are violating the law and government notified fares through the mechanism of surge pricing and manipulative fares.
The matter will be heard on 18th April.
(Image credits: indiatimes)