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Taxi Drivers Ask For Equal Rights: 'Since Uber Came To Miami-Dade County We Lost Everything'

Miami-Dade County taxi drivers protested Tuesday in downtown Miami, for equal rights as they compete with new ride-sharing services like Uber and Lyft.
Amanda Rabines
/
WLRN
Miami-Dade County taxi drivers protested Tuesday in downtown Miami, for equal rights as they compete with new ride-sharing services like Uber and Lyft.

Miami-Dade County taxi drivers protested Tuesday outside Government Center Station in Downtown Miami, for equal rights as they compete with new ride-sharing services like Uber and Lyft. 



Since companies like Uber and Lyft started legal operations in Miami-Dade County last May, cabbies have struggled to keep up with what they call cheaper and more unregulated competition.



“Since Uber came to Miami-Dade County we lost everything,” Jean Jules, a single father of two and taxicab driver in Miami, said.


Jules joined nearly two dozen protesters who held signs criticizing Mayor Carlos Gimenez, who is in a run-off election next month to keep his job.



Raymond Francois is part of the non-profit organization New Vision Drivers Association of Florida Inc. that helped organize Tuesday’s protests and several others previously. 
He said local commissioners are doing very little to address the issue.

“We’re going to have an election very soon to elect people to represent us, but the way they operate, they don’t protect us,” Francois said. 



To better “protect” them, taxi drivers say local politicians like Gimenez should do more to address what the cabbies call the unlimited permits, scant oversight and cheaper fares the ride-sharing firms enjoy.

Meenah Jagannath, an attorney for the New Vision Drivers Association of Florida Inc. and a co-founder of Community Justice Project, is helping cabbies apply pressure on local commissioners.

“Taxicab drivers have to pay a middleman. How can they compete when they also need to pay to lease a medallion?” Jagannath asks. “It makes it harder to set  these drivers up for success.”

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Amanda Rabines is a senior at Florida International University pursuing a degree in Journalism and a minor in Digital Media. She is expecting to graduate in Fall 2016 but her curious nature makes her an eternal student at heart. In 2013, she spent a year volunteering every Wednesday at Radio Lollipop, a radio station at Miami Children’s Hospital, where she helped broadcast shows, create events and design crafts for children while simultaneously interacting with patients and families. The experience taught her how to talk to family members who were going through tough medical circumstances. That was the year Amanda had to learn how to be a great listener and emotionally stronger, two traits she now carries as an aspiring journalist. Amanda was born and raised in Miami, Florida, and is a strong activist for feminism. Some women who inspire her include leaders like Maya Angelou and her mother, a dental hygienist for Sunset Dentistry, who came to Miami from Cuba when she was 11 years old. Her mother endured leaving her home country, and has worked since she was 15. It’s because of her that Amanda believes in hard work and the power of Cuban coffee. Amanda has written content, shot photos and has produced videos that have been published in the Miami Herald and Sun Sentinel.