Toronto taxi drivers call off plans for strike ahead of NBA All-Star Game - Action News
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Toronto

Toronto taxi drivers call off plans for strike ahead of NBA All-Star Game

Toronto taxi drivers have called off plans to stage a strike that would have slowed traffic during this weekend's NBA All-Star Weekend festivities.

'I'm a little hot-headed sometimes,' says protest organizer

Coun. Glenn De Baeremaeker: 'UberX is illegal. UberX is unfair. UberX is unsafe. If you are in an UberX right now, get the heck out.'

9 years ago
Duration 0:49
Coun. Glenn De Baeremaeker warns residents against using the UberX service.

Toronto taxi drivers have called off plans to stage a strike that would haveslowed traffic duringthis weekend's NBA All-Star Weekend festivities.

Cabbies had planned to block traffic toprotest againstthe waythe city is handling UberX, the ride hailingapp they say is operating illegally and cutting into their business. UberX, Uber's lower-costservice, connects riders with drivers that are not licensed as taxis in the city.

Taxi representativesannounced their intentions to stand downafter meeting with a group of city councillorsWednesday.

"We never had an intention to hijack the city ahead of this," saidPaulSekhon of the United Taxi Workers Association, who had earlier in the daysaid 8,000 vehicles would be protesting to "shame" the mayor and draw the attention of international media.

"Emotions overranus and we didn't know what else to do," he said Wednesday afternoon.

Paul Sekhon of the United Taxi Workers Association speaks to reporters at city hall on Wednesday. (Jamie Strashin/CBC News)

Sekhon made the comments at a 1 p.m. news conference surrounded by city councillorsJanet Davis, Kristyn Wong-Tamand Glenn De Baeremaeker.Sekhon, who spent much of the morning making media appearances outlining his plans to have cabbies block traffic on Friday, said he decided to back down when those three council members agreed to make clear public statements describing UberX as illegal.

"That's the kind of message we need to be sending out," he said.

Sekhon admitted he mighthave gone too far in some of his public statements.

"I'm a little hot-headed sometimes," he said. "I am very emotional. This is my industry. This is what I've done my whole life."

All three councillorscame to the podium and said UberX is illegal and unsafe.

"If you love somebody, do not let them get into an UberX cab," saidDeBaeremaeker.

Taxi industry representativesdid not rule out other protests after the NBA All-Star Weekend if the city doesn't take a tougher stance on Uber.

"The fact that we are calling off this demonstration today doesn't say what's going to happen in the future," said industry spokesperson Sam Moini.

Members of the city's hotel and restaurant associationsappeared at the podium to express thanks tothe cabbies for calling off the strike. They also expressed sympathy for the taxi drivers' plight.

Cabbies say they can't compete because UberX is unregulated while they require expensive licences to operate.

City staff areworking to re-write taxi rules to includeUber but the new regulations won't gobefore council untilApril at the earliest.

In an interview on CBC Radio's Metro Morning today,Sekhonhadsaid cabbieswould be "blocking" traffic on Friday.

Mayor John Tory said later in the morning that any protest action wouldnot speed up "by one minute" the process of getting new taxi rules in place.

Beck Taxi, one of the city's largest taxi operators, had said it didn't want its drivers to take part in the protest.