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January 19th, 2006, 09:12
The Nation, Published on January 19, 2006

Taxi drivers are often regarded as rapacious cheats, but that reputation was amply belied yesterday by two honest cabbies.

An elderly taxi driver in Samut Prakan returned the equivalent of Bt630,000 in British currency to a housewife who had left the money behind in his cab. In Chon Buri, meanwhile, another cabby performed a similar act of kindness by returning Bt164,500 to a forgetful British tourist.

On Tuesday, Ladda Hill, a 32-year-old housewife, called the Jor Sor 100 traffic news radio station to report that she had forgotten a plastic bag containing ?9,000 (Bt630,000) on the backseat of a taxi.

She told the station that she had hailed a cab outside Evana Hotel in Bang Na, where she and her British husband had been staying. She later realised she had accidentally left the bag full of cash in the taxi. Ladda said she had been planning to give the money to her sister to pay for a house for their mother, who lives in Tak.

тАЬI was shocked,тАЭ Ladda said. тАЬThatтАЩs a lot of money and I couldnтАЩt remember the taxiтАЩs registration number. My brother in-law told me to call Jor Sor 100 for help.тАЭ This she did, and as it turned out the hotel staff also had the taxiтАЩs registration number on record.

Phut Dokmaijin, a 63-year-old taxi driver who volunteers as a health-care giver, received a call yesterday on his mobile phone just as he was helping vaccinate residents in his neighbourhood in Samut Prakhan.

Phut was informed that a passenger had left a bag full of cash in his cab. He said he immediately rushed home to check and found the money.

Ladda said she and her husband had given up on ever regaining their money. They rewarded the honest driver with Bt10,000.

Also yesterday, another taxi driver Jaikla Thongphaen, 34, drove back to the Sunya House Hotel in Chon BuriтАЩs Bang Lamung district to tell the staff there he had found a suitcase containing ?2,350 in cash (Bt164,000), some documents, and the passport of an Englishman called Wilson Matthew.

He said he had driven the tourist to the hotel at 11pm on Tuesday. Matthew, 31, thanked the Thai driver profusely and gave him Bt26,000 as reward yesterday.

yaraboy
January 19th, 2006, 11:58
Lovely, but for the second time I have been ripped off by a taxi from A/p to Bnk. Trip to Pinnacle should be about 165 baht (ex tolls) but in each case about 280 baht..one being a speeded up meter other being a meter with 2 amounts showing,and I of course was charged the higher. Did not complain as frankly the amount is not much and on my trips in from the a/p do not know if rates have been raised (which they should be)

January 19th, 2006, 12:51
Yaraboy.

I took a taxi from the Airport to the Pinnacle last week and the cost was Bt300 which was correct. The meter fare was Bt140. The Airport tax is Bt50 and the two Motorway tolls make up the rest. You were not ripped off but I bet the driver did not get a tip!

Poor taxi drivers and no tariff increase for the huge rise in the price of gasoline and other fuels.

I am sure that out of the 20,000+ taxis in Bangkok some are ready to rip off passengers - especially tuk tuk drivers.

I could bore you with stories about a taxi who gave me 30 baht back to appologize for the traffic jam, the one who put on the clock and after a few hundred yards I decided to go somewhere else and did not want a taxi. I offered the minimum fare but he said no charge. A guy brought a Pattaya couple to our meeting. A passenger had become sick in their baht bus and they took him to hospital, took care visiting as he knew nobody and finished up using their life savings to pay for his treatment when money from Sweden was delayed - and all for making merit!

January 19th, 2006, 21:58
Everything I ever left in a cab was returned to me (they remember my usual pick up point in front of my condo bldg). The trip A/P to the Pinnacle neighborhood is about 280 baht total. The few times a taxi driver ever really screwed on me he accepted less than the meter (forgive me, but sometimes getting stuck in Bangkok traffic unnecessarily and have to PISS really gets me mad).

My only problem with Bkk taxi drivers is that very few times they want to barter higher fares than the meter would charge, usually late when they think they can get it. I usually just politely (well, not always politely) refuse and find another cab.

TrongpaiExpat
January 20th, 2006, 01:29
It's not so much the meter taxi drivers at the airport that are crooks as is the official Thai Limo service. Those polite uniformed boys and girls that approach you asking you where you go. They charge up to 600B for what is a 200/300 B meter taxi trip.

I generally go the the street for a taxi, not so much to avoid the 50B surcharge as to get what I find to be honest drivers and to skip having to wait in a sometimes long line.

I am curious as to how taxis are going to work at the new airport. What will the airport surcharge be and will some official limo service try to get you to go with them?

The high speed train is a good idea but so was the sky train that originally was to continue to the old airport. The completion date for the train is 2007 and anyone want to take bets on the when it really opens?
I understand that this train is to terminate at Makkasan station and that is not connected to the sky train or subway.

Bob
January 20th, 2006, 03:58
I've had only good experiences with the taxi drivers. A few years back, one went way out his way to return a passport I had dropped on the floor of his cab and the guy initially refused any tip at all for his efforts (but my insistence eventually won out). Given this was a taxi which didn't hang out at the hotel in which I was residing, I still can't figure out how he remembered where he picked me up the day before.

January 20th, 2006, 03:58
Late evening on Silom and Suriwong it is often difficult to get a taxi to go for the meter fare despite there being lots of them around. I'm told (?) that they have to pay Bt50 to hang around there. There are usually plenty who will go for meter fare on Rama IV or Silom Soi 6.

Unsurprisingly, Government plans to make all Bangkok taxis operate from taxi stands - to improve traffic flow - have faded. It was mooted to start on 25th October and then Mr. Taksin was expected to bring it up at his meeting with the taxi drivers in December (the one when he cussed a lot). Anyway it did not happen and we still enjoy a plentiful supply of cheap taxis.

I find it amazing that the meter prices have not gone up due to the massive fuel price increases.

Come to think of it Bangkok taxis are much cheaper than chartering a Pattaya baht bus.

yaraboy
January 20th, 2006, 10:31
Wowpow...................I said that meter was about 250 baht from a/p............so about 100 baht over charge. Toll and surcharge extra.
Now I just go up to departure level and jump an incoming taxi...never a problem and the driver is grateful
Re late at night on Silom. I find never a problem if one crosses road and catches one near Convent Rd

January 22nd, 2006, 11:47
I dont ride TUK TUK S ,and no more Bangkok taxis,already i have had a fight with three of them.They pick you up at the airport,yes yes yes 1200 b to Pattaya,then take you to the flamin Limo place a couple of Kilometres /miles from the airport.I had a fight with the limo company in that yard down from the airport.They called the cops after i punched one taxi driver.I was walking back to the main rd to hail another cab when the cop car drove in and spoke to the drivers and didnt say nuthin to me at all.
Im not gonna be ripped off by c...ts.Yes yes we take you to Pattaya for 1200b and then take me to the flamin Limo yard.This hasnt only happen to me its happened to other people too.F....... em i now get the bloody bus,cheaper,more interesting and i can sit up the front and sleep.
If i want a taxi in Bangkok i now have to follow the same procedure as i do in Sydney and go around looking at their faces first.In Sydney the cab drivers are all mostly chinese students and Arabs.I think 70 per cent asian and 30 per cent Arabic.I jump into a cab at Sydney airport with a asian cab driver at least i know he doesnt try to rip me off but in BAngkok the c...ts do.No stuff them,look for women cab drivers.I try to look for Thai cab drivers in Sydney,heaps of Thai boys now driving cabs here.
Good luck to them,not a job i would want to do during the night.

lonelywombat
January 22nd, 2006, 15:55
[quote="mrsydney"
In Sydney the cab drivers are all mostly chinese students and Arabs.I think 70 per cent asian and 30 per cent Arabic.I jump into a cab at Sydney airport with a asian cab driver at least i know he doesnt try to rip me off

Good luck to them,not a job i would want to do during the night.[/quote]

How much is the fare from Sydney airport to West Dubbo. Are there asian students driving cabs there.

What type of job is safe at night in West Dubbo. Parking Inspectors?

January 25th, 2006, 09:09
TAT PRAISES TWO TAXI CHAUFFEREURS WHO PICKED UP THE FORGOTTEN MONEY

The Tourism Authority of Thailand held an honorary certificate presentation ceremony for the two taxi chauffeurs who picked up the forgotten money belonging to two foreign tourists.
The TAT deemed that this is an act of being a good host to tourists, which would inevitably affect the image of Thailand and its tourism industry. Hence, an honorary certificate presentation was held for these two righteous cab drivers.

The first incident took place when a foreign tourist identified as Mr. Wilson Matthew unintentionally dropped his wallet with more than 2,350 pounds sterling in a cab while he was heading to Sunya House Hotel in Pattaya. However, the cab driver, Mr. Jaigla Pantong (ใจกล้า แผ่นทอง), recovered the forgotten money and returned it to Mr. Matthew. As for the second case, it was a similar incident in which Mrs. Ladda Hill forgot her 9,000 pound sterling in a taxi, but fortunately the taxi driver picked up her money at his backseat. He then informed a radio station on this matter, and as a result, the cash was returned to the right owner.

Such award presentation has been held by the TAT for many times, in order to motivate and boost the morale of these praiseworthy people. Thus, they would continue to perform good deeds for the community. As for these two cab chauffeurs, their news have been broadcasted to other countries, and as a result, the image of Thailand has become more positive.

This clearly shows that it pays to perform good deeds, and it also shows that every Thai people can help contribute beneficial results to the kingdom in both a micro an macro levels.

January 25th, 2006, 11:24
Talking of taxi drivers doing good deeds. Just the other night, my friends and I were driving back from eating at the Esan Classic restaraunt in Phuket Town (I highly recommend to you for both ambiance and food). As anyone who has been to Phuket knows, the drive 'over the hill' between Phuket Town and Patong Beach is one hell of a scary ride and I personally have seen many an accident. Anyway, our taxi driver that night we had used several times before and goes by the name Pisan (spelling?). We witnessed the after affects of an accident between two motorcycles (pretty standard on that particular road) and our driver stopped to help. One of the motorcycle riders was on the floor but the other hopped back on his bike and sped off. Without a thought, Pisan sped after him, looking at me to ask if ok, I nodded and gripped my seat for a fiver minute chase down unlit back streets. Eventually Pisan caught up to the rider, overtook him and then pulled the car over infront of the bike stopping him. Jumping out he took the id details off the guy, took a photo of him and his license plate and then made sure the guy rode slowly back infront of the car to the scene of the accident. The other rider of the bike was by this time sat on the edge of the road nursing a minor injury and looking at the mess her bike was in. Pisan made sure that she was ok, called the police for her and gave the other rider a real mouthful making sure he would not move from the spot before taking us on our merry way home. I am not sure how many motorists or indeed taxi drivers would do the same thing, but I have the uptmost respect for Pisan who did this good deed with no thought for personal profit. :cheers:

January 25th, 2006, 11:39
but not peculiar to Thailand.

I must confess when I was very very young I found a wallet in the back of a London taxi with 300 pounds and a German passport. I posted the passport to the German consul and took myself off to Tangier for a week of sunshine and meetings with various lads I dubbed Abdul1 2 and 3. ( they were actually all called Abdul)

However after I returned I was racked with guilt and finally visited the German consul and handed over 300 pounds to be given to the passport holder with some story about it having slipped my attention.

A month later I received a very kind letter from the German passport owner to explain how grateful he was that I had returned it, how it had been pickpocketed from him at the Camden Passage Market while fortunately his wallet had remained intact in another pocket-and how delighted he was to receive an unexpected gift of 300 pounds and that it had forever changed his view of stingy Brits.

Bob
January 25th, 2006, 23:48
........when I was very very young ......


You sure that wasn't a stagecoach you were riding??? :compress: