
Southend-on-Sea City Council’s independent, quasi-judicial Licensing Sub-Committee will determine an application from Uber Britannia Limited for a Private Hire Vehicle (PHV) Operator’s Licence.
This will take place at a Licensing Sub-Committee meeting on Monday 15 December at 10am.
Under national law, councils must grant a licence if satisfied that the applicant is "fit and proper" to operate.
A detailed report has been prepared for the committee, setting out the legal framework, Uber's evidence, and public representations. The Licensing Sub-Committee operates separately from the council's political administration and must base its decision solely on the evidence and licensing law.
If approved, any Uber driver licensed in Southend would need to meet the same standards as all local private hire drivers. This includes passing the Southend knowledge test, completing safeguarding training, undergoing DBS and medical checks, and displaying Southend PHV door stickers.
Uber has also volunteered an additional licence condition requiring them to notify the council within 72 hours of any serious complaint, including allegations of sexual misconduct, violence, discrimination, breaches of equality duties, wrong-driver incidents or suspected substance misuse.
The report addresses concerns about "out-of-area drivers". National legislation allows private hire drivers licensed in one authority to carry out pre-booked journeys elsewhere, and case law confirms councils cannot prohibit this.
Southend will continue to use the national NR3S register to ensure drivers who are refused, suspended or revoked anywhere in the country cannot bypass safety checks.
Cllr Daniel Cowan, Leader of the Council, said: "Uber has applied for a licence to operate in Southend, and it is for the council's independent, quasi-judicial Licensing Sub-Committee to assess whether the company is fit and proper to do so.
"This process involves detailed scrutiny of safety, safeguarding and operating arrangements.
"Public safety is always our priority, and any operator licensed in Southend must meet the same high standards as every other PHV operator. We will publish the committee's decision once the process is complete."
The independent Licensing Sub-Committee will consider all evidence on 15 December and publish the outcome after the meeting.

The Regulatory and General Purposes Committee approved the proposal, put forward by Unite the Union, at a meeting on December 10, despite having received four objections from the public .

Newcastle City Council recently announced that applications for Clean Air Zone (CAZ) upgrade grants, worth up to £16,000, will close on January 30. 

The enforcement action, codenamed Operation Beccles, was carried out on 5 December by the Swansea and Neath Port Talbot Licensing Team with colleagues from Swansea Council taxi licensing team.

Year 11 of doing his annual toy appeal to help less fortunate local kids get a present on Christmas Day.

The demonstration aims to ensure the draft legislation, which would drastically reduce VTC licences from 900 to around 300, is passed in its current strict form.

The joint initiative, involving Peterborough Positive, Peterborough City Council, and Light Project Peterborough, aims to provide immediate medical welfare and ensure safe travel home for revellers.

The incident occurred around 11.10 pm on October 11 on Liverpool Road.

Taxi drivers operating at Norwich station car park are reporting they have been wrongfully issued £100 fines by NCP, despite only spending brief periods dropping off or picking up customers.

The kiosks, set for a broader rollout at hotels, ports, and international airports, are specifically designed to serve international visitors arriving without local U.S. mobile data plans.

The incident has led the operator, Hello, to immediately halt its robotaxi service in the city as authorities investigate.

The initiative, which costs £3,800 and is partly funded by the Hertfordshire Police & Crime Commissioner's Safer Town Centres Grant Scheme, commenced on 5 December.

Appearing before the Public Accounts Committee, witnesses argued that while councils are committed to helping children entitled to support, the service does not need to be “a door-to-door taxi service.”

Several taxi drivers in Cornwall have had their licences revoked or refused following serious misconduct, including being arrested for driving on cocaine and then smashing into cars.

The proposal, to be considered by the regulatory committee, would see day rates increase by as much as 13% for longer journeys and a 13% increase for one-mile journeys at Christmas and New Year.

The council’s general purposes board is due to consider the report on December 10, which confirms that representatives of the taxi trade "have now been requested to submit their views.

An "explosive" new report lays bare the "serious safety concerns" of the UK's "outdated and poorly regulated number plate system," warning it enables criminals to operate undetected.

David Harrison, from Bilston, is accused of killing 39-year-old Mr. Khan. The victim "was shot outside his Tudor Street home at 9.25pm on March 3, 2008, and later died at hospital."

The driver was penalised after officers discovered that the treads on one of his tyres measured a mere "0.8mm," well below the legal limit.

The council has noted an annual rise in reports of "bogus vehicles purporting to be lawful taxi services" during the holiday period.

Self Assessment customers can spread the cost of their tax bill with HMRC’s Time to Pay service.
