
Commuters and motorists are "braced" this week as a major reconfiguration of Sheffield station’s access roads begins, aimed at finally ending years of traffic chaos and air pollution.
Under the new plans, taxi drivers emerge as the "big winners."
Black cabs will be granted "exclusive access to the under-cover pick-up area" directly by the station doors, while private hire vehicles are set to take over the current public set-down zone.
To streamline the flow of vehicles, a new one-way system will be implemented, forcing all traffic to "enter via Fornham Street and leave via Turner Street." Other key changes include:
Public Drop-Off: A new area on Cross Turner Street dedicated to "free ‘very short stays’."
Accessibility: The existing short-stay car park will be converted to "Blue Badge only."
Philippa Cresswell, customer experience director at East Midlands Railway, stated the changes would "ease congestion and improve air quality."
She noted that the new layout will create a "smoother, safer way for cars to drop off passengers," adding: “We hope customers and taxi drivers see a real difference accessing the station by car once the changes are live.”
The overhaul follows a period of tension, including a protest last year where taxi drivers refused to pay for annual permits.
Hafeas Rehman, chair of Sheffield Taxi Trade Association, welcomed the move, noting that the station has suffered from congestion issues for "at least 10 years."
While acknowledging that some passengers may now have "further to walk" to reach the new public drop-off point, Rehman defended the plan: “At other interchanges around the country people have to walk much further compared to Sheffield, even after moving the drop-off to Cross Turner Street.”
The project, a joint effort between Sheffield City Council and East Midlands Railway, is expected to be fully operational this week.

At a meeting on Monday, January 12, Rother District Council’s Licensing and General Purposes Committee threw its support behind proposals that introduce new triggers for disciplinary action.

Under the new proposals, the initial "flag fall" for standard journeys (Tariff 1) would climb from £3.50 to £4.00, while the higher Tariff 2 rate would rise from £4.00 to £4.50.

The incident occurred outside the Royal British Legion’s Tidworth branch at approximately 11:30 pm on December 27. 

Mohammed Kharal, 42, stood trial facing two counts of sexual assault allegedly committed on August 28, 2022.

Despite a two-hour session of the authority’s executive board and a "barrage of questions" from drivers and opposition councillors, Labour members voted to maintain the status quo.

A late-night dispute over a taxi fare turned violent in the early hours of January 4, leaving a local driver "shaken" after being struck in the face.

This is about fixing the Manchester private hire industry — something everyone says they want.

A red Seat Leon collided with a Citroen C4 Picasso taxi in Wigan Road, Bolton in the early hours 11 January, Greater Manchester Police (GMP) said.

Two private hire drivers have been hit with nearly £1,900 in combined penalties after separate incidents where they refused to transport passengers with assistance dogs.

Taxi and private hire drivers, operators and wider stakeholders are being invited to share their views on proposed changes to licensing fees, as West Northamptonshire Council.

Samir Jamshidi pleaded guilty at Cheltenham Magistrates’ Court to operating a private hire vehicle without a licence and driving without insurance between May 9 and June 1, 2025.

A mounting backlash against Slough Borough Council’s environmental crackdown has culminated in a 1,517-signature petition, forcing a mandatory council debate over the future of the town’s taxi fleet.

Keith Auld, a taxi driver and Unite trade union representative, has sounded the alarm over the practice known as “seagulling,” where PH drivers pick up passengers directly from the street. 

With several long-standing competitors selling out and a growing number of out-of-town vehicles flooding Manchester’s streets, the firm says local licensed drivers are pushed aside in their own city.

The decision came after a November 18 meeting of Bolton Council’s licensing committee, where the driver faced scrutiny over a series of repeated traffic violations.

Joseph O’Neill, 39, was apprehended by police in Woolton on July 19, 2024, after officers witnessed a suspected transaction outside a pub.

The incident occurred at approximately 10:35 am on Thursday, January 8, near the junction of Bordesley Green East and Richmond Road.

The incident, which brought southbound traffic to a standstill near Ramsbottom, occurred after a woman requested a taxi from Fairfield Hospital to a bridge. 

A drunken passenger who threatened to strangle a Leeds cabbie before fleeing with his phone has been spared jail, despite leaving his victim too traumatised to continue working in the UK.

The government has announced its first road safety strategy in over a decade, with a plan to reduce deaths and serious injuries on Britain’s roads by 65% by 2035.
