Off the wire
Political mistrust grows in Venezuela ahead of major protest  • Result of men's volleyball final at Rio Olympics  • Over half Republican voters not happy with Trump as presidential nominee: poll  • Result of boxing men's fly (52kg) final bout at Rio Olympics  • Results of boxing women's middle (69-75kg) at Rio Olympics  • Result of boxing women's middle (69-75kg) final bout at Rio Olympics  • Results of boxing men's fly (52kg) at Rio Olympics  • Results of cycling mountain bike men's cross-country at Rio Olympics  • Result of wrestling men's freestyle 65kg final at Rio Olympics  • Argentina "did great job" at Rio Olympics, says sports official  
You are here:   Home

Mandatory English proficiency test scraped for New York City cab drivers

Xinhua, August 22, 2016 Adjust font size:

A new law has gone into effect over the weekend that no longer requires New York City cab drivers to be proficient in English, a move that was seen to combat the challenges from mobile cab-hailing services like Uber and Lyft.

The new law was signed by mayor Bill de Blasio in April and went into effect on Friday, scraping the mandatory English examination for taxi drivers. Now the test for cab drivers to get a license will be available in several different languages.

According to the New York Times, the bill was passed in an effort to seek parity with app-based ride services such as Uber, which don't require drivers to pass an English test.

Foreign-born drivers had long been dominating the city's taxi market. As of 2016, only 4 percent of New York City's yellow cab drivers were born in the U.S., comparing with 24 percent in Bangladesh and 10 percent in Pakistan, according to the city's Taxi and Limousine Commission. Endit