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U-T San Diego | Plan removes cabbies’ economic shackles
SACRAMENTO — After the Civil War, newly freed slaves and poor whites in the Deep South often became “sharecroppers” who farmed land owned by others and paid a share of the crops. Barely able to eke out a living and unable to buy farms, they became indebted to the owners and locked into a life of poverty.
It sounds strange at first, but San Diego’s taxicab system — like such systems elsewhere – has parallels to that antiquated economic model. Eighty-nine percent of the city’s cab drivers rent cabs. Because of a city-imposed cap on the number of cabs, these drivers cannot go out on their own.