The use of the proposed access tagging on roads to indicate whether or not a private hire/rideshare can drive on them I think we can all agree is straightforward, but it gets muddy when talking about other types of infrastructure that this might apply to.
I would like to better understand how such access tagging would work in practice for an example at my local airport. In that instance, the designated Uber pickup/dropoff location is a particular spot within a specific parking garage (tagged with amenity=parking + building=yes). Do I add private_hire=designated to the building? Okay, that can work. But then, adding operator=Uber doesn't work -- after all, Uber isn't operating the parking garage, they just have permission to make pickups at a particular signed location. This tells me that a POI that's separate from the parking garage object is needed to indicate the precise pickup location within the garage. Are we saying that's amenity=taxi + private_hire=designated? That doesn't work because a taxi stand implies on-demand transportation. I would just ask that we consider the full picture of how designated private hire/rideshare tagging should be done at airports and other transportation hubs; without that "big picture", merely focusing very narrowly on the access attribute feels incomplete. On Sat, Oct 31, 2020 at 4:03 PM Simon Poole <[email protected]> wrote: > I think there is a bit of a misunderstanding here. > > This is not about taxi stands or anything similar, but about access for > Lyfts, Ubers, Grabs employees to streets and infrastructure that they would > not be able to utilize if they were driving for themselves (including > actual ride sharing :-)). Example pick up and drop off access at airports > and similar, this might include access to taxi dedicated infrastructure > too. This is quite legit and no beef with the companies wanting to be able > to model this to improve routing for their drivers and customers. > > Simon > Am 31.10.2020 um 15:23 schrieb Brian M. Sperlongano: > > In the United States at least, there is a very real difference in meaning > between "rideshare" and "taxi" services when it comes *specifically* to > access at airports. And I believe that is the intent of this proposal: how > do I tag the special area in the airport where I must go in order to be > picked up by XYZ rideshare company? > > At an airport, if you wish to take a taxi, you walk up to a taxi stand > (amenity=taxi), where the taxi cabs line up, and you take the first taxi > cab in line. This is an explicit area where only taxis queue up. > > Alternately, if you wish to take a "ride share", you are using an app to > make an arrangement with a specific vehicle and driver to be picked up at a > specific location. In this case, airports often (at this point, probably > "usually") have a specified location where such ride shares are allowed to > pick up and/or drop off passengers. > > In some cases, the ride share pickup/drop-off locations have specific > areas that are different for different ride share providers. For example, > at my local airport, due to disagreements about how much these companies > should pay the airport for curb access (really), there is one location > where you can pick up a Lyft, and a separate location 100 meters away off > the airport property where you can pick up an Uber! > > The point here is that in the US there is a very real distinction between > these two classes of objects, and the information someone traveling through > the airport looking for ground transportation would want to know is: > 1. Is it a ride share (pre-arranged pickup) or taxi stand (on-demand > pickup) > 2. Is it limited to only specific ride share companies? > 3. Is it pickup only, dropoff only, or both? > > > > On Sat, Oct 31, 2020 at 6:36 AM Simon Poole <[email protected]> wrote: > >> For starters I would oppose using the term "rideshare" for what is a >> taxi/chauffeur service. It should be noted that there are actual rideshare >> organisations and services out there, but uber, grab, lyft etc. are not >> among them, they are simply trying to co-opt a term with positive >> associations for their operations. >> >> Further, real rideshare services don't get special access treatment >> anywhere I know of, outside of vehicle occupancy regulations, which isn't >> surprising as real ride sharing simply involves sharing costs and car on a >> trip that the driver was going to make anyway. >> >> If there are actual legal differences between taxi and chauffeur access >> somewhere, we could use chauffeur or chauffeur-driven as an access tag >> (better suggestions welcome). >> >> Simon >> >> .............. > _______________________________________________ > Tagging mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/tagging >
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