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Date: Fri, 5 Nov 1999 19:55:45 -0700
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From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Vin Suprynowicz)
Subject: Nov. 8 column -- limousine protection racket
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    FROM MOUNTAIN MEDIA
    EDITORS NOTE: Yes, Bil Clutter spells "Bil" with one "l."
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE DATED NOV. 8, 1999
    THE LIBERTARIAN, By Vin Suprynowicz
    Legalize the limo business


    Imagine being told you're free to open a Burger King or a Wendy's
franchise -- as soon as you can demonstrate to state bureaucrats that by
doing so you won't reduce by a single dime the sales or profits of any of
the city's existing McDonald restaurants, including the one across the
street.

  You wouldn't be able to do that, would you? The very reason you go (start
ital)into(end ital) a business is because you believe you can offer better
price or service than the public is getting now. Sure, you hope to develop
new customers. But in a free market, you're also putting the competition on
notice they'd better shape up, or you will indeed take away some of their
trade.

  Yet this seemingly absurd scenario is precisely what has ensnared any
number of independent operators who have endeavored to go into the taxi or
limousine business in Las Vegas, thanks to a Nevada state statute that sets
precisely that requirement -- prove your new enterprise won't harm the
existing businesses, or no charter.

  The Washington-based Institute for Justice is even now pursuing a lawsuit
in District Court on behalf of independent limousine drivers like Bil
Clutter and Rich Lowre, who -- having been denied charters -- tried to find
ways to operate in the legal gray zone of "third party charters" or
"tip-only service," from 1987 (when the current law was enacted) through
the fall of 1998.

  Busted by undercover police spies, however, Lowre now says "We're out of
business. There've been bankruptcies, broken marriages. This is government
by the lobbyists for the special interests. I come from one of the most
corrupt cities in the country, which is Boston, but I've never seen
anything like this."

  Into this blatant protection racket disguised as "state regulation" now
steps former policeman and Las Vegas City Councilman (and, oh yes,
Convention and Visitors Authority Chairman) Michael McDonald, announcing
that he intends to go into ... the limousine business.

  Will the state transportation bureaucrats and the Bell family, operator
of the company which Mr. Lowre's Washington attorney describes as
controlling "90 percent of the market," now take the political risk of
stepping forward and telling the city councilman his competition is not
welcome? Or -- as Mr. Clutter's impounded limousine continues to run up
more than $10,000 worth in fines and storage fees after being seized more
than two years ago -- will it suddenly be, "Of course, Mr. Councilman. No
problem, Mr. Chairman"?

  The point is not that Mr. McDonald shouldn't be allowed to buy and
operate limousines -- or enter into any other legal business. Nevada, for
the most part, expects her elected officials to serve part-time. They're
expected to make the bulk of their livings in the private sector, rubbing
shoulders with their fellow citizens and operating under the same laws they
pass for everyone else. A darned good idea, too.

  But the risks of favoritism and thinly-veiled bribery should be obvious
here. How easy might it be for someone planning a convention in Las Vegas
to get the impression -- rightly or wrongly -- that any number of
regulatory headaches might suddenly evaporate if only they signed a
contract to throw a good part of their business to the McDonald Luxury
Limousine Company -- especially if the man with Mr. McDonald's ear, City
Council aide Rick Henry, changes hats and runs the limo operation Tuesdays
and Thursdays?

  Fortunately, there's an answer which would untie the largest part of this
Gordian knot. The Las Vegas City Council should petition the state
Legislature to repeal all related legislation, shutting down the
Transportation Services Authority -- as a state agency that operates only
in Clark County, a misshapen and ill-conceived beast in the first place.

  Those victimized by the previous protection racket should be reimbursed
their legal expenses and have their impounded cars returned or replaced.
Then, Mr. McDonald won't (start ital)need(end ital) any special
dispensation to enter into a taxi and limousine business from which others
are still barred. So long as everyone's cars meet basic safety standards
and their drivers maintain clean licenses, let the councilman compete with
Mr. Bell, Mr. Clutter, Mr. Lowre, and all comers -- with no state
bureaucrats to lend an advantage to anyone ... and may the best man get all
those lucrative round-trips to Pahrump.

    Mind you, the proximity with which his chosen industry rubs shoulders
with the Convention Authority would still make Mr. McDonald's plan more
problematic than, say, a shoe store. But it would be a start.


Vin Suprynowicz is assistant editorial page editor of the Las Vegas
Review-Journal. His new book, "Send in the Waco Killers: Essays on the
Freedom Movement, 1993-1998," is available at $24.95 postaid through
Mountain Media, P.O. Box 271122, Las Vegas, Nev. 89127. The 500-page trade
paperback may also be ordered via web site
http://www.thespiritof76.com/wacokillers.html, or by dialing
1-800-244-2224.

***


Vin Suprynowicz,   [EMAIL PROTECTED]

"The evils of tyranny are rarely seen but by him who resists it." -- John
Hay, 1872

"The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed -- and
thus clamorous to be led to safety -- by menacing it with an endless series
of hobgoblins, all of them imaginary." -- H.L. Mencken

* * *


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