Taxicab Cultural Clash at the Minneapolis-St Paul Intl. Airport

Taxicab Cultural Clash at the Minneapolis-St Paul Intl. Airport

Driven by Faith or Customer Service? Muslim Taxi Drivers at MSP Refuse Passengers with Alcohol

LAP Lambert Academic Publishing ( 2010-12-21 )

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When Steve Wareham heard that there had been another complaint about taxi service at the Minneapolis St. Paul International Airport (MSP), it came as no surprise. As Airport Director, Wareham had been working for years to improve customer service in this important ground transportation arena. Beginning in 2002, Airport Staff became aware that some passengers who were carrying alcohol – often visible in the plastic bags from duty-free shops — had been refused taxi service. The drivers, many of whom were Muslims from Somalia, explained that their faith did not permit them to consume or transport alcohol. Drivers who refused a fare for any reason were sent to the end of the line, and had to wait two to four hours for another fare. Losing fares represented a significant economic and practical hardship; for the drivers, this was an issue of religious accommodation, and they requested special accomodations that could allow them to refuse customers with alcohol without "losing a fare". How do faith issues relate in the customer service driven taxicab industry?

Book Details:

ISBN-13:

978-3-8433-7045-5

ISBN-10:

3843370451

EAN:

9783843370455

Book language:

English

By (author) :

Steve Wareham

Number of pages:

120

Published on:

2010-12-21

Category:

Civil rights, Civil proceeding