The Daily - The Taxi Driver's Plight

Episode Date: May 2, 2018

A New York City taxi driver, Nicanor Ochisor, took his own life in March. His family says he grew increasingly hopeless as ride-hailing services like Uber took over the industry. Mr. Ochisor’s suici...de is one of several in recent months that have called attention to the economic straits of professional drivers. Guest: Nicolae Hent, who has been a taxi driver in New York City for three decades and was a friend of Mr. Ochisor. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro. This is The Daily. Today, a New York City taxi driver took his own life. His family blames Uber. It's the fourth such suicide in five months. It's Wednesday, May 2nd. Do you know which corner? Ah, there he is. Okay.
Starting point is 00:00:44 Hold on, hold on. Don't die. Okay, let's go. Hey. You have to move a little bit ahead because they already told me to move because it's a hotel. Okay, let's get in. Okay. Do you mind if I get in the back? Okay.
Starting point is 00:00:57 Nikolai Hent has been a New York City taxi driver for the past 30 years. Nikolai. Yes. Thank you for letting us into your cab. Why not? So I'm Michael Barbaro. I'm the host of The Daily. Okay.
Starting point is 00:01:14 So you want me to move or you want me to stay? Yeah, I thought we might go where you and drivers that you know would go around this time of day, or are they all in their car? Is there a place that you... At this time of the day, most of them will be in their car okay because it's three o'clock and you know in my case everything i have to eat is here in this lunchbox really it's my breakfast my lunch is that corn on the cob this is a sandwich my wife make for me every every day this is a corn, this is some mellow and cantaloupe, green tea, water, a banana, strawberry, grapes and two apples. That is a beautiful lunch slash dinner slash everything.
Starting point is 00:01:56 Slash everything. What kind of sandwich is it? It's some kind of salami. Does she prepare that for you every day? Every morning. Every morning? Yeah. the salami and does she prepare that for you every day every morning every morning yeah that's that's she wakes wakes up around 8 a.m or 8 30 and you know by 10 30 i have to be done to go to work
Starting point is 00:02:11 wow six days a week you know today i log on at i think was 1 31 and i'll be at home probably if things go as well midnight It's a long day. Can I ask you, how did you start driving a taxi? What's the story? In 1988, I moved from Dallas, Texas into New York City. I look around and I rent an apartment in Ridgewood, 587 Ondondore Avenue. In Queens? In Queens.
Starting point is 00:02:47 So how did it start? What were the first couple of days like behind the wheel of a taxi? First day when I start driving, I rent, you know, a Dodge Diplomat. And I remember first day was a Saturday when I start. I pick up the car and first day I had an accident. You had an accident on your first day? What happened? What happened, you know, it was a very bad start. It was an old and junk car, you know.
Starting point is 00:03:13 So I hit a puddle on the 3rd Avenue and then the brakes didn't work. So I scratched another car, you know. So I'm not surprised. Welcome to New York City. I'm not surprised because everywhere where I start in my life, I start bad, but I end up good. Everywhere, honestly. So that was first day. It sounds like you're describing renting a car. Correct. How do you make a decision to try to own a car and to get involved in the medallion system? I'll let you know and I remember exactly.
Starting point is 00:03:43 And by the way, for people who don't understand, what is the medallion system? That's the number we see on the hood. So it's like a, yeah, it looks like a police shield. This number. Yeah, exactly. This number, 751. What happens if you don't have that medallion? The police will arrest you. That medallion is your right to...
Starting point is 00:03:58 To hail a New York City. To own a taxi or rent a taxi, but without that, you're not a taxi. No. Okay, and you own that. Yes. Yes. And when I bought that, they specific that, you're not a taxi. No. Okay. And you own that. Yes. Yes. And when I bought that, they specific that you are a medallion owner. You have the exclusive rights to hail a New York city. And that says on the paper, how much did the medallion cost when you, when you bought it and what year was it? I remember that was 1990. Everything's cost 125,
Starting point is 00:04:21 the price of medallion, $125,000 price of medallion. 125,000. $1,000. Price of medallion, over 6,000 in sale tax for the New York City, broker fee. And then I had to install the meter and everything. That was probably about $1,000. And everything cost me like up to $150,000 with the car. So for $150,000, you own a medallion and you own your own car. And basically you own your own car. And basically, you own your own business. Yes.
Starting point is 00:04:47 You own your own business. You know, hard worker, you know, young immigrant, whatever you want to say. I was like 30-something years old. And, you know, had a lot of power to work. And that's what I did. So before we talk, I'm going to let you get through this intersection. Hold on, because it's a little hairy. Okay.
Starting point is 00:05:06 Before we talk about what happened to him, would you tell me a little bit about your friend Nicanor? And first of all, am I pronouncing his name correctly? Nicanor Oquisor. Nicanor. Yeah, Nicanor Oquisor. We call him nickname Norell. Norell? Norell, yeah, because easy, you know. I meet him first time in LaGuardia Airport at the American Airlines taxi stand. What year was it? It was in 1988. I think it was late spring or early summer. But it was in the afternoon around 6 p.m. or 7 p.m.
Starting point is 00:05:36 He was talking with me. I heard his accent. I said, are you from Romania? And he said, yeah. And I said, I am Romanian too. And then we were talking over there like for probably 15-20 minutes you know and he told me he has a six years or five years old boy and I told him I have a daughter which is five years and so then after that every time when we see in the airport we went to each other and start talking you know about our life you know and he told me
Starting point is 00:06:04 the story in the beginning when he started driving, how bad it was, you know, because he didn't speak English. So you guys seem to really understand each other and like each other. Yeah. Every problems I had, I always ask him and he asked me. For example, we had the same family doctors in Queens. We were very, very good friends, not only with him, but with his wife too. So sometime in the week, on a Sunday, I find out, you know,
Starting point is 00:06:28 we can go to buy grapes from a broccoli market. You know, there is a broccoli market where grapes come from California, and we went over there to buy grapes, and then we make wine. Was it good? It is very good. After that, you know, we become much better friends. You know, then he brought the medallion one year before me. Then I brought after him.
Starting point is 00:06:48 Nicanor owns a medallion. You own a medallion. Yes. It sounds like things are going pretty well for both of you. Correct. Correct. Hard workers, but you survive. You make a living.
Starting point is 00:07:00 So let me just ask you this. When was the first time that you can recall seeing an Uber or a Lyft on the streets of New York? I think it was in 2000, end of 2013 or end of 2014. So 2000, 2014. Because I had a friend of mine who used to drive a taxi. And I remember somebody bleeped the horn in the back of me on Allen Street and Stanton. So Lower East Side. And Rivington. Usually I do like this, you know, what the hell do you want? Then he came next to me. I look and I saw him.
Starting point is 00:07:31 I said, you are lucky I didn't curse you. So you knew him? I knew him. I said, I didn't see you for three, four years. What are you doing? He said, I drive an Uber. I said, what Uber? He said, I work with Uber.
Starting point is 00:07:42 He said, how's things going? I said, yeah, I make better money than the yellow. That was the beginning. So you're seeing a friend pull up alongside you in your taxi in an Uber saying, I drive an Uber now. He used to have a Lincoln MKT. I said, how this work? You know, and then in 2014, you know, more people are talking about Uber, more people want Uber. And I said, no, this is the problem.
Starting point is 00:08:03 Because I see them on the roads, you know, every block I see how many, you know, black cars, you know, TC cars, you know, a TC place number and how many yellow. Cars like that. You see TC? Yep. The T on the yellow license plate? Yeah. That means it's a taxi, but not like your taxi. No, it's, you know, with $270, they can have that car on the road. You understand? Which is not very much money. There's nothing. So that's why there's so many cars. I'm just noticing that.
Starting point is 00:08:31 Look at how many of them are in a row now. Yeah, one, two, three. This is a three. Yeah, you see? You know, used to be like seven taxi on the road, and now it's 10 Uber. I mean, app car. You know, that's...
Starting point is 00:08:44 I think there's another one behind it yeah it's very bad so let me understand what would you take home at the end of the year in 2013 or so and then what do you take home at the end of the year okay now my my net income you're not going to believe it but it's less than 32 000 it's less than $32,000. It's less than $32,000 now? Yes. What was it before Uber, Lyft, all these other guys? It was more than $40,000. And what happened to the medallion that you bought for $150,000 back in the 80s? What's happened to that and to its value? The highest value was, you know, in 2012 when the TLC sold at auction minimum $850,000. So something that you bought
Starting point is 00:09:28 for $150,000 or maybe even a little bit less, $130,000 in the late 1980s, is now worth $800,000 or more, which is a nice appreciation. In 2013. Yep. Correct. And they sold as high as $1.2 million.
Starting point is 00:09:44 $1.2 million was the value of a medallion. But the bidding, you know, for starting the price was from 850 up. That seems like a dream. Yeah. So if you want to buy a medallion right now today, what's roughly the price? You can buy with 150, 160. Wow. Back to what it was in the 1980s. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:10:02 That's a pretty awful round-trip journey for you. Exactly, exactly. And why is that? Why is that? Because you allow these cars in the street. For Ubers. So why should anybody be so stupid to buy now a Medallion? Because there's no restriction for those cars. They can put as many as they want.
Starting point is 00:10:20 And we have all the rules and the restriction. So you're saying the reason why a medallion is worth less is because there's more competition from these app cars, from Uber, from Lyft, and also your work is more regulated than theirs. And so this is making it less desirable for people to own a medallion. I wanted to be clear here. When you use the word competition,
Starting point is 00:10:43 you have to be careful because there is no competition when I have to pay $160,000 for medallion or $270,000 for license. So you're saying the competition is not the right word for that? That's not competition. This word, competition, sounds good for Uber.
Starting point is 00:10:59 But it's, you know, fake news, the way Trump says. So you're saying it's such an unfair competition. Exactly. It's not really called competition. I want competition, but I want to be equal. Got it. So if they want to have a free license, I should have a free license.
Starting point is 00:11:19 And how did these changes that you're describing and the erosion of the medallion's value, how did this affect your best friend, Nicanor? He always was telling me, you know, I meet him, you know, at least four times or five times a week in JFK. And he was telling me all the time, Nick, I cannot make the same money. Every day I make less money than before. And I was telling him, things are going to change. It's not going to be like that. Something has to happen sooner or later.
Starting point is 00:11:51 But this will take time. But I think he was more depressed than me because he said, I'm about to retire now and look what I got after 20 plus years working, driving a taxi. How do you understand that? What is a lower valued medallion? How does it change your retirement? Because both of you were in your 60s. So I imagine you and he are both thinking about what the rest of your life is going to look like when you're not behind the wheel of his taxi.
Starting point is 00:12:17 And so how would a medallion's value falling change his retirement? I use my case now. I'm 62. So in the beginning we think, well, if I buy a medallion, I pay so much interest to the bank, you don't pay too much into social security and into the federal tax.
Starting point is 00:12:38 But I will have my medallion as a retirement. Your medallion is your retirement? Yes. If it's worth a lot. I never thought to sell it. I thought to give it to the broker to have, you know, a $3,000 a month, you know, income. Just so I understand, your plan, and maybe this was his plan too, Nicanor, was to let somebody else lease your medallion the way you leased medallions when you were getting started. Exactly. Basically, they're paying you rent. Exactly. And that's how you're going to retire.
Starting point is 00:13:02 Exactly. That's how we thought. And so what happens when the medallion falls? What does that do to that plan? But now if you give the medallion to the broker, the broker will give you probably $800. Not $3,000 a month. No, no, no. $800 a month. Because now they don't have drivers. Because no one wants to drive now because of
Starting point is 00:13:19 what's going on with... Why should anybody pick up a yellow taxi to drive when it's all full of regulation? And when you go in the airport, we have to go in the waiting area, in the line, and then we go one by one to the terminal. Right.
Starting point is 00:13:36 When Uber goes over there, everywhere it's black cars going, people looking with the phone in their hand like this, looking for that, what is the TC, what is the... So you cannot get in and you cannot get out. When you talked to Nicanor, what was most upsetting to him? He was always kind of quiet, man.
Starting point is 00:13:55 Didn't speak too much, you know. And he speak only what he has to say. I am different. I'm a big mouth, you know. But two days before, I saw his voice different. He was talking so slow, just like, you know, he didn't want to have a life anymore. And I had another friend of mine, Eugene, which he told me about him, you know, a day before. He saw Norell and didn't like the way he talked and the way he looks. And another one, his name is Solomon Weiss.
Starting point is 00:14:29 So these friends were worried about what they were seeing. Solomon met him the day before, Thursday evening, on the way home after the Queensborough Bridge on Thompson Street. Solomon saw him and they pull over on the 30th Street and the 48th Avenue and they talk with each other and Solomon said you know I didn't like the way he looks and I didn't like the way the way he talked and you know he because he seemed down he seemed very very down so that's Thursday evening and Friday morning around 10 a.m. he he hanged himself he hanged himself
Starting point is 00:15:00 in the garage in the garage at home and he and his garage because he has a garage separate of the house that's terrible then when his son came home his wife came home and then his son look for him and opened the garage door and so you know then he called the police and called my friend eugene and eugene went to to the house and another friend of mine Dan called me and said
Starting point is 00:15:29 what happened with Norel I said no I don't know because two days ago I spoke with him and where were you when you got that call I was in LaGuardia airport
Starting point is 00:15:35 in the taxi in the taxi you know waiting in the waiting line so then I called my friend Eugene he said I cannot talk
Starting point is 00:15:42 but I'll text you so then like I got a text if I look back I can find the text, he said, I cannot talk but I'll text you. So then I got a text, if I look back I can find the text. And he said, poor Norel he hang himself. Everybody said, why, why? And you know, doing the research, we thought it's only the medallion I just want to understand what you're saying because it's a very it's a very significant and very awful suggestion
Starting point is 00:16:13 that the value of his medallion had fallen so much and that his finances had changed and deteriorated so rapidly that you believe that is why he took his life? That's the only reason why he did. That's how I think.
Starting point is 00:16:29 I was skeptical in the beginning, but I see no signs to be something else. Nikolai, what did Nikanor's family say about his death? Why do they think he killed himself? I told you, and I say again, that's what, they believe that's the reason. Medallion. From what I can tell from doing some reading
Starting point is 00:16:53 before we met up with you, this is the fourth taxi driver in New York City. The guy, the Doug Schaefer, I know him. So four of your colleagues have committed suicide. And in each case, people around them are asking if the reason they killed themselves was because of the changes in this industry that made them feel that they were losing their identity, that they were losing their money, that their life would not be what they hoped it would be because of these changes. And if you look at the age, Doc Schaefer was about my age, Nicanor Occhishora about my age.
Starting point is 00:17:32 At this age, you cannot take losses like you could do it at the age. So I cannot speak for them, but I can say this. You know, not everybody can take the losses. You know, remember during the depression, how many people killed themselves right so is this partly though about the inevitable changes in an industry people's habits change people's lifestyles change you've just parked this car in front of the new york times yeah you know that our industry changed
Starting point is 00:18:02 there used to be people getting newspapers every day. They don't get newspapers every day. Yeah. They don't want them in their life. Yeah. But they can go on the app. They can. It changed. But is your industry something that just is becoming obsolete and inevitably there's going to be something that comes and it challenges it. And it's a hard, it must be a hard thing to hear. It's a hard thing to say because you're a wonderful person and you've built a wonderful business. But is this just the inevitable way of the world and business? Okay, I put it in this way. If the city of New York likes more Uber and Lyft or app cars, okay, come to the table, make a deal with the yellow taxi medallion owners, and arrange them a settlement.
Starting point is 00:18:49 Don't turn your back on me after you sold me the exclusive rights. I still own the exclusive rights. I want that back. You're arguing the city, the regulators have betrayed you because you bought what you believe was an exclusive right to pick up passengers, and they actually let everybody else have that same right without paying what you paid. And so the contract has been broken. Let me say something else.
Starting point is 00:19:10 Did you watch the Super Bowl this year? Half of it. Okay. What channel broadcast the Super Bowl? One of the major networks. Channel 5? Mm-hmm. Why channel 2 didn't broadcast?
Starting point is 00:19:21 Because they didn't pay for the rights to it. Ah, so I pay for the rights to hell. Mm-hmm. So why my rights are broke? It'd be didn't pay for the rights to it. Ah, so I pay for the rights to hell. So why my rights are broke? It'd be like if we stole the game on television. Why? Just because Uber is Silicon Valley, you know, bullshit. They stick you.
Starting point is 00:19:38 So you're saying this is not about disruption and innovation to you. It's about my exclusive rights. Once you sold me the exclusive rights, you have the right to buy that back, but not for peanuts. What are cab drivers like you and the cab drivers that you talk to when you guys have some time to talk
Starting point is 00:19:53 at JFK or at a restaurant? What are you saying to each other about what happened to Nicanor? I would say this. I said this before. He's not going to be
Starting point is 00:20:05 first, not going to be last. If something doesn't, if the city doesn't do something, doesn't act, it will be more. It will be more. I just spoke yesterday
Starting point is 00:20:15 with a guy, Cliff, his name, you know, and he said he wants to kill himself last summer when he lost the medallion. Wow. He's a Greek guy and a veteran.
Starting point is 00:20:25 I am afraid more will do that. I fear that. You know, honestly, right now, me, I have nothing to lose. What am I going to lose? I lost more than a million dollars, you know, in value. You've lost more than a million dollars. Yeah. But I'm not going to kill myself.
Starting point is 00:20:43 I'm going to fight until I'm going to die. I guess I just want to say one thing that I think I'm wrestling with and I'm guessing the producers are wrestling with too here. I don't want to speak for anybody else but I take Ubers and you're making me wonder. You as a passenger
Starting point is 00:21:02 you have the right to take whatever you want to take. But they should pay for the license like me. You don't blame passengers? No. No, because, you know, you as a passenger, you are my bread and butter. You understand? I have to respect that.
Starting point is 00:21:20 If you don't like me, you don't have to come on my cab. You know, But they should pay for the license like I do. They shouldn't get it for free. Nikolai, I want to thank you for taking us on a really remarkable journey through your career and the city today, at least Manhattan. We're really grateful for your time. Well, thank you very much. Me too. And what can I say?
Starting point is 00:21:48 Card payment method selected. Good luck. Please enter the tip amount. Please insert, swipe, or tap card now. I think you have to sign. Did you sign? I don't know. Oh.
Starting point is 00:22:09 Sign. There's something. Thank you. Payment has been processed. Would you like a receipt? Yes. Okay, wait like five, six seconds and press yes in the back. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:22:25 Sorry. Thank you. Sorry. Thank you very much for your time. Thank you. Thanks a lot. Okay, I have to turn that off, I'm sorry to say, the last guy which committed his suicide, he was a best friend of mine. His financial problem was less than mine. was less than mine. On Monday, weeks after Nikanor O'Keeshore's death,
Starting point is 00:23:11 Nikolai spoke at a hearing held by the New York City Council, urging the city council to act. In 1990, everything I had, I paid for the medallion. Now it looks like I'm going to retire homeless. now looks like I'm going to retire homeless. In a first step, the council weighed several bills that could change the rules for car service apps and limit the number of for-hire cars throughout the city. We'll be right back. On Tuesday, President Trump expressed fury over the disclosure of 49 questions that special counsel Robert Mueller wants to ask him in the Russia investigation.
Starting point is 00:24:13 In a tweet, the president wrote, quote, so disgraceful that the questions concerning Russian witch hunt were leaked to the media. He added, incorrectly, no questions on collusion. In fact, at least a dozen of Mueller's questions related to possible cooperation between the Trump campaign and Russia. That's it for The Daily. I'm Michael Barbaro. See you tomorrow.

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