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Authors: Mike Heffernan

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The Other Side of Midnight

BOOK: The Other Side of Midnight
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THE OTHER SIDE OF

MIDNIGHT:

TAXICAB  STORIES

St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador
2012

© 2012, Mike Heffernan

We gratefully acknowledge the financial support of the Canada Council for the
Arts, the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund (CBF),
and the Government of Newfoundland and Labrador through the Department of Tourism,
Culture and Recreation for our publishing program.

All rights reserved. No part of this work covered by the copyrights hereon may be
reproduced or used in any form or by any means—graphic, electronic or
mechanical—without the prior written permission of the publisher. Any requests for
photocopying, recording, taping or information storage and retrieval systems of
any part of this book shall be directed in writing to the Canadian Reprography Collective,
One Yonge Street, Suite 1900, Toronto, Ontario M5E 1E5.

Cover Design by Darren Whalen
Layout by Todd Manning and Amy Fitzpatrick
Printed on acid-free paper

Published by
CREATIVE PUBLISHERS
an imprint of CREATIVE BOOK PUBLISHING
a Transcontinental Inc. associated company
P.O. Box 8660, Stn. A
St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador A1B 3T7

Printed in Canada by:
TRANSCONTINENTAL INC.

Heffernan, Mike, 1978-

The other side of midnight : taxicab stories / Mike Heffernan.

ISBN 978-1-897174-96-8

1. Taxicab drivers--Newfoundland and Labrador--St. John's.
2. Taxicab drivers--Newfoundland and Labrador--St. John's-Social conditions.
3. Taxicab industry--Newfoundland and Labrador-
St. John's. I. Title.

HD8039.T162C3 2012          388.4'13214097181          C2012-904660-4

“With
Taxicab Stories
, Heffernan has meticulously crafted a timely, historically
insightful collection of tales told from the front lines of one of the world's oldest
professions. Brace yourself for a scrappy, page-turning exposé full of stark black
humour, raw violence and gut-wrenching compassion. You'll never hail a cab,
or cruise the streets of St. John's, quite the same again.”

– Joel Thomas Hynes,
author of
Down to the Dirt
and
Right Away
Monday

For Lesley.

And the taxicab drivers of St. John's.

“Work, is, by its very nature, about violence—to the spirit as well as to the
body. It is about ulcers as well as accidents, about shouting matches as well as
fistfights, about nervous breakdowns as well as kicking the dog around. It is,
above all (or beneath all), about daily humiliations. To survive the day is triumph
enough for the walking wounded among the great many of us.”

– Studs Terkel,
Working

“I taxied up and down this town since 1954
Wore out ten or a dozen cars over thirty years or more
Drove the other side of midnight to the clear edge of dawn
Heard a whole lot of wasn't right
And more of what was wrong.”

– Ron Hynes, “Killer Cab” from
Face to the Gale

Table of Contents

INTRODUCTION

A Hard Way of Life

THE GOOD OL' DAYS

The Early Taxicab Industry

The Last of the Old Taxi Men

It Was Steady Go—Steady Belt

The Best Taxi Driver in St. John's

The Taxi Inspector

The Knight Riders

Concrete Jungle

DEAD TIME

Financial Hardships

Sacrifices

Raising a Family

Self-Discipline

The State of the Economy

All They Were Interested in Was Eating

Cut Off at the Knees

There Is No Life as a Taxi Driver

I'm Stuck at This

Just a Girl Driving a Taxi

Poor-Mouthing

I Need this Job

A Bunch of Cutthroats

If You Want to Drive, Get Your Own Cab

Have a Nice Day, My Darling

What it All Boils Down To

The Nature of the Business

Sky Pilots

The Downtown Rush

A Vicious Cycle

Make the Most of What You Got

Cribbing

Costing Regular Business

They Got to Get These Cars Moving

The Last Time We Got a Raise

A Peaceful Demonstration

Fighting Over Scraps

THE CITY'S TEEMING ENTRAILS

Scenes From the Underground

Over Aggressive—That's One Way to Put It

I Won't Touch a Drop

The Rich Man's Drug

An Eye-Opening Experience

A Dealer on Every Corner

Reapers

Stolen Meat

On the Rob

I Got to Move My Stuff

A Backyard Tour of Duckworth Street

Who Flushed All the Ecstasy Down the Toilet?

The Government Pays a Fortune

What Happens Between You and the Driver

There Are No Prostitutes in St. John's

A Common Practice

Keep It in Your Pants

What Happened to the Business?

HACKED TO DEATH

Work-Related Violence.

A Hard Case

Getting Set Up

Just Out of Dorchester

A Sobeys Bag Full of Beer

Guys Like You in Prison

Level-Headed

I'm Not a Tough Person

Going to War

You Can't Leave the Scene of an Accident

Getting Sick in the Back Seat

Zombies

I Never Heard Nothing Until I Got into This

Dealing with Drunken Women

They Don't Know They're in the Car

You Get Fucked Over, and No One Gives a Fuck

Doing the Cops a Favour

A People Person

Hotheaded

Violence is Not the Answer

EPILOGUE

Honesty is the Road to Poverty

A Note on Sources

Acknowledgements

Introduction

A Hard Way of Life

“A taxi driver has a way of life. Someone who drives taxi has an
occupation. One is a subculture; the other is a job.”

– unpublished diary;
quoted in Kimberly Berry,
The Last Cowboy

The first horse-drawn taxis in St. John's appeared on Water Street in the 1860s. By the start of the First World War, automobiles operating as taxicabs arrived in the city. The industry then went through a boom during the Second World War to accommodate the influx of thousands of Allied (American, British and Canadian) troops. There are now 364 taxis and anywhere from 500 to 1,000 full and part-time taxi drivers operating in St. John's. Exact numbers are difficult to determine because the city only keeps a record of taxicab licence holders. But, outside of the stereotypes, the public doesn't know much about the working lives of taxicab drivers. Even taxi drivers in cities like New York, where they number somewhere in the neighborhood of 40,000, have had surprisingly few serious studies devoted to them.

The Other Side of Midnight: Taxicab Stories
is not a traditional history of the St. John's taxicab industry. Instead, it's a collection of first-person monologues based on approximately forty interviews conducted with taxicab drivers and dispatchers over the course of more than three years. Incorporating elements of creative non-fiction and oral history, it describes the commonly shared experiences of an underrecorded portion of Newfoundland's working class.

This book explores the daily experiences of its subjects, as well as their thoughts and feelings about their choice of career and their clients. Every segment of our society, from the elite to the marginal, utilizes their services: business executives, drug pushers, tourists and prostitutes. Comical, absurd and often dramatic, their reminiscences are of long hours and years on the job, high hopes and decayed dreams.

Many St. John's taxi drivers have been working behind the wheel for decades. They have witnessed the city evolve from relative poverty and isolation to the post-1990s financial upswing and the “boomtown” phenomenon that a great deal of of them believe has followed closely on its heels. But it's important to read these monologues within their proper context. As historian Jean Barman has pointed out, “Perceptions of past experiences are often filtered through a contemporary lens.” The interviews, or monologues, presented in this book compose a chorus of voices whose lives have often been ground down by years of economic uncertainty. Long gone are the aspirations of their youth. They drive a cab not by choice but by necessity. The answers to the questions posed to them were often shaped by that resignation.

Parallel to this, a major hurdle with the research was finding willing interview subjects. As soon as a microphone was turned on the taxicab drivers were often unsure about the process, even after anonymity was guaranteed. In fact, it was explicit that details would be masked to hide their identity. This book does not name names nor does it target specific companies. Only several former and current stand owners and cab drivers are identified; the rest are pseudonyms. The book does, however, identify industry-wide problems.

The modern nature of the taxi business has made many drivers nervous. They fear retaliation from their employers as well as their co-workers. Even the Commission of Inquiry into the St. John's Taxicab Industry, established in 1990 to “complete a comprehensive review of the taxi industry and to determine the appropriateness of the existing Taxi Bylaw,” couldn't get more than a few drivers to come forward to air their grievances. Instead, the city heard from the fleet owners and the brokers (a multiple-lease holder who rents his cars to taxicab drivers for an even share of the profits). This book lets the taxicab drivers of St. John's speak for themselves without fear of recrimination.

BOOK: The Other Side of Midnight
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