Thursday, October 6, 2011

Ethiopian immigrant, MSU runner trying to win the taxi race

Roba Bati, owner of Mavs Taxi, is the latest entrant into
 a suddenly very competitive cab market in Mankato.

MANKATO — It was Roba Bati’s speediness, persistence and competitiveness that brought the Ethiopian immigrant to Mankato in 1994, and Bati is hopeful those same attributes will serve him well in the increasingly crowded pack of local taxi cab companies.



Bati, who came to Mankato when he earned a track scholarship to Minnesota State University, is the owner of Mavs Taxi — the second new cab company established in the city this summer. Mavs Taxi and Blue Earth Taxi joined Taxi Pros and the long-standing leader in the local market — Kato Cab.


A city taxi license is required for each vehicle, and they’re limited by Mankato ordinance based on population. The 2010 census showed enough growth in the city to generate four new licenses, with Blue Earth Taxi and Mavs Taxi each getting two.

Three-year-old Taxi Pros has three. Kato Cab, the big dog that’s been around for decades, has 17.

If more licenses become available because of additional population growth or one of the other companies goes out of business, Bati said he’d love to add licenses and vehicles.

“We’d jump in for sure,” he said.

As a runner, Bati wasn’t a sprinter. He ran longer distances and regularly outlasted all his opponents.

“I was a very, very good athlete,” said Bati, who was offered a scholarship by MSU after immigrating to the Twin Cities from Ethiopia as a teenager. “I was a state champion. I was All-America several times.”

Bati doesn’t predict he will eventually run out of the pack of local cab companies in the same way.

“Every year, things are changing,” he said. “You never know where the future will take us.”

But he promises to offer low fares, tidy cabs, prompt service and honest warnings about wait times if someone calls for a ride when both his cabs are busy.

“We’re trying to give the lowest fare possible. That’s the goal. ... And good service — be on time. Clean vans. Very good customer service so that people will come back.”

Mavs Taxi offered an introductory rate of $6 for all rides within Mankato-North Mankato when it began operations a month ago. Shorter rides still go for that rate, but others involve a pick-up charge plus a per-mile rate.

He’s preparing a special cut-rate price for workers who need a cab daily to get to their job, a discount offered to reliable customers looking for a ride at a predictable time.

“I’m very interested in giving service to the community,” he said. “To me, money’s not very important.”

Bati has a few years of experience in the transportation business and in making sure the bottom line is balanced. In 2007, he opened Affordable Accessible Van, Inc., which specializes in providing rides for wheelchair-bound people to medical appointments.

It was another case of entering a market with a dominant leader already in place, in this case AMV. His business runs a handful of vehicles, serving people throughout south-central Minnesota.

Bati is brainstorming a way to expand AAV’s services, offering the wheelchair-accessible vans for a lower rate for elderly people who want to go on a non-medical outing. Without an insurer to pay the cost, the fares would have to be low, but Bati thinks the demand would be high if the service was affordable.

“They can go out for activities or events, to see family, or church,” he said. “... If it’s cheaper, they can do activities every day.”

Bati spent countless hours on the road when he was starting AAV, which began with a single mobility van. Now he has several drivers and more office work to do.

He still likes to get behind the wheel, though, especially when carrying elderly riders.

“Actually, I love driving,” he said. “I love giving service to old people. I love hearing their stories. It’s very fascinating.”

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