I have a new idea for a job. Because all I do now is cover
teach and coach track and consult for my old job and take German classes and
take Masters classes online… but all on a sporadic and part-time basis. So I
thought it would be cool to drive a bike taxi.
Brian and I had been seeing them around town since the
weather started to warm up. It’s more of a pod than a bike, kind of like a
Smart Car crossed with a tricycle. They drive people to the zoo and soccer
games and on tours around the city, and the passengers always seem to be having
a good time. We never saw any women driving them, though, so Brian joked that I
could be the only foreign female bike taxi driver in Hannover. It seemed silly
but the more I thought about it, it made sense. I could make a little money,
practice my German, get a workout, and learn my way around the city all at the
same time!
This is what they look like |
I decided to email them. What did I really have to lose?
They probably wouldn’t reply anyway. Brian found the websites for the two bike
taxi companies in Hannover, and I sent them an email in English and German.
They both called me. The same day. In German. I managed to have a conversation
and they still both asked me to come in for an interview and a test drive.
I’ve been on a lot of job interviews before but I don’t
remember ever being as nervous as I was for my first bike taxi interview. I
didn’t need a resume or a nice outfit or a list of references. I just had to do
it all in the language that I didn’t know a word of 9 months ago. Driving the
bike taxi was the easy part.
And… I did ok. I passed the bike taxi test drive, and
understood most of what the bike taxi guys said to me. I even managed to ask a few
questions. It seems like I can work at either place if I want to - the main
issue now is whether I can do it legally. Bike taxi drivers are considered
self-employed. They have to pay a fee (1-20 euros a day) to the bike taxi
company to cover use of the taxi, insurance, uniforms (yes, spandex and
jerseys), etc. Then the driver gets to keep the fares. In order to be
self-employed in Germany you need a business license, and no one seems to know
for sure if I can get one as a non-EU citizen with a residence permit.
So next week I get to go to the foreigner’s office to find
out. That should be interesting. I can envision the conversation now. The
grumpy government employee will ask – What
sort of business do you want to start? How it will contribute to the German
economy? And I will answer - I want to become the only foreign female bike
taxi driver in Hannover. It will help me learn German, and I look good in bike
shorts.
Then I will either get the stamp of approval or get laughed
out of the building. But if I can at least put those phrases together in
German, it will be an accomplishment either way.
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