Antonio Coats usually has no problem finding a taxi as he leaves the New Carrollton Metro station. So when the 21-year-old barber came out of the station early Tuesday, he was surprised that not a single cab was available.
"I don't know what is going on, normally the cabs are already out here," said Coats, who didn't realize that a number of Prince George's cab drivers skipped work to protest the share of revenue kept by the county's cab companies.
The strike, however, proved more a nuisance for customers than anything else. Coats had to wait only about 10 minutes to get a cab because many drivers chose to work despite the strike.
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