Uber007 Archives Lyft, Via, Juno, and other ride-hailing app drivers have some new protections and minimum pay guarantees in New York City after a city council vote this afternoon.
One of the votes put a cap on the number of vehicles licensed to drive for apps like Lyft and Uber. The "pause" will last 12 months; at that point the city will review how the break affected congestion, public transit, drivers, and passengers. It's not a permanent ban on new ride-hailing vehicles, and there is some flexibility, like for new accessible vehicles.
New York is the first major American city to take a stand on the number of vehicles Uber, Lyft, and other ride-sharing apps can have out on the street.
SEE ALSO: Car rental options pop up again for ride-share drivers, but it's still not worth itUber and Lyft, for their parts, seemed discouraged with Wednesday's cap decision.
In a statement, Lyft VP of public policy Joseph Okpaku said, "These sweeping cuts to transportation will bring New Yorkers back to an era of struggling to get a ride, particularly for communities of color and in the outer boroughs."
Uber also saw the cap as a hurdle for riders to easily access cars and shared rides. "The City’s 12-month pause on new vehicle licenses will threaten one of the few reliable transportation options while doing nothing to fix the subways or ease congestion," a spokesperson said in a statement.
Amitai Bin-Nun, vice president of Autonomous Vehicles and Mobility Innovation at Securing America’s Future Energy, or SAFE, echoed concerns for riders in an email statement: “Caps on transportation network companies vehicles will likely do more harm than good." For many riders, plentiful Lyft and Uber vehicles provide an easier way to get around the city, the organization said.
The Amalgamated Transit Union in a statement said it "applauds" the temporary freeze. Lawrence Hanley, the union president, called this "an important first step in the fight for justice for rideshare drivers."
NYC mayor Bill de Blasio also praised the yearlong vehicle hold.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The other big vote was on a minimum driver pay plan. In a 5-1 vote, the city voted to establish minimum hourly pay for drivers within a more "livable" range.
Drivers had been pushing for pay protection and were celebrating the win this afternoon.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The Independent Drivers Guild, which represents app drivers, was ecstatic about what it considers a pay raise. "We hope this is the start of a more fair industry not only here in New York City, but all over the world,” IDG founder Jim Conigliaro, Jr., said in a statement.
Other supporters of the legislation, like the New York Tax Workers taxi and car driver union, were proud of the council's vote.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Lyft said it supports a livable wage for its drivers and is already paying close to the $17.22 minimum hourly rate (after expenses) to its drivers. Uber saw the combination of the vehicle cap and guaranteed pay rate as a way to encourage already licensed drivers to come to the Uber platform. Uber said there are 121,840 for-hire vehicles already licensed in the city, but apps like Uber or Lyft only work with about 80,000 of those vehicles. So the remaining vehicles are able to jump online and start earning.
Rachel Allen, the transportation and shared mobility product manager at Arity, said passengers will likely not see the effect of these decisions. "Shared mobility platforms are obsessed with customer experience and value," Allen said in an email. "They will find creative ways to recoup costs on the backend in order to maintain access to their platform and win with price."
So these new rules may push the apps to get creative to make sure ride-hailing passengers don't experience any service gaps and drivers stay happy -- at any cost.
Topics Uber lyft
J.K. Rowling teases the Cormoran Strike miniseriesFinally, the VR esports tournament Oculus gamers have been waiting forTrump won't fire Sean Spicer because 'that guy gets great ratings''We Bare Bears' is a kids' show tackling modern millennial anxietiesHow 'Star Wars: The Last Jedi' will be brought into virtual realityApp creator apologizes for 'racist' filter that lightens users' skin toneInstagram bait: Why Starbucks put a unicorn meme on its menuHow 'Star Wars: The Last Jedi' will be brought into virtual realityTesla plans to double its charging network by the end of the yearSamsung Galaxy S8 breaks company record for preordersIndia's relentless push for digital now reaches the hinterlandsTake that, dudes: Female astronaut breaks record for most time spent in space.'The Fate of the Furious' is days away from a $1 billion box officeApp creator apologizes for 'racist' filter that lightens users' skin toneMcDonald's braces for the apocalypse with chic new uniformsVery hungry caterpillars could be the answer to the Earth's massive plastic bag problem'Fallout' becomes a board game in 'Wasteland Warfare'Lyft driver files class action lawsuit over Uber's 'Hell' programTinder wants you to swipe right on this rhino to help save his speciesPlease stop putting old ladders in your bathroom Secret Erotica, Jane Austen, and Other News by Sadie Stein And just like that, Gloria Steinem makes a cameo in 'Sex and the City' Cities in Books, and Other News by Sadie Stein The MyPillow guy tweeted his company's official Twitter account into a permanent ban On Footnotes Jane Austen Unmentionables, and Other News by Sadie Stein Brennan Lee Mulligan on the joys of 'Dimension 20: Dungeons and Drag Queens' Mark Twain Designed His Own Notebooks, and Other News by Sadie Stein Threads needs user What We’re Doing: Necessary Errors at McNally Jackson by Sadie Stein Big Box by Sadie Stein Elmore Leonard, 1925–2013 by Sadie Stein Commercial Fan Fiction by Sadie Stein What We’re Doing: Not Staying in Room 1212 Watch The Paris Review on Charlie Rose The Liminal Space by Sam Stephenson To Be or Not To Be? And Other News by Sadie Stein Sex on the Beach by M.J. Moore Emma Cline’s “Marion” by Lorin Stein Samsung sets next Galaxy Unpacked stream for July
2.6814s , 10132.4921875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【2007 Archives】,Wisdom Convergence Information Network