Edmonton Journal

Losing his job all too familiar for Uber driver

- REID SOUTHWICK

CALGARY Months after he was laid off, David Chawi is banking on Uber’s return to Calgary to help him pay his bills.

During Uber’s short-lived stint in the city, Chawi said he frequently drove for the ride-sharing service, working late into the night and early morning to supplement his income from a part-time cleaning job.

“A couple of months ago, I lost my full-time job; I got laid off, and I can’t find any more (work),” said Chawi, who used to work in packaging at Lilydale Inc.’s processing plant in southeast Calgary.

Uber suspended its app-based service in Calgary after a judge approved a temporary injunction against the company. City officials argued drivers were picking up customers without proper insurance and licensing.

City officials launched a sting operation to catch offending drivers, charging 19 people with 52 traffic safety and bylaw offences, with 48 charges pending against another 19 drivers.

The city will seek a permanent injunction next month, until its safety, regulatory and insurance concerns are met.

Uber drivers had been hoping to cash in on the Christmas shopping season, a time of year when the local taxi industry is strained, with customers fuming over busy signals when trying to order a cab.

Instead, Chawi will shovel walkways and driveways to make extra cash. Still, he remains optimistic that Uber will satisfy the city’s requiremen­ts and return to operations before long.

Don Carruthers, an Uber driver who was served with injunction paperwork 20 centimetre­s thick, said city hall’s efforts to block the ride-sharing service have been heavy-handed and unnecessar­y.

Carruthers said he researched the company thoroughly before applying for the job and was convinced he was adequately insured, citing the company’s $5-million insurance policy.

“Their (the city’s) attitude is that they are trying to save us from ourselves,” he said.

City officials say they’re worried Uber drivers operate with little oversight, raising questions about vehicle inspection­s, driver background checks and inadequate insurance coverage.

Despite Uber’s $5-million policy, Alberta’s superinten­dent of insurance warned the type of coverage Uber drivers would need did not exist in the province, and urged the industry to produce these policies soon.

Carruthers said there is not enough money to be made as an Uber driver in Calgary to qualify as full-time work, though he said that would likely change if the company was allowed to stay and build a customer base.

A retired engineer-turned-entreprene­ur, Carruthers was attracted by the flexibilit­y of setting his own hours.

He also enjoyed conversati­ons with customers, something he felt kept him connected to the pulse of the city.

 ?? COLLEEN DE NEVE/CALGARY HERALD ?? Don Carruthers sits in his driveway after a court ruling last week put Uber service on ice in Calgary.
COLLEEN DE NEVE/CALGARY HERALD Don Carruthers sits in his driveway after a court ruling last week put Uber service on ice in Calgary.

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