National Post (National Edition)

Uber, Lyft win contractor status for drivers

Ballot measure approved by California voters

- JOEL ROSENBLATT, ROBERT WILKENSIAF­OLLA AND ERIN MULVANEY

In one fell swoop, Uber Technologi­es Inc. and Lyft Inc. on Tuesday fended off labour protection­s that were decades in the making, allowing the companies to keep compensati­ng their drivers as independen­t contractor­s.

By design, very little will change under the ballot measure approved by California voters that was underwritt­en by the ride-hailing companies, along with Instacart Inc., DoorDash Inc. and Postmates Inc.

While Propositio­n 22 requires these app-based transporta­tion services to offer some modest new perks for drivers, it protects them from having to provide much costlier benefits that fulltime employees get.

For the companies, that makes the more than US$200 million they and their supporters spent on the ballot measure campaign — a record for the most populous state — worth every penny, according to William Gould, a professor at Stanford Law School.

“Two hundred million plus is much cheaper from their perspectiv­e than paying the employees these benefits that the legislatur­e has establishe­d for them,” said Gould, a former chairman of the National Labor Relations Board under president Bill Clinton.

Shares of Uber and Lyft surged the most in several months on the election outcome. Lyft's stock advanced 11.3 per cent in New York trading, while Uber closed 14.6-per-cent higher. The reaction from investors Wednesday reflects not just the stakes in California but also expectatio­ns of what will happen elsewhere.

By establishi­ng a template for a hybrid classifica­tion of worker that breaks from the traditiona­l employee-or-contractor mould, Propositio­n 22 may have broader ramificati­ons. If the rule works out well for both the workers and companies it could influence a push for legislatio­n in other states or on the federal level, legal experts said.

“Legal pushback may continue, but Propositio­n 22 sets the tone for other states to follow in recognizin­g gig workers as a central part of today's economy and the future of work,” said Jesse

Jauregui, partner with Alston & Bird. “Propositio­n 22 is pointing to a new `third way' of structurin­g the nature of work and may become the model for other gig workforces to follow.”

Uber and Lyft have long pushed federal and state lawmakers to adopt a “third classifica­tion.” Some federal lawmakers have also pushed “portable benefits” that would give some benefits to drivers, but not give them the full employment entitlemen­ts or put the companies on the hook for liability.

By no stretch is Tuesday's vote a global panacea for the ride-hailing industry, which has been ravaged by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Uber and Lyft will continue to face court challenges to their labour model elsewhere in the U.S. and abroad. Uber is fighting a suit by the attorney general in Massachuse­tts similar to the crackdown it faced in California. New Jersey and Connecticu­t also have strict standards like those adopted last year in California

that boosted benefits for workers across a range of industries.

In London, the U.K.'s highest court is expected to issue a final decision before the end of the year in Uber's fiveyear fight to keep its drivers from being reclassifi­ed as employees.

But in their home state, the ride-hailing and delivery service companies no longer have to worry about the state attorney general beating up on them to comply with Assembly Bill 5.

For Uber and Lyft, Propositio­n 22 also amounts to a hall pass from landmark decisions by the California Supreme Court dating back to 1989 that define who's an employee in what's widely considered an employee-friendly state.

“It's shocking, it's so bizarre, that this basic right could be put to the voters in an election in which deep pockets can influence something so important to the people,” said attorney Shannon Liss-Riordan.

The Boston-based lawyer has been the ride-hailing companies' most tenacious adversary in dozens of California lawsuits she's filed on behalf of drivers over seven years seeking benefits including a minimum wage, sick pay and workers' compensati­on.

Uber and Lyft still face substantia­l exposure for how they treated drivers prior to Propositio­n 22, despite reaching settlement agreements to resolve previous lawsuits, Liss-Riordan said. The majority of California drivers didn't take part in those deals and can still sue, she said.

In lieu of full employee benefits, Propositio­n 22 requires the companies to put in place a slimmer package that includes a guaranteed pay rate for when drivers have an assigned passenger, and some alternativ­e health, disability, and non-discrimina­tion guarantees. A Morgan Stanley analyst estimated this will raise Uber's labour costs by about five per cent.

Yet the initiative doesn't include an enforcemen­t mechanism for regulators or individual drivers to go after companies that shirk their obligation­s, legal experts said.

“Prop 22 creates these rights, but as slender and grossly insufficie­nt as they may be, there's real questions whether workers can access them,” said Terri Gerstein, director of the State and Local Enforcemen­t Project at Harvard University's Labor and Worklife Program.

The ballot measure reflects the argument Uber and Lyft have advanced in court for years that California's labour laws are outdated and don't apply to digital platforms that connect drivers and riders. In a role reversal, Propositio­n 22 requires state officials to defend the measure against any legal challenges. If they don't, the state must pay independen­t lawyers to fight for it. Some legal experts are concerned the initiative may serve as a model for other companies looking for a way out of paying for employee benefits, which in turn threatens to starve the public treasury of payroll and income tax revenue. The Tax Policy Institute estimates worker misclassif­ication costs California US$7 billion in annual revenue.

Gould, the professor, described Tuesday's vote as a paradox for California's propositio­n system, an exercise in direct democracy devised more than a century ago at a time when the state legislatur­e was unconcerne­d with the plight of the “little guy.”

“This has turned the propositio­n system on its head,” Gould said. “These companies are the new robber barons, and they're using the system to establish a privilege status for themselves.”

THESE COMPANIES ARE THE NEW ROBBER BARONS.

 ?? ROBYN BECK / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? A ride share driver opposes the California propositio­n. California voters put the brakes on a law stopping ride share firms from classifyin­g drivers as independen­t contractor­s.
ROBYN BECK / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILES A ride share driver opposes the California propositio­n. California voters put the brakes on a law stopping ride share firms from classifyin­g drivers as independen­t contractor­s.

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