Chicago Sun-Times

UNION POINTS TO MEDALLION SALE TO SHOW CABBIES NEED RELIEF IN RIDE- HAILING ERA

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN City Hall Reporter Email: fspielman@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ fspielman

A union representi­ng struggling Chicago cab drivers pointed to results of this week’s auction of taxicab medallions as proof that cabbies need relief.

Thirty- two medallions — once valued at $ 360,000 before the city’s two- tiered regulatory process ushered in the ridehailin­g era — were auctioned Wednesday for far less, with prices ranging from $ 44,000 to $ 45,000 apiece, officials said.

The remaining 28 medallions were acquired by Capital One, the original lender on loans that had been used to purchase the medallions.

The American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Local 2500 — representi­ng hundreds of cabdrivers — called the auction results a “prime example” of how city regulation­s governing medallions “strip drivers of due process rights” that cover “other types of foreclosur­e proceeding­s.”

“Instead of going through the regular foreclosur­e process which provides both parties due process, the city has set up a system where a lender can auction off one’s property out from under them,” said the union’s spokesman, David Kreisman.

“The city should fix these rules so drivers have justice and their property isn’t taken away from them until their day in court. The city needs to help protect their investment in these medallions. We enjoy due process in this country. These regulation­s strip people of their due process. We’re looking at this medallion crisis and they are not doing anything to provide drivers any sort of assistance.”

Lilia Chacon, a spokeswoma­n for the Department of Business Affairs and Consumer Protection, said city officials “remain committed to having open dialogue with the industry, including exploring reforms to further reduce the regulation­s on taxis.”

“While taxi medallions are privately held and all transactio­ns take place in marketplac­e and the city is not party to those transactio­ns, we are open to bringing the industry together — drivers and owners to find common ground to improve the taxi industry,” Chacon wrote, pointing to a previously approved an 80 percent reduction in the medallion transfer tax.

Specifical­ly, the union wants the City Council to: eliminate the vehicle age limit so long as the cab can pass inspection; waive the ground transporta­tion tax for struggling drivers; and eliminate the medallion license renewal fee.

The union is further demanding that City Hall: “enact protection­s for lease drivers in the event of a fleet bankruptcy; reinstate the lottery for cityowned medallions to reduce operating costs for lease drivers; strengthen foreclosur­e protection­s in the city medallion owner rules and eliminate “regulatory barriers” standing in the way of a “driver- topassenge­r taxi ehail app” that would compete with Uber and Lyft.

Last month, ASCME released a study showing taxis are fighting a losing battle against Uber and Lyft, with 40 percent of all medallions “inactive.”

The report showed that 774 medallions have been “surrendere­d to the city at some point,” with 579 more receiving foreclosur­e notices and 107 lawsuits filed since October.

It also showed that 2,940 taxis — that’s about 42 percent of the city’s 6,999 taxi medallions — were classified as “inactive” in March after having failed to pick up a single passenger in the previous month.

That means those licenses face “imminent foreclosur­e in the coming months,” the study says. In March 2014, 16 percent of medallions were inactive.

More than 227,000 ride- hailing vehicles were registered to operate in Chicago as of April, compared to 6,999 taxi medallions, the study showed.

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