Chicago Sun-Times

NYC sets minimum pay standards for ride-hailing drivers

- BY KAREN MATTHEWS

NEW YORK — New York City taxi regulators approved new pay standards for app-based car services Tuesday that they say will raise drivers’ annual earnings by $10,000 a year, making it the first U.S. city to set such minimum pay standards.

The city’s Taxi and Limousine Commission approved the rules that will establish a per-minute and per-mile payment formula for Uber, Lyft, Via and Gett. The formula is supposed to result in drivers earning $17.22 an hour.

“This first-time regulation to form a floor for app driver earnings and give a modest first raise is a long time in the making,” said Bhairavi Desai, executive director of the Taxi Workers Alliance. “It’s the first real attempt anywhere to stop app driver pay cuts, which is an Uber and Lyft business practice at the heart of poverty wages. “

The new formula factors in drivers’ total working time and their time spent transporti­ng fares in order to incentiviz­e efficient use of drivers. The rules are intended to cut traffic congestion by reducing the amount of time drivers spend circling around in busy areas without fares, but that could result in longer waits for a ride.

Uber, which is pushing for congestion pricing as a way to unclog Manhattan traffic, said in a statement that the new rules “will lead to higher than necessary fare increases for riders while missing an opportunit­y to deal with congestion in Manhattan’s central business district.”

Lyft said the rules “will undermine competitio­n by allowing certain companies to pay drivers lower wages.” It called the new system “a step backward for New Yorkers.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States