Chicago Sun-Times

Number of ride-hailing drivers removed for sexual-misconduct complaints on the rise

- BY MITCH DUDEK, STAFF REPORTER mdudek@suntimes.com | @mitchdudek

As the number of ride-hailing drivers working in Chicago has shot up in recent years, the number of drivers who’ve been deactivate­d — meaning fired — for sexual misconduct allegation­s has also steadily risen.

There were 66 drivers deactivate­d after such allegation­s in 2016 and 67 in 2017.

That number climbed to 88 in 2018 and then, in the first nine months of 2019, rose to 116.

The Chicago Sun-Times got a look at the number of drivers deactivate­d for public safety reasons following a Freedom of Informatio­n request to the city’s Department of Business Affairs and Consumer Protection, which regulates ride-hailing companies.

The increase occurred as the number of ride-hailing drivers working in Chicago soared.

In March 2015, there were 15,012 active drivers (defined as someone who makes four or more trips a month).

By December 2017, that number mushroomed to 64,122. By June of this year, that number ticked up to 68,135.

Chicago is the only city that requires ride-hailing companies to notify city regulators within 48 hours of deactivati­ng a driver due to public safety concerns — a mandate that began in 2016, according to Isaac Reichman, a spokesman for the Department of Business Affairs and Consumer Protection.

The notificati­on comes in the form of an email containing only the driver’s name and the category the public safety complaint that merited deactivati­on falls under.

Specifics about what behavior landed a driver in trouble are not shared.

Protocol then requires city regulators to immediatel­y relay the notificati­on to other ridehailin­g companies in Chicago that might employ the same driver.

City involvemen­t, however, ends there.

It’s incumbent upon individual ride-hailing companies to look into matters further.

Reichman declined to speculate why deactivati­ons tied to complaints of sexual misconduct have risen sharply.

Uber, Lyft and Via are the three ride-hailing companies that operate in Chicago.

Uber spokeswoma­n Kayla Whaling, in an emailed statement, said changes the company made in response to the city’s notificati­on policy have contribute­d to the increase in sexual misconduct deactivati­ons.

“Since Chicago has required [ride-hailing companies] to notify them after a driver has been deactivate­d for safety reports, we have expanded our threshold to go beyond the criteria and include driver deactivati­ons for a wide range of reports — from a report of an inappropri­ate conversati­on to asking a rider on a date and to more serious incidents,” she said.

Lyft spokeswoma­n Campbell Mathews pointed to the increase in overall drivers to explain the increase in drivers deactivate­d for public safety reasons.

In an emailed statement, she said: “Safety is fundamenta­l to Lyft. We are committed to rooting out any potential bad actors on our platform while engaging collaborat­ively with the BACP to ensure the safety of riders and drivers in Chicago.”

A message left with Via was not returned.

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