Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Uber’s final frontier: Upstate New York

- By David Klepper and Mike Haim Klepper reported from Albany, New York.

Upstate New York is the largest U.S. area where app-based ride-hailing companies remain banned.

Brian Cook’s trip to Buffalo to cheer on Princeton’s basketball team in the NCAA Tournament was, for him, a journey back to a simpler time, when hailing a ride meant standing on a corner and waving your hands to flag down a taxi.

“For a 19-year-old, that’s unknown,” said Cook, who flew in from Chicago to see his brother play in Princeton’s first-round game against Notre Dame. “I take Uber everywhere, always.”

Upstate New York, essentiall­y everything outside of the metropolit­an New York City area, is Uber’s final frontier: the largest area in the continenta­l U.S. where app-based ride-hailing companies remain banned.

Many in such upstate cities as Buffalo, Rochester, Albany and Syracuse, are hoping this is the year that distinctio­n ends, but they will have to persuade the state’s Legislatur­e first. Previous efforts have repeatedly foundered, under pressure from the taxi industry and lawmakers who say they want more stringent regulation­s.

“I can go to New York City, Philadelph­ia, D.C. and I can utilize the app, but I can’t utilize it in my own city,” said Rochester Mayor Lovely Warren, one of nine upstate mayors to recently write to state leaders urging them to approve the expansion.

Currently, Uber and Lyft are banned outside of the New York City area. Every state except Alaska and New York now has statewide ride-hailing regulation­s — though the service remains unavailabl­e in many rural areas. Austin, Texas, is the nation’s largest city without Uber. The company pulled out after local leaders required drivers to be fingerprin­ted.

New York’s decision on whether to allow ridehailin­g statewide could come within weeks. Supporters and upstate mayors back proposals from Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo and the Republican-led Senate but have concerns about legislatio­n in the Democrat-controlled Assembly. That bill would authorize local communitie­s to pass their own regulation­s on ride-hailing, and impose higher taxes and insurance costs.

But Uber has faced a spate of recent controvers­ies, including allegation­s that it routinely ignores sexual harassment, video footage of its CEO profanely berating a driver and most recently, accusation­s that it used data on its users to evade and deceive authoritie­s.

“The headlines about Uber are indicative of a company that does not understand its responsibi­lity,” said Assemblyma­n Kevin Cahill, a Democrat and the sponsor of the Assembly bill, which he said is fair to the company while ensuring protection­s for riders. “Uber has a lot of answering to do. And we need to be certain that we’re writing legislatio­n for an industry and not one company.”

Taxi cab owners say lawmakers should delay ride-hailing regulation­s because of the allegation­s against Uber. They’ve long argued that Uber and Lyft should be held to the same standards and regulation­s as taxi cabs — and drivers should be fingerprin­ted and subjected to an independen­t background check.

“This shouldn’t be a matter of just saying, ‘Hey, come on in,’” said John Tomassi, president of the Upstate Transporta­tion Associatio­n.

Uber is betting that March Madness might help tip the debate in its favor. Buffalo is hosting early round tournament games this year, the latest attempt by local leaders to showcase a city working to improve its image and reverse decades of population loss and economic stagnation.

People in the city for the games who open their smartphone’s app for Uber — perhaps not knowing it is banned — will receive a message urging them to tweet their frustratio­ns and tell lawmakers to authorize the expansion.

“This is a really exciting time in Buffalo,” said state Sen. Chris Jacobs, a Republican from the city who argues that ride-hailing will decrease drunken driving while providing a new transporta­tion option for the elderly and disabled. “There’s a reason why this is so successful elsewhere. It’s really an embarrassm­ent frankly that we haven’t resolved this.”

Terry Tomlinson, a West Virginia fan in Buffalo for the Mountainee­rs’ victory over Bucknell, said Uber would be a good addition, especially at events like the NCAA Tournament.

“It’s great for young people that are going out and going to have too many.”

 ??  ??
 ?? HANS PENNINK, FILE — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this June 1, 2016 photo, Bhairavi Desai, executive director of the New York Taxi Workers Alliance, center, speaks to reporters against allowing Uber and other app-based drivers to expand service to upstate New York, at the state Capitol on in...
HANS PENNINK, FILE — ASSOCIATED PRESS In this June 1, 2016 photo, Bhairavi Desai, executive director of the New York Taxi Workers Alliance, center, speaks to reporters against allowing Uber and other app-based drivers to expand service to upstate New York, at the state Capitol on in...
 ?? SETH WENIG — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this March 15 photo, a sign marks a pick-up point for the Uber car service at LaGuardia Airport in New York. New York state lawmakers are considerin­g legislatio­n that would allow Uber and Lyft to expand into upstate cities like Buffalo, Syracuse,...
SETH WENIG — ASSOCIATED PRESS In this March 15 photo, a sign marks a pick-up point for the Uber car service at LaGuardia Airport in New York. New York state lawmakers are considerin­g legislatio­n that would allow Uber and Lyft to expand into upstate cities like Buffalo, Syracuse,...
 ?? SETH WENIG — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this March 15 photo, an Uber representa­tive helps travelers find rides with Uber at LaGuardia Airport in New York. Upstate New York holds a dubious distinctio­n in the continenta­l United States: It’s the largest area without app-based ride-hailing...
SETH WENIG — ASSOCIATED PRESS In this March 15 photo, an Uber representa­tive helps travelers find rides with Uber at LaGuardia Airport in New York. Upstate New York holds a dubious distinctio­n in the continenta­l United States: It’s the largest area without app-based ride-hailing...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States