Imperial Valley Press

UK top court gives Uber drivers benefits in landmark ruling

-

LONDON (AP) — Uber drivers in Britain are entitled to benefits like paid holidays and minimum wage, the country’s top court ruled Friday, in a decision that threatens the company’s business model and holds broad implicatio­ns for the gig economy.

The ruling that the drivers should be classed as “workers” and not self-employed is a big defeat for the ride- hailing giant. And it could inspire similar legal action against other companies who rely on gig workers as well as influence courts in other countries grappling with the issue, experts said.

The seven Supreme Court judges who heard the case unanimousl­y rejected Uber’s appeal against an employment tribunal ruling that two Uber drivers were “workers” under British law.

Yaseen Aslam and James Farrar, the two drivers, cheered the outcome.

“This ruling will fundamenta­lly re-order the gig economy and bring an end to rife exploitati­on of workers by means of algorithmi­c and contract trickery,” said James Farrar said by email. The pair took Uber to the tribunal in 2016, which ruled in their favor. The decision was upheld in two rounds of appeals before it arrived at the Supreme Court.

San Francisco- based Uber, which has 65,000 active drivers and 5 million regular users in the U.K., had argued that Aslam and Farrar were independen­t contractor­s. The company said it respected the court’s decision, which it argued focused on a small number of drivers who used the Uber app in 2016.

“Since then we have made some significan­t changes to our business, guided by drivers every step of the way,” Jamie Heywood, Uber’s regional general manager for Northern and Eastern Europe, said in a statement. “These include giving even more control over how they earn and providing new protection­s like free insurance in case of sickness or injury.”

Heywood said the company would consult with its U.K. drivers to understand the changes they want.

The ruling clarified that drivers are considered to be on the job when they are logged in to the Uber app in their territory and ready and willing to accept rides, which could be used to calculate minimum wage and holiday pay. Uber had argued that drivers were only working when they were making a journey with a paying passenger.

The case is now expected to return to the employment tribunal for decisions on compensati­on over lost pay for about two dozen drivers involved in the original claim. Another 2,000 drivers’ cases had been stayed pending the decision. Drivers could be entitled to an average of 12,000 pounds ($16,800), estimated law firm Leigh Day, which is representi­ng drivers.

Uber drive Conrad Delphine looked forward to getting paid time off after years of working without holiday or sick pay.

“I am very pleased. It means I can go on holiday without having to worry about how to pay for it,” Delphine said. “Things have been worse because of coronaviru­s. If we catch the virus we should be entitled to sick pay. It’s about time we had some decent pay and conditions.”

Uber and other appbased ride-hailing services avoided a similar attempt in California to classify drivers as employees eligible for benefits and job protection­s. The companies bankrolled Propositio­n 22, a ballot measure exempting them from the state’s gig-economy laws by keeping drivers classified as independen­t contractor­s able to set their own hours. Voters approved it in November.

The British judges on Friday cited a number of factors in their decision: Uber sets fares and contract terms and penalizes drivers who reject or cancel rides. It also uses passenger ratings to control drivers and minimizes communicat­ions between drivers and passengers, which results in the service being “very tightly defined and controlled by Uber.”

“Drivers are in a position of subordinat­ion and dependency to Uber,” with little ability to improve their economic position and the only way to increase their earnings is by “working longer hours while constantly meeting Uber’s measures of performanc­e,” said judge George

Leggatt, as he read out a summary of the ruling on a court livestream.

Uber said some features cited in the ruling no longer exist, noting that since 2017 drivers face no repercussi­on for rejecting multiple consecutiv­e trips.

Providing more benefits for its drivers is likely increase costs for Uber, which already was struggling to make a profit and had previously run into regulatory trouble in London, where authoritie­s had sought to revoke its license. The changes could ultimately push up fares for riders, experts say.

The decision also comes as the coronaviru­s has upended Uber’s operating environmen­t. The company slashed more than 6,000 jobs last year as the virus decimated demand for trips while boosting demand for its Uber Eats food delivery service. The ruling doesn’t affect Uber Eats couriers.

Experts said the ruling does not have a major immediate impact on other companies because the judges cited business practices specific to Uber, which in the U.K. has to operate under specific regulation­s governing minicabs.

“That being said, whilst it’s not going to automatica­lly make all gig economy workers have those rights, it’s obviously going to make people alive to the potential for bringing those claims” in court, said Joe Aiston, a senior associate at law firm Taylor Wessing. “And you wouldn’t be surprised to see more claims coming in against other similar businesses.”

Aiston said the ruling could act as reference for courts and regulators outside Britain grappling with similar issues, such as the European Union’s executive Commission, which is due to publish recommenda­tions next week on how to regulate gig economy platform workers.

Ahead of that review, Uber CEO Dara Khosrowsha­hi published a white paper this week urging the EU to adopt laws that encourage “flexible and decent earning opportunit­ies” and suggested they could adopt legislatio­n similar to California’s, along with other ideas such as a portable benefits fund.

THE HAGUE, Netherland­s ( AP) — Dutch senators late Friday approved hastily drawn up legislatio­n underpinni­ng the country’s coronaviru­s curfew, ensuring that it will remain in force at least until early March despite a court order on Tuesday that it be scrapped.

The vote — nearly an hour after the 9 p.m. start of the curfew — was a victory for the government in its two-pronged battle to ensure the measure remains in force amid fears that more transmissi­ble COVID-19 variants will reverse a weeks-long decline in infections.

Several opposition parties joined government senators in approving the legislatio­n by a 45-13 vote, after a debate with Justice Minister Ferd Grapperhau­s that lasted several hours.

Earlier Friday an appeals court said it will take a week to decide whether to overturn the ban on the curfew that was imposed by a judge, in an injunction filed by a group called Viruswaarh­eid, or Virustruth, that opposes the national lockdown. Their decision was rendered largely irrelevant by the senate vote.

A clear majority of lawmakers in the lower house of parliament, including a number of opposition parties, approved the legislatio­n Thursday.

The 9 p.m. to 4:30 a.m. curfew sparked rioting when it was introduced last month but is broadly supported and adhered to.

In a summary judgment Tuesday, a judge in The Hague rejected the legal basis for the curfew, saying that the situation was not urgent enough for the government to use a law allowing it to act swiftly in acute emergencie­s such as a major breach of the dikes that protect the low-lying Netherland­s from high water.

In court Friday, government lawyer Reimer Veldhuis used the dikes as a metaphor for the coronaviru­s pandemic that has caused more than 15,000 confirmed deaths in the country.

“Just before the introducti­on of the curfew, the water was splashing against the dike,” he told the appeals panel.

He said the government’s scientific advisors warned it of a “third wave bearing down on the Netherland­s” swelled by the more transmissi­ble variant of the virus first discovered in Britain.

“In those circumstan­ces, the Cabinet believed it had to take emergency measures in the form of a curfew,” Veldhuis said. “To remain in the metaphor, the water level had to be reduced as quickly as possible to make room for the new wave approachin­g us.”

However, Viruswaarh­eid lawyer Gerben van de Corput told the court that the initial ban was correct and should be upheld because the government did not need to use the emergency legislatio­n.

Citing one of the government’s advisors who has called the looming threat of more contagious variants a “dark cloud,” Van de Corput told the judges, “a dark cloud is clearly something different to a dike breach.”

The Netherland­s has been in a tough lockdown since mid- December, sending infection numbers slowly lower.

 ?? MIKE CORDER
AP PHOTO/ ?? The leader of the coronaviru­s-skeptical group Viruswaarh­eid, or Virustruth, Willem Engel, and the group’s legal advisor, Jeroen Pols, left, enter the court building for an appeal hearing into the Dutch government’s curfew in The Hague, Netherland­s, Friday.
MIKE CORDER AP PHOTO/ The leader of the coronaviru­s-skeptical group Viruswaarh­eid, or Virustruth, Willem Engel, and the group’s legal advisor, Jeroen Pols, left, enter the court building for an appeal hearing into the Dutch government’s curfew in The Hague, Netherland­s, Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States