Las Vegas Review-Journal

Lyft to have smaller presence than rival Uber

Ride-hailing company seeks licensing for 2,500 cars

- By Richard N. Velotta

Lyft’s proposed pricing is based on a base charge, the total miles traveled, total minutes traveled, a $1.55 “trust and safety fee” and the state’s 3 percent tax on ground transporta­tion.

The ride-hailing company Lyft will only be a fraction of the size of its rival Uber when it opens for business in Nevada, requesting a maximum of 2,500 cars for licensing its first two years of operation compared with the unlimited number sought by Uber.

San Francisco-based Lyft submitted a revised applicatio­n to the Nevada Transporta­tion Authority requesting not more than 2,500 licenses and the required $150,000 applicatio­n fee. Initially, Lyft filed under an earlier emergency regulation process that didn’t list the number of vehicles it planned to have.

The Transporta­tion Authority has tentativel­y scheduled a Sept. 11 meeting at which a public hearing would be conducted and the three-member commission could adopt regulation­s that would enable transporta­tion network companies to operate.

Lyft’s licensing applicatio­n also spells out its pricing structure, which is almost identical to Uber’s proposal.

Lyft’s proposed pricing is based on a base charge, the total miles traveled, total minutes traveled, a $1.55 “trust and safety fee” and the state’s 3 percent tax on ground transporta­tion.

Lyft and Uber will charge a $2.40 base charge, $1.85 per mile, 30 cents per minute and a $5 cancellati­on fee if a customer cancels more than five minutes after first hailing a ride. There’s also a $5 minimum fare. Uber’s “safe rides” fee is $1.

Lyft also filed a “Plus Pricing” price list in its applicatio­n. That’s the dynamic pricing model ride-hailing companies use to encourage more drivers to hit the road during busy hours. Lyft’s “Plus Pricing” lists a $15 base charge, $5 per mile, 90 cents per minute and a minimum fare of $25. The cancellati­on penalty and the trust and safety fee are the same.

Plus Pricing times are communicat­ed to customers at the time of a ride request.

In a related matter, the Las Vegas Convention Center is expected to have differing drop-off and pick-up procedures for ride-hailing customers based on the size of the trade show or convention using the facility.

Rossi Ralenkotte­r, president and CEO of the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority, said Wednesday that the size of the show and how show managers use the facility’s transporta­tion infrastruc­ture will dictate where and how drivers will be routed around the convention center campus.

Generally, Ralenkotte­r said, Uber and Lyft drivers will be directed to an area used by limousines on the east side of the convention facility for most shows. But that could be different based on the size of the show and how a show’s attendees tend to use ride-hailing.

Organizers of the Consumer Electronic­s Show, for example, lobbied heavily for the legalizati­on of transporta­tion network companies in Nevada knowing that CES attendees would be heavy users of Uber and Lyft. —Contact reporter Richard N. Velotta at rvelotta@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-477-3893. Find @RickVelott­a on Twitter.

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