Las Vegas Review-Journal

Uber gets 18-month extension for London service

- By Kelvin Chan

LONDON — Uber can keep operating in London for another year and a half after winning its appeal of a decision by the British capital’s transit regulator not to renew its license.

The San Francisco-based ride-hailing company had challenged Transport for London’s decision in late 2019 not to renew its operating license over safety concerns involving impostor drivers.

Deputy Chief Magistrate Tan Ikram said Monday that he found Uber to be “fit and proper” and granted the company an 18-month license extension, which comes with 21 conditions.

It’s a crucial legal victory in a lucrative European market as the company struggles to turn a profit. Uber posted a $1.8 billion loss in the latest quarter because millions of people stayed home amid the pandemic. That has raised doubts that it can meet its goal of becoming profitable by 2021.

The company faces a slew of other regulatory challenges around the globe. In Britain, it’s also involved in a separate case at the Supreme Court over whether drivers should be considered workers with rights, in a ruling that could shake up the country’s gig economy.

The magistrate said he took into account Uber’s efforts to improve oversight and tighten up identity checks. He said he didn’t find any evidence of a “cover up” of the driver photo fraud problem.

“Uber doesn’t have a perfect record, but it has an improving picture,” Ikram said. “I am satisfied that they are doing what a reasonable business in their sector could be expected to do, perhaps even more.”

Uber’s 45,000 drivers normally provide millions of trips each month in London, where its services have proved popular with residents who want an alternativ­e to the city’s more expensive traditiona­l black cabs.

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