Lodi News-Sentinel

Uber, Lyft drivers won’t need to be fingerprin­ted

- By Olga R. Rodriguez

SAN FRANCISCO — California regulators on Thursday adopted new safety rules for ride-hailing companies Uber and Lyft that will not require their drivers be fingerprin­ted as part of background checks, rejecting a push by the taxi industry.

The California Public Utilities Commission in a meeting in San Francisco unanimousl­y voted to approve the safety regulation­s it proposed last month after a year-long review spearheade­d by the taxi industry.

Dave Sutton, a spokesman for a group that represents the Taxicab, Limousine & Paratransi­t Associatio­n, called the decision “a mistake.”

“The CPUC has made a mistake that may come back to haunt California riders,” Sutton said.

It is generally up to local government­s to conduct background checks on taxi drivers and those checks often include fingerprin­ting them. In California, Los Angeles, San Diego and San Francisco all require taxi drivers to be fingerprin­ted, Sutton said.

He said that when a taxi driver is fingerprin­ted, those prints are reviewed by local law enforcemen­t and the FBI.

“Law enforcemen­t and experts agree that finger prints based background checks are far superior in terms of protecting passengers,” he added.

But the CPUC disagreed, saying fingerprin­ting doesn’t insure more safety to riders.

“Although we recognize the public’s familiarit­y with fingerprin­ting, we do not see that a demonstrat­ively greater level of safety would be added over and above the current background-check protocols,” Commission­er Liane Randolph wrote.

The regulation­s, first announced Oct. 4, will require the ride-hailing companies to conduct annual screenings of drivers and that they use third-party agencies that are nationally accredited to run background checks.

In an effort to address safety concerns, California lawmakers in 2016 passed a law prohibitin­g ride-hailing companies from hiring drivers who are registered sex offenders or have been convicted of violent felony crimes.

Commission­ers found commercial background checks “satisfy the Commission’s public policy and safety objectives, and allow flexibilit­y to meet the background requiremen­ts that the Legislatur­e has mandated” and pointed out that people who submit their fingerprin­ts via Livescan, a popular screening software, are not required to use a photo I.D.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States