Los Angeles Times

Plan would loosen taxicab rules

Companies find ally in state legislator, whose bill aims to make them more competitiv­e.

- By Liam Dillon

SACRAMENTO — Uber and Lyft continue to expand their dominance in California, and taxi companies are looking to the state Legislatur­e for some relief.

“If communitie­s value taxicabs, then we’re going to have to have a regulatory environmen­t that allows cab companies to thrive,” said William Rouse, general manager of Yellow Cab of Los Angeles. “Right now, that’s just not the case.”

Rouse and others in the taxi industry have turned to Assemblyma­n Evan Low (DCampbell) for help. Low has introduced AB 1069, which aims to ease taxi regulation­s to make the companies more competitiv­e with their ride-hailing rivals.

Under Low’s legislatio­n, which overwhelmi­ngly passed the Assembly last month, taxi regulation would occur regionally rather than city by city. This means, for instance, cabs could pick up passengers in Los Angeles, drop them off in Santa Monica and vice versa without needing multiple permits.

Taxis also could lower or raise their prices — similar to Uber and Lyft’s surgeprici­ng models — in response to demand, with a maximum price set by each region.

“If we don’t do anything now, they will completely be annihilate­d,” Low said.

In California, numbers show the extent of the taxi industry’s decline and the ride-hailing boom. Taxi trips dropped nearly 30% in Los Angeles from 2012, right before Uber and Lyft began operating, to 2015. New research from the Brookings Institutio­n shows that the number of ride-hailing drivers doubled in Los Angeles, Sacramento, San Diego and San Jose in 2015.

Uber and Lyft’s business models rely on using public pressure and lobbying to shape and change laws and regulation­s, said Elizabeth Pollman, a professor at Loyola Law School who has written about how Uber and Lyft have challenged existing state and local rules.

“Their business model wasn’t just to replicate the world we had, but rather to create a new model,” Pollman said.

Uber and Lyft have succeeded at the state Capitol in getting regulation­s and laws passed to benefit their industry and shooting down those that don’t. Even if Low’s bill passes, major regulatory disparitie­s between ride-hailing companies and taxis will remain.

Taxi drivers still will have to pass fingerprin­t-based background checks, while Uber and Lyft drivers face less onerous rules. After years of delays, the California Public Utilities Commission, which regulates ridehailin­g statewide, is scheduled in the fall to decide whether ride-hailing drivers will need to pass fingerprin­t checks as well. Neither Uber nor Lyft has taken a position on Low’s bill, but each company has been generally supportive of loosening taxi regulation­s.

Still, cab companies and transporta­tion experts said the legislatio­n could have clear benefits for the taxi industry. Currently, it costs more than $3,000 a year for taxi permits to operate in four cities — Torrance, Redondo Beach, Hermosa Beach and Manhattan Beach — that stretch roughly six miles along the Los Angeles County coast. In Silicon Valley, similar annual city-by-city fees can run $13,000. Low’s bill aims to wipe away such charges and replace them with a single payment.

The measure would promote greater competitio­n by allowing taxis to grow their own on-demand apps and other dispatch services with fewer restrictio­ns, said Bruce Schaller, a New Yorkbased consultant who monitors both industries.

Schaller said the taxi industry’s problems go beyond regulation, and cabs will need to dramatical­ly improve their service and reduce their fares.

“Why do people use Uber and Lyft?” Schaller said. “It’s because they’re cheap and they show up. That’s it.”

Low’s bill faces many obstacles. Last year, he wrote legislatio­n that would have turned over taxi regulation to the state, but Gov. Jerry Brown vetoed it. The governor’s veto message said he didn’t believe such a major change was warranted. Low’s current bill shifts the burden from cities to counties, but counties don’t want the responsibi­lity.

In a May letter opposing the bill, a representa­tive of the California State Assn. of Counties wrote that counties were ill-equipped to handle taxi regulation­s without help from cities.

“AB 1069 confuses the relationsh­ip between counties and cities by arbitraril­y placing the entire burden on the county for taxicab licensure,” the letter said.

Low said he’s open to another entity, such as regional agencies including the Southern California Assn. of Government­s in the Los Angeles area, to regulate taxis instead of counties handling them. But he warned that local government­s shouldn’t be shortsight­ed in maintainin­g strict regulation­s and high fees that could continue driving taxis out of business.

In that case, Low said, cities “won’t get any of their revenues whatsoever.”

 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? A BILL PASSED by the state Assembly would consolidat­e taxi permit fees and allow demand-based ride pricing, similar to Uber and Lyft.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times A BILL PASSED by the state Assembly would consolidat­e taxi permit fees and allow demand-based ride pricing, similar to Uber and Lyft.

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