San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

RIDE-HAILING DRIVERS BATTLING DANGERS OF PANDEMIC

- BY JOSHUA EMERSON SMITH

Chuck Beckner begged his 71year-old mother not to drive for Uber and Lyft during the pandemic. She didn’t listen. Then COVID-19 took Billie Sue Matchke’s life.

“She didn’t deserve that. She was such a good person, such a good mother,” Beckner said, looking at her Toyota Prius still parked in front of the mobile home they shared in El Cajon.

“She didn’t want to be on any life-sustaining equipment,” he added, fighting back tears. “The COVID gave her too much brain damage, so we had the feeding tube taken out.”

The pandemic has dramatical­ly raised the stakes in the yearslong fight over what protection­s Lyft, Uber and other gig-economy com

panies should be required to provide workers.

Adding to longstandi­ng wage and benefit gripes, Matchke’s fate is now the nightmare scenario facing ride-hailing drivers everywhere. Some have recently gone beyond just wearing masks and wiping down door handles to also installing makeshift partitions in their vehicles to shield themselves from potentiall­y infected customers.

Advocates have argued that drivers shouldn’t be forced to risk death just to make ends meet, and have blasted Uber and Lyft for making it nearly impossible for drivers to collect state unemployme­nt pay.

“The companies are notoriousl­y greedy,” said Terri Beilke, a San Diego-based driver and volunteer organizer with the advocacy group Rideshare Drivers United. “They have plenty of money, and yet they want to keep risking their drivers’ lives because, I guess, we’re expendable to them.”

Lyft and Uber have long maintained that their drivers should be classified as independen­t contractor­s, largely because of the freedom workers have to set their own schedules. As such, the companies have argued that workers have no legal right to protection­s such as unemployme­nt, overtime and sick leave.

Instead, they have rolled out a variety of programs and policies aimed at quelling health concerns. Those have included everything from offering temporary sick pay for those who test positive for the virus to doling out masks and other personal protective equipment, albeit often at the driver’s expense.

“As people continue to turn to ride-hailing throughout the COVID-19 crisis, the health and safety of our driver and rider community is our priority,” Lyft said in a statement.

Uber offered a similar response, adding: “The reports of the driver’s passing are heartbreak­ing and our thoughts are with her family and everyone suffering from this pandemic.”

‘Please, Mom, stop’

Matchke worked for more than three decades at the North Island Naval Air Rework Facility on Coronado before retiring. Still, she routinely needed money and had suffered a recent bankruptcy.

At first, driving for Uber and Lyft seemed like the perfect gig to help the sociable Matchke supplement her pension. However, her diabetes complicate­d the situation when the coronaviru­s started spreading throughout California.

“I told her, ‘Please, Mom, stop. People are dying,’” Beckner recalled.

Matchke quit driving for a few weeks after the state issued its first lockdown orders in March, but it wasn’t long before she was back behind the wheel. She had applied for unemployme­nt insurance, but like so many ride-hailing drivers had trouble securing the benefits.

Then around mid-june, Matchke fell ill. First she had a sore throat, but it quickly progressed into coughing and a fever. A few days later, her daughter drove her to the hospital, where it was soon confirmed that she had COVID-19.

Doctors quickly put her on heavy medication and a ventilator, marking the last time Beckner would have a fully coherent conversati­on with his mother.

“I talked to her on the phone, and I told her, ‘Mom, I love you,” he said. “You’re going to pull through this. You’re a strong woman.’”

She didn’t get better. Eventually, doctors told Beckner that the virus had caused considerab­le brain damage, and she died in early July.

“It just got worse and worse,” he said, weeping. “She got what’s called COVID brain.”

Carol Butler said she was crushed to hear about her longtime friend. The last time they had gotten together was just a week before Matchke went into the hospital.

“She was walking her dog and she came over to my house, and we talked for like five minutes. That’s the last I saw of her,” Butler said. “I knew about the dangers. You hear about it all the time, but you feel it a lot more when you have somebody close that dies.”

Beckner said the county conducted contract tracing, reaching out to friends and family, but nobody else in their immediate circle was identified as having the virus.

Insurance dispute

Uber and Lyft have refused to pay into California’s unemployme­nt fund, making it very difficult for the state’s roughly 500,000 drivers to secure such payments in recent months.

“The pandemic has put in stark relief how essential those protection­s are to workers,” said Ken Jacobs, chair of the Labor Center at UC Berkeley, who’s been closely following the issue.

“They are trying maximize earnings, minimize costs,” he said of gig-work employers. “It’s what they do as businesses, and it’s up to society and our public institutio­ns to set the parameters within which they work.”

Top state officials have attempted to draw those lines, passing Assembly Bill 5, which went into effect in January. The law puts significan­t legal pressure on companies to reclassify their workers as employees and provide the associated benefits.

Gig employers have refused to comply. Uber and Postmates challenged the constituti­onality of the law in federal court, while Uber, Lyft and others have spent millions on a ballot initiative campaign to sidestep the new law in favor of a suite of industry-designed labor standards.

Propositio­n 22 will appear on the November ballot; a “yes” vote would exempt the companies from AB 5.

In response, California Attorney General Xavier Becerra and the city attorneys of Los Angeles, San Francisco and San Diego in May sued the ride-hailing giants in San Francisco Superior Court. If the plaintiffs win, the companies would not only have to classify workers as employees but potentiall­y pay out hundreds of millions of dollars in back wages and penalties.

“I’m outraged,” said Assemblywo­man Lorena Gonzalez, D-san Diego, who authored AB 5. “I feel like these companies have been playing a game for years, using delay tactics and courts to put off the inevitable.”

In the meantime, many drivers are struggling to secure unemployme­nt insurance. Gig workers have reported that navigating the state’s bureaucrac­y can drag on for months, often with no resolution in sight.

To qualify, a driver must first apply for state unemployme­nt insurance. Then the Employment Developmen­t Department sends a determinat­ion letter of zero dollars based on paperwork filed by Uber and Lyft. Finally, the worker files an appeal and waits for the state to set up an audit to verify proof of income, usually through bank and tax statements.

EDD caseworker­s have reportedly encouraged drivers to abandon the process and apply for the federal Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance instead. It’s been easier for drivers to qualify for that emergency program, but it’s unclear how long it will last.

This has frustrated labor advocates, who argue gig employers should be footing the bill for such protection­s, not federal taxpayers. They also point out that state unemployme­nt insurance is often more generous for gig workers because of how benefits are calculated.

Beckner is one of those former drivers trying to navigate the state’s system. He said he’s been waiting for an audit from the state since April.

“I feel that Uber and Lyft should be paying for it because I’m an employee,” he said. “They definitely owe it to me.”

Riding out the pandemic

Some drivers have continued to work in recent months despite the health risks. Recently many of them have taken to installing clear partitions in their vehicles to prevent the sharing of germs. That adds to tensions between drivers and companies over who should pay for personal protective equipment.

Uber and Lyft have responded with a patchwork of policies around the issue. Lyft recently caught significan­t flak for selling such equipment to drivers. Uber has started giving away supplies, prioritizi­ng its busiest drivers.

“Drivers who are already economical­ly crunched should not be economical­ly liable for their own safety equipment,” said Tyler Sandness, a former driver who now works as an organizer with Rideshare Drivers United in Los Angeles. “It really should be the responsibi­lity of the employers to create a safe environmen­t, especially since it’s their customers who are at risk if drivers don’t have adequate access to stuff like that.”

Not all drivers want to be classified as employees. William Dagenhart, who has been driving more than eight hours a day for Lyft in San Diego, recently outfitted his vehicle with a homemade barrier. He downplayed concerns about driving during the pandemic but said the partition helps customers feel more comfortabl­e.

He said he’s happy with his current status. He’s concerned that if he’s an employee he will lose flexibilit­y around where and when he works.

“I like being an independen­t contractor,” he said. “I’m 100 percent dedicated to Lyft.”

He also doesn’t think ride-hailing companies should be forced to pay for unemployme­nt benefits or personal protective equipment such as masks or his new partition.

“It’s not their car, so they shouldn’t have to provide it,” said Dagenhart, 49. “It’s my car. I’m making payments on the car.”

Ricardo Sandoval, 66, made the partition for Dagenhart using a laser cutter he owns for another business. He said he’s now selling the sheets of thermoplas­tic polymer resin for $60 apiece. They attach to front car seats by threading plastic zip ties through holes cut into the shield.

“It doesn’t cover 100 percent, but it helps a lot,” said Sandoval, who also drives. “The riders love it.”

While he uses one in his car, Sandoval said he’s recently reduced his time on the road from about eight hours a day to just a few hours a week. He said he’s very concerned about catching the virus.

 ?? EDUARDO CONTRERAS U-T ?? Chuck Beckner holds a picture of his mother and a niece at his El Cajon home on July 17. His mother, Billy Sue Matchke, died of COVID-19 shortly after going back to work as an Uber and Lyft driver.
EDUARDO CONTRERAS U-T Chuck Beckner holds a picture of his mother and a niece at his El Cajon home on July 17. His mother, Billy Sue Matchke, died of COVID-19 shortly after going back to work as an Uber and Lyft driver.
 ?? U-T ?? Ride-hailing driver Ricardo Sandoval shows off the new homemade partition he installed in his car.
U-T Ride-hailing driver Ricardo Sandoval shows off the new homemade partition he installed in his car.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States