The Commercial Appeal

Uber cuts 3,000 jobs from workforce

Offices also will be closed during pandemic

- Cathy Bussewitz ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK – Uber has cut 3,000 jobs from its workforce, its second major wave of layoffs in two weeks as the coronaviru­s slashed demand for rides.

The San Francisco company has cut a quarter of its workforce since the year began, eliminatin­g 3,700 people from the payroll earlier this month.

Uber will be re-focusing on its core business, moving people and delivering food and groceries, said CEO Dara Khosrowsha­hi, in a note to employees Monday.

The ride-hailing giant will be closing or consolidat­ing 45 offices globally, and almost all department­s will be affected by layoffs. The company is closing its business for developing products and services for its platform and a unit working on artificial intelligen­ce. It will also pursue strategic alternativ­es for its job recruiting app, Uber Works, Khosrowsha­hi said.

“This is a decision I struggled with,” Khosrowsha­hi said. “Our balance sheet is strong, Eats is doing great, Rides looks a little better, maybe we can wait this damn virus out . ... I wanted there to be a different answer ... but there simply was no good news to hear.”

Uber’s rides business, the company’s main profit generator, fell 80% in April compared to the same month last year.

“Ultimately, I realized that hoping the world would return to normal within any predictabl­e time frame, so we could pick up where we left off on our path to profitability, was not a viable option,” he said.

Uber lost $2.9 billion in the first quarter as the coronaviru­s pandemic decimated its overseas investment­s. Companies that rely on the sharing economy have been hit hard as people stay indoors and shy from the service.

Lyft, Uber’s main U.S. rival, laid off 982 people last month, or 17% of its workforce.

Uber estimates it will incur $175 million to $220 million in charges related to the restructur­ing, including severance, other benefits and office closing costs, according to a federal filing. Combined with the earlier layoffs, the changes are designed to save $1 billion annually.

Uber’s drivers are considered freelance or contract workers, not fullfledged employees, so despite the sharp drop in their incomes from obliterate­d demand, they are not eligible for severance or benefits from the company.

One silver lining to the pandemic is that Uber’s Eats business has become more important to people staying home and restaurant­s, and delivery is here to stay, Khosrowsha­hi said.

He cautioned, however, that the growth in Eats does not come close to covering expenses.

“I have every belief that the moves we are making will get Eats to profitability, just as we did with Rides, but it’s not going to happen overnight,” Khosrowsha­hi said.

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