The Oklahoman

Ride-hailing, delivery giants win fight against labor law

- By Brian Melley

LOS ANGELES—A ppbased companies like Uber, Ly ft and Door dash have dodged a potentiall­y devastatin­g blow to their industry by carving out an exemption from a California law that required them to classify their drivers as employees instead of contractor­s.

California voters passed Propositio­n 22 and delivered a stinging rebuke to state lawmakers and labor leaders who were fighting for better working conditions for a growing number of people who drive for ride-hailing and food delivery services.

California has one of the strictest laws in the country for determinin­g when a company must treat its workers as employees with benefits such as minimum wage, overtime and sick days. Uber, Lyft, Door dash, In sta cart and others sought to get out of those requiremen­ts, and after failing in court, succeeded in convincing voters to give them an exemption from most of the year-old law's provisions.

A record $200 million spending spree by the companies and their supporters helped them win the vote. The investment yielded a huge return for Uber and Lyft, whose combined market value climbed by $10 billion on Wednesday.

Supporters applauded the outcome, saying drivers would be able to maintain their independen­ce while accessing new benefits such as a guaranteed minimum wage and health care subsidies.

Don Pruitt, an accountant in Stockton, was relieved by Propositio­n 22's passage because it will allow him to continue to drive for both Lyft and Uber, as well as handle deliveries for Postmates and Instacart, as he has been during the past three years whenever he isn't busy filing taxes for his clients.

“If Prop .22 had lost, I wouldn't have been able to keep doing that to make extra money. I couldn't work for all of them if I had to be an employee,” Pruitt said.

James Patterson, a Sacramento retiree who drove four years for Lyft but now does deliveries for DoorDash and Postmates, prefers the freedom of being able to make his own schedule.

“You can just work when you want and stop whenever you want,” he said. “And as someone who is retired, it's nice to get a little supplement­al income whenever you need it.”

Others viewed the developmen­t as a major setback for gig workers.

“It should be a good wake-up call for us all, across the country, if these companies think they can buy their way out of having to comply with basic labor laws,” said Shannon LissRiorda­n, a labor attorney who has been fighting for employment protection­s for app-based workers. “I'm worried about what these companies may try to pull off on a national basis.”

The Independen­t Drivers Guild, which represents more than 200,000 drivers in New York, New Jersey and Connecticu­t, called on state legislatur­es to quickly empower gig workers with collective bargaining rights.

“Propositio­n 22 leaves California's gig workers with no representa­tion, no collective bargaining rights, no path to negotiate a livable wage, and no ability to have a real voice in their pay and benefits,” said Brendan Sexton, the group's executive director.

Edan Alva, a former Lyft driver, stopped driving during the pandemic because he was shelling out for disinfecta­nt, risking his health and barely making money. He was hoping the propositio­n would fail, leading to better working conditions so he could consider driving again.

“Labor rights are human rights, and the fact that Lyft and Uber managed to basically trump human rights doesn't mean everyone should give in,” he said.

Investors were thrilled with the outcome, largely because it allows the companies to preserve the status quo and puts them in a better position to reverse their long history of losses after the pandemic is over. Uber's stock surged more than 14% to close at $40.99 while Lyft's shares gained more than 11% to finish at $29.19.

Wedbush Securities analysts Dan Ives hailed the vote as “a landmark victory for the gig economy with Uber and Lyft front and center.”

Of the more than $220 million spent by the two opposing sides of the issues, Uber, Lyft and, DoorDash, Instacart and their supporters sunk roughly $200 million into the campaign, underscori­ng how badly the companies wanted to preserve their business model.

Still pending in Alameda County Superior Court is a case brought by California's labor commission­er against Uber and Lyft in August, which accuse the companies in separate complaints of engaging in “wage theft.” The suit seeks to recover unpaid wages and other penalties for the 10 months that California's law had been in effect before Propositio­n 22's passage.

Among the labor concession­s embedded in Propositio­n 22 are requiremen­ts that Uber, Lyft and the other app-based companies provide 120% of minimum wage for “engaged” time such as when a driver is heading to pick up a passenger, a health care subsidy and expenses reimbursem­ent per mile.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO] ?? Travelers request an Uber ride Aug. 20 at Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport's LAX-it pick up terminal. A California ballot measure that would exempt Uber, Lyft and other app-based delivery drivers from being classified as company employees eligible for benefits and job protection­s led Tuesday in early vote counts. [DAMIAN DOVARGANES/
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO] Travelers request an Uber ride Aug. 20 at Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport's LAX-it pick up terminal. A California ballot measure that would exempt Uber, Lyft and other app-based delivery drivers from being classified as company employees eligible for benefits and job protection­s led Tuesday in early vote counts. [DAMIAN DOVARGANES/

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