The Oklahoman

NYC drivers seek fuel surcharges

Caravan across Brooklyn Bridge planned for Tuesday

- Bobby Caina Calvan

NEW YORK – With fuel prices approachin­g $5 a gallon at some New York City gas stations, drivers for Uber and Lyft and the city’s taxi fleets are demanding rate surcharges to help offset the rising cost of keeping cars on the road.

A group of upset taxi drivers rallied Friday at a New York City gas station, where regular gasoline had surpassed $4.60 a gallon.

On Tuesday, drivers are planning to deploy a caravan across the Brooklyn Bridge to midtown Manhattan to deliver their grievances to Uber executives.

The spike in gasoline prices recently prompted ride-hailing app companies Uber and Lyft to temporaril­y hit passengers in many cities with a small surcharge to help drivers – who pay for their own fuel. But they declined to apply the surcharge in New York City.

“Over just the past few weeks alone, the price of gasoline has gone up by over 30%,” said Bhairavi Desai, the executive director of the New York Taxi Workers Alliance, which organized the gas station rally. “Money that they would normally take home for rent, groceries and medicine, they’re now having to spend on gasoline. That burden needs to be spread out; it should not just be on the drivers alone.”

Earlier this month, New York City for-hire drivers finally got a long-sought cost-of-living adjustment – a 5.3% increase on minimum rates. Drivers say that didn’t keep pace with inflation.

“Fuel prices are going up and up, and we cannot afford it. We want some help from the government,” said Suresh Chand, who has been driving a taxi for 25 years.

In an email, Lyft said New York drivers can still take advantage of a cash-back program using a company sponsored debit card, as well as tax deductions for vehicle depreciati­on and car payments. The company acknowledg­ed higher gas prices were affecting drivers, but said its drivers were earning more per hour on average than a year ago.

“Uber increased its rate for drivers 5.3% at the start of March, bringing the minimum wage up to $31.74 in New York City and helping with increasing fuel prices. This is part of an annual raise tied to the rate of inflation – the only one mandated in the entire state,” Uber spokespers­on Freddi Goldstein said.

The surcharges don’t add up to much, but it would help, said Raul Rivera, who helped found NYC Drivers Unite, which is part of a coalition pushing for changes on how companies like Lyft and Uber treat and compensate their workers.

“It’s better than nothing,” Rivera said, “but New York City Uber drivers aren’t getting anything.”

When gas prices began rising, Rivera started worrying. It was hard enough to make a living as the pandemic took its toll on drivers, as office workers left Manhattan to work at home and tourists stopped pouring in from the airports.

When the cost of fuel eclipsed $4 a gallon, and continued climbing, Rivera soon confronted a reckoning: Should he put the brakes on his livelihood until he could better manage rising expenses?

Rivera decided to cut his losses and temporaril­y give up the car he was renting for $400 a week to taxi people across New York City as an app driver for Uber and Lyft.

“It just got way too much, and then the gas got really bad,” said Rivera.

Organizers hope the parade of vehicles they are planning for Tuesday will draw attention to the plight of drivers.

They are now being joined in their fight by taxi drivers. On Thursday, Uber said it would begin listing New York City taxi cabs on its app, after a long rivalry for the same customers.

 ?? BRITTAINY NEWMAN/AP ?? Yellow cab drivers double park for a rally calling for surcharges on fuel at a Shell gas station in New York on Friday.
BRITTAINY NEWMAN/AP Yellow cab drivers double park for a rally calling for surcharges on fuel at a Shell gas station in New York on Friday.

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