National Post

A few good reasons to hate Uber

DRIVING’S LORRAINE SOMMERFELD WRITES IT’S EASY TO MAKE MONEY WHEN THERE ARE NO REGULATION­S

- Driving Twitter. com/ TweeetLorr­aine

There are a lot of reasons I hate Uber, no matter how many headlines you read that it is transformi­ng the car-for-hire industry, it’s the inevitable wave of the future, and it provides opportunit­y to anyone willing to work hard. Bulloney.

Uber is the biggest, noisiest example of the race to create a totally unstable and dangerous workplace. Virtually anyone driving for Uber right now — estimates are 20,000 drivers in Toronto alone — is doing so uninsured. It is against the law to operate a motor vehicle without appropriat­e insurance; if you’re driving for Uber and your insurance company is unaware that you are doing so, you have invalid insurance. If you think because you still have that little pink slip you’re covered, you’re not.

“If you tell your personal insurer you are using the vehicle to carry passengers for compensati­on, they will cancel the policy because it is no longer a personal-use vehicle. The coverage will have to be changed to a commercial policy,” says Debbie Arnold, Group Business Developmen­t Manager with Sound Insurance Services, Inc. in Toronto.

Maybe you f i gure t he driver’s situation is the driver’s problem. You just want a cheap, fast ride. But one other detail that seems to get glided over is passenger protection. If you’re injured as a passenger, “your medical payments will be first paid by any health- care coverage (i.e. through their employer); if there aren’t any or if those are exhausted, it moves to their own automobile insurance,” Arnold says.

If they don’t have group benefits or their own vehicle insurance, payments will have to be paid by either the Uber driver’s insurance policy ( if policy was invalid, that insurer may sue the driver for these payments) or by the third party ( other vehicle in crash) insurer, Arnold explains. Accident benefits in Ontario are set up so that claims will be paid; the passenger will be taken care of regardless, however, it can be a long and confusing process since, effectivel­y, the Uber driver wasn’t insured.

If the injury meets the “catastroph­ic” guideline and the Uber driver was at fault for the accident, then the Uber driver will be liable for any lawsuit and will be held personally responsibl­e. Because there would not be any coverage under the Uber driver’s personal policy, he or she is responsibl­e for whatever the award is once that goes to court (about five years), during which time, the Uber driver will be incurring legal fees for which he or she is personally responsibl­e. Clear as mud, right? Uber is far from the only company trouncing on regulation­s and skirting laws to set up shop, but it is one of the biggest and doing it right up the nose of every city it shows up in.

I did a totally non- scientific poll among some young Uber users: my son and his friends. Their overwhelmi­ng appreciati­on was about how easy and fast it was. A generation accustomed to hitting a button and having magic happen is made for Uber. “Drivers are competing to come pick me up!” laughed one. If you’ve ever waited for a cab that never came, it’s easy to understand the sentiment. “And, dude had, like, water bottles and everything,” he finished.

They like that no money changes hands, as the app handles the billing through Uber. I asked what would happen if that driver, dude with the water bottles and everything, got hurt either on or off the job and couldn’t work for a period of time. “Well, another Uber driver would answer,” they concluded.

Why should a passenger care if a driver — a worker — is hurt on the job and not protected? I reminded the kids that their own protection if they are in a crash is not so clear-cut, either.

I don’t blame them for not wanting to see how the sausage gets made. There was one holdout in the room, a young man who simply stated, “This is about a corporatio­n — Uber — getting rich but not having to be responsibl­e for anything. Others — the drivers — assume all of the risk, and Uber just gets the money.”

Uber rules in Canada differ from those in the U. S. Everybody wants to be an i ndependent contractor until something goes wrong. Uber makes much of their $5,000,000 insurance coverage, but that’s to cover their own butt, not their individual “independen­t contractor” drivers.

It’s easier to earn a profit when you don’t have to factor in things like insurance and workers’ compensati­on.

Change is good. We’re seeing most industries get shaken up and reordered from the ground up, sometimes seemingly overnight. I’m a huge advocate of figuring out how to get on the train before it runs you over, but embracing change that eradicates human rights and how we value work, as well as individual­s, is a fool’s game.

We are living in an era where there is always someone who will do your job for less, and watching Uber barge around the car-for-hire industry unmolested by regulation, screaming about the benefits for consumers while ignoring the cost to workers, is backward and ignorant. When your job is up next, when you’re undercut by a few bucks or someone who agrees to no benefits, when your position is flipped to a contract so you can’t secure a mortgage or plan for a family, let me know how cool Uber is.

Am I against the overhaul of the taxi industry as we historical­ly know it? Hardly. The taxi industry should have cleaned up its own stable a long time ago. I’m not against the overhaul of any industry. I’m simply against that overhaul taking place on the backs of uninsured drivers and poorly protected passengers, so some corporate entity that doesn’t give a damn about either can make more money. This is less a giant step into our technologi­cal future and more like a giant leap back to the Wild West.

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