Vancouver Sun

Uber must pay man $35K, provide accessible rides

Wheelchair user discrimina­ted against, province's human rights tribunal rules

- SUSAN LAZARUK slazaruk@postmedia.com

Uber Canada has been ordered to pay $35,000 to a rider who uses a wheelchair after the B.C. Human Rights Tribunal found he was discrimina­ted against because of his disability. The ride-hailing app was also ordered to offer those with disabiliti­es accessible rides, according to the ruling this week.

Complainan­t Martin Bauer was granted the award “as compensati­on for injury to his dignity, feelings and self respect,” the ruling by tribunal member Amber Prince said.

“Uber discrimina­ted against Mr. Bauer in the area of services based on physical disability ... (and) must provide a wheelchair accessible option in the Lower Mainland within one year of this decision,” she wrote.

It was the first time a ride-hailing app in Canada has been the subject of a human rights tribunal, the ruling said. But Uber told the 2022 hearing into Bauer's complaint that it didn't violate the Human Rights Code because it's an app and doesn't provide a service as defined under the code.

The company also said it was exempt from providing accessible rides in B.C. because of a law that allows it and other ride-hailing apps to pay a “per trip” fee instead of accommodat­ing those with physical disabiliti­es, according to the ruling.

The tribunal rejected both arguments and declared Uber contravene­d Section 8 of the B.C. Human Rights Code, which precludes discrimina­tion on the basis of physical disability and other factors.

Bauer was seeking $100,000 in compensati­on, but Prince said she aligned the award with those in similar cases.

Bauer couldn't be reached for comment, but he told the hearing accessible transporta­tion is of “enormous consequenc­e” and it is “particular­ly important for myself since I am currently entirely reliant on wheelchair taxis.”

B.C.'s attorney general was named as a respondent in the complaint and in its submission said it implemente­d a 30-cent per-trip fee under the Passenger Transporta­tion Act or Regulation as an incentive for ride-hailing apps to provide a wheelchair-accessible ride option, not to exempt them from offering one.

Uber argued that the Passenger Transport Act and Regulation conflicted with the Human Rights Code because it was inconsiste­nt for the province to approve the pre-trip fee for Uber and then face punishment for paying it.

It also said the per-trip fees were to be collected by the province and be redistribu­ted to increase wheelchair-accessible transporta­tion, and that not all the money has been used for that purpose.

Uber's Yanique Williams told the hearing the province announced in a news release on Feb. 1, 2023 that the per-trip fees would be used to help offset extra costs that taxi owners face to provide wheelchair-accessible vehicles so that the number of such vehicles would increase. On Jan. 1, 2023, the per-trip fee was raised to 90 cents from 30 cents.

In a statement on Wednesday, Uber spokeswoma­n Keerthana Rang said in an email that Uber complies with laws on accessibil­ity, paying fees and having wheelchair-accessible vehicles available and is reviewing the decision and its appeal options.

She also said the province has collected “tens of millions of dollars” in fees from the ride-share industry and “only a small portion” has been given to taxi owner-operators. Ride-share drivers can't access those funds to use it to increase accessible rides, she said.

“We continue to urge the provincial government to allocate the accessibil­ity fees collected from ride-share trips to achieve better accessibil­ity solutions for riders in B.C.,” said Rang.

Communicat­ions director Catherine Pate said B.C.'s Attorney General Ministry is “reviewing the tribunal's decision.” The ministry wasn't able to comment further on Uber's comments before deadline.

The B.C. Taxi Associatio­n said that, for the first time last year, a small number of cab companies received more than $2 million to purchase wheelchair-accessible vehicles, according to president Mohan Kang.

He said to buy and convert each van costs $85,000, compared with about $45,000 for a Prius car. He said they also cost more to operate in gas and insurance, and each trip takes longer to load and unload, so they're not as profitable as cars.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Uber must offer accessible rides in the Lower Mainland within one year after a ruling by the B.C. Human Rights Tribunal.
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Uber must offer accessible rides in the Lower Mainland within one year after a ruling by the B.C. Human Rights Tribunal.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada