Bangkok Post

Gett’s Juno shuts down NYC operations

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Israeli transporta­tion company Gett said on Monday that it would end its New York City ride-hailing business Juno, citing “misguided regulation­s” enacted to combat city congestion earlier this year.

The company told Juno users on Monday its service would cease to operate that evening, directing riders instead to former competitor Lyft Inc, which it has struck a strategic partnershi­p with.

Beginning in 2020, users of the Gett taxi app will be able to request Lyftoperat­ed rides.

Gett and Lyft declined to provide financial details of their partnershi­p.

Gett said it would increasing­ly focus on the corporate transporta­tion sector.

The company faced growing pressure as regulation damaged ride volumes, making profitabil­ity a distant and difficult prospect.

New York City’s Taxi and Limousine Commission (TLC) last year implemente­d several laws challengin­g the way ride-share companies operate in North America’s largest city, one of the industry’s biggest markets.

Since January, private ride-hailing trips below Manhattan’s 96th Street are taxed at $2.75, while shared rides are charged 75 cents. The charge must be passed on to passengers and cannot be taken out of drivers’ pay, the law says.

New rules also cap the number of app-based, for-hire cars and establishe­d minimum pay for the city’s 80,000 rideshare drivers based on how much time they spend transporti­ng passengers.

Beginning next year, the law also limits time drivers spend “cruising” — driving to or waiting to pick up new passengers.

Juno, which launched its NYC ridehailin­g service in 2016, marketed itself as retaining happier drivers by taking a smaller commission from every ride. Gett acquired the company in 2017 for $200 million.

“Juno’s closure in New York City is further evidence that the TLC’s approach has created an uneven playing field that reduces choice for riders and drivers,” Lyft said in a statement on Monday.

Asked about the impact of NYC’s regulation, Uber Technologi­es Inc chief executive Dara Khosrowsha­hi told investors during a third-quarter earnings call on Nov 4 that significan­t price increases were slowing down trip growth, but that the business overall was “quite resilient to the environmen­t around it.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? The Uber, Lyft and Juno logos are seen on a car as it drives up 6th Avenue in New York City.
REUTERS The Uber, Lyft and Juno logos are seen on a car as it drives up 6th Avenue in New York City.

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