Bangkok Post

Uber strike over wages fizzles out in NY

- JACKIE DAVALOS

NEW YORK: A planned strike by New York Uber drivers fizzled on Monday and there appeared to be plenty of cars on the road despite a call by drivers for a boycott of the app.

The New York Taxi Workers Alliance, a union representi­ng the city’s yellow cab and rideshare industry, had asked Uber drivers to turn off their app for 24 hours starting at midnight on Sunday to protest Uber Technologi­es Inc’s attempts to block wage increases approved by the city’s Taxi & Limousine Commission last week. The pay bump was supposed to go into effect on Monday, but is on hold pending a court hearing on Jan 31.

Some drivers remarked in Facebook groups where workers congregate at how there wasn’t morning surge pricing, a sign there were still sufficient cars on the road to meet customer demand.

“Some drivers live day to day and Christmas is coming,” said Uber driver Fernando Feliciano, 50.

A spokesman for Uber said the company hadn’t seen any disruption­s in service due to the strike and isn’t concerned about driver supply. “Since 2019, driver pay has gone up 38.4% and drivers are out there today doing critical work for New Yorkers, not listening to political chatter on Twitter,” he said.

The spokesman said there were 3% more drivers between 7am and 10am in New York, compared with the typical Monday over the last six months, and wait times were in line with the average.

Pay rates for Uber and Lyft Inc drivers were to increase by 7% per minute and 24% per mile, according to the TLC, with a sample trip of 30 minutes and 12km requiring a minimum payment of $27.15. Uber said the city’s calculatio­n of the per-mile rate increase is misleading and that it is actually 16%, taking into account mandated annual adjustment­s implemente­d in 2020 and 2022.

The Independen­t Drivers Guild, which represents roughly 80,000 Uber and Lyft drivers in New York, said more than 500 of its members hit the streets on Monday morning, marching from Brooklyn to the Thurgood Marshall US Courthouse in Manhattan in protest of the decision to block pay raises.

Drivers asked New Yorkers to show support by not using the app on Monday.

“Uber wants to pay nothing more to the drivers whose labour creates the company’s profits,” said New York Taxi Workers Alliance Executive Director Bhairavi Desai.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Drivers protest against a lawsuit which aims to block pay raises ordered by the New York City Taxi and Limousine Commission.
REUTERS Drivers protest against a lawsuit which aims to block pay raises ordered by the New York City Taxi and Limousine Commission.

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