Antelope Valley Press

Former Uber CEO Kalanick severs ties with ride-hailing giant

-

NEW YORK (AP) — Travis Kalanick, who built Uber into a ride-hailing giant, only to be ousted as CEO over the company’s sexist “bro” culture, is cashing out.

Kalanick disclosed Tuesday that he has sold off all his Uber stock — estimated at more than $2.5 billion — and is resigning from the Board of directors, severing ties to the company he co-founded a decade ago.

“At the close of the decade, and with the company now public, it seems like the right moment for me to focus on my current business and philanthro­pic pursuits,” the 43-year-old entreprene­ur said in a statement.

Uber, based in San Francisco, transforme­d the way people get around and how they make a living, too, turbocharg­ing the gig economy and underminin­g the taxi industry.

Its nearly 4 million drivers around the globe have logged 15 billion trips since 2010, when Kalanick and Garrett Camp came up with the idea of hailing a ride from a smartphone after a trip to Paris when they couldn’t find a taxi.

But Kalanick was fired as CEO in the summer of 2017 with the company mired in lawsuits.

Uber under Kalanick grew with incredible speed, but like a number of other tech startups, it ran into trouble with a corporate culture that appeared at times to be spinning out of control.

His career at Uber seemed to fit a certain pattern seen in Silicon Valley: The brash and disruptive personalit­ies who are great at creating startups can be ill-suited for the corner office when the company reaches maturity. Sometimes “adult supervisio­n” in the form of experience­d executives has to be brought in.

In one of the Uber’s biggest scandals, Kalanick was accused of presiding over a workplace environmen­t that allowed rampant sexual harassment.

A former Uber engineer, Susan Fowler, leveled sexual harassment and sexism allegation­s in a 2017 blog post, saying a boss — not Kalanick — had propositio­ned her and higher-ups had ignored her complaints. Kalanick called the accusation­s “abhorrent” and hired former Attorney General Eric Holder to investigat­e. Holder recommende­d reducing Kalanick’s responsibi­lities.

After multiple investigat­ions, Uber fired 20 employees accused of sexual harassment, bullying and retaliatio­n against those who complained. This month, the company paid $4.4 million to settle a federal investigat­ion over workplace misconduct.

The problems went beyond employee relations.

Waymo, the self-driving car company spun off from Google, sued Uber in 2017, alleging a top manager at Google stole pivotal technology from the company before leaving to run Uber’s self-driving car division.

Uber also gained a reputation under Kalanick for running roughshod over regulators.

 ??  ?? KALANICK
KALANICK

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States