Lodi News-Sentinel

Uber will pay $20M to settle lawsuits over questions of whether drivers are employees

- By Johana Bhuiyan

When tech workers began rallying last year against their employers’ mandatory arbitratio­n clauses, some of the industry’s biggest companies changed their policies. Google dropped mandatory arbitratio­n entirely. Uber Technologi­es Inc., however, opted to abolish forced arbitratio­n in sexual misconduct cases, but not in other labor disputes.

That decision proved significan­t Tuesday when Uber agreed to pay $20 million to settle lawsuits challengin­g the classifica­tion of drivers as independen­t contractor­s, rather than employees owed the benefits of traditiona­l employment.

The payout is a far cry from the $100 million Uber had agreed to pay to settle the suit in 2016, after a San Francisco judge granted 385,000 drivers in California and Massachuse­tts class-action status. Eventually, a judge determined $100 million was not sufficient given the original class size.

But an appeals court ruling found Uber’s mandatory arbitratio­n agreements — which obligate workers to settle their claims with the company one-on-one — were largely valid and enforceabl­e.

That ruling, and Uber’s decision in May to maintain its policy of upholding its arbitratio­n clause in cases unrelated to sexual misconduct, ultimately reduced the class to about 13,600 drivers, who had either opted not to agree to mandatory arbitratio­n or drove for Uber before the company implemente­d such a policy.

Drivers argued that Uber made it onerous for them to opt out of the arbitratio­n provisions. Shannon LissRiorda­n, the attorney representi­ng drivers in this case, said Uber “rigorously enforces” its arbitratio­n clauses.

“It’s a myth that these opt-out provisions in arbitratio­n clauses really make these agreements voluntary.” Liss-Riordan said. She’s seeking $5 million in attorney’s fees and estimates that drivers will receive about $.37 per mile they have driven for Uber.

Resolution of the long-standing fight over benefits and pay comes as Uber is preparing for its initial public offering later this year. The litigation attacked the ride-hailing company’s business model of treating its drivers as contractor­s to avoid the costs of paying a minimum wage, overtime, sick leave and health insurance. Drivers will continue to be considered contractor­s as part of the settlement.

Uber said it had worked to make “the driver experience even better through improvemen­ts like in-app tipping, a redesigned driver app, and new rewards programs,” according to an emailed statement from spokesman Matt Kallman. “We’ll continue working hard to improve the quality, security and dignity of independen­t work.”

The settlement, which requires a judge’s approval, was filed late Monday in San Francisco federal court and confirmed by Liss-Riordan.

Even before the appeals court ruling, prospects for the suits against Uber were dealt a blow by a U.S. Supreme Court decision last year that bolstered the power of employers to force workers to use individual arbitratio­n instead of class-action lawsuits.

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