Los Angeles Times

CITY PULLS UBER’S PERMIT

The suspension ramps up L.A.’s dispute with the firm over data from bikes, scooters.

- By Laura J. Nelson

Following months of conflict over a controvers­ial data-sharing policy, Los Angeles has temporaril­y suspended Uber’s permit to rent electric scooters and bicycles on city streets and sidewalks.

The company’s subsidiary, Jump, must appeal the decision by Friday or leave the city, the Transporta­tion Department told the company in a letter last week. For now, customers can still rent the vivid red scooters and electric bikes through the Jump app.

In response, Uber threatened in a letter to sue the city over the “patently unfair and improper” suspension. The letter also questioned the validity of the “eleventhho­ur administra­tive review process” that the city created last month.

“Every other company that is permitted in Los Angeles is following the rules,” said Transporta­tion Department spokeswoma­n Connie Llanos. “We look forward to being able to work with Uber on getting them into compliance.”

The suspension follows months of tension and failed attempts at compromise between Uber and the city over a data-sharing rule in L.A.’s one-year pilot permit program. Companies must share real-time data on all trips made within the city, including the start point, end point and travel time.

Uber has resisted the rule for months, arguing, with the backing of data privacy organizati­ons, that the city’s policy constitute­s government surveillan­ce. With minimal analysis, they say, the informatio­n could easily reveal where people live, work, socialize or worship.

Los Angeles officials have said the data are necessary to figure out which companies are flouting the permit program’s rules, including caps on the number of vehicles and bans on riding in certain areas. They have also argued that the companies cannot be trusted to regulate themselves.

The eight companies with permits to operate in L.A. — including Uber, Bird, Lime and Lyft — manage a f leet of about 32,000 scooters and bikes that see about 1 million trips per month.

The dispute highlights the lack of trust between cities and transporta­tion companies that have moved into new markets without asking permission, working with local officials or sharing details on their operations.

Companies such as Uber “generate and collect massive amounts of personal and financial data,” while the city “does not collect informatio­n specific to individual riders beyond trip informatio­n,” said Marcel Porras, the Transporta­tion Department’s chief sustainabi­lity officer, in a letter to Uber last week.

The data-sharing policies crafted in Los Angeles are now being overseen by the nonprofit Open Mobility Foundation. Its advocates hope the rules will serve as a framework to standardiz­e data-sharing between government­s and transporta­tion companies.

The Transporta­tion Department has urged California regulators to adopt a similar framework for trips made in Uber and Lyft cars, which would reveal vast amounts of data on their operations statewide — data that cities badly want to review, but that the companies have jealously guarded.

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