Los Angeles Times

Uber, Lyft get a reprieve over drivers’ status, averting a shutdown.

Court grants reprieve and sets deadline for companies to spell out how they will convert drivers to employees.

- By Suhauna Hussain Bloomberg was used in compiling this report.

Uber Technologi­es Inc. and Lyft Inc. were spared from having to rapidly convert their California drivers to employees after a state appeals court agreed they can keep their business models in place while challengin­g a judge’s order to comply with a state labor law.

The decision Thursday is a big but temporary reprieve for the ride-hailing companies, whose leaders threatened to shut down in their home state indefinite­ly, saying they would not be able to shift to providing drivers with costly benefits including health insurance and overtime on short notice.

The court has ordered Uber and Lyft to submit sworn statements by their chief executives by early September certifying that they have a plan to hire drivers as employees, in the event the court does not decide in their favor. Both companies now have five days to agree to the procedure laid out by the court. The appeals court scheduled arguments for Oct. 13.

Shares in both companies rose on the news. Lyft ended the day up 5.8% and Uber finished up 6.8%.

“We are glad that the court of appeals recognized the important questions raised in this case, and that access to these critical services won’t be cut off while we continue to advocate for drivers’ ability to work with the freedom they want,” Uber said in a statement.

Lyft also indicated that it would not shut down services this week and pointed to a November ballot measure backed by gig economy companies that would exempt them from a sweeping new California labor law.

“While we won’t have to suspend operations tonight, we do need to continue fighting for independen­ce plus benefits for drivers,” Lyft spokeswoma­n Julie Wood said in a statement.

The delay buys time for the companies as they campaign for Propositio­n 22, which would exclude appbased transporta­tion and delivery companies from Assembly Bill 5, which set stricter standards for classifyin­g workers as contractor­s. Uber, Lyft, and several other gig economy companies have refused to comply with the law since it went into effect Jan. 1.

Propositio­n 22 carves out a new category of work, sparing the companies from paying for full benefits that employees currently get under California law, such as unemployme­nt insurance and complete workers’ compensati­on, while requiring them to pay 120% of minimum wage, healthcare contributi­ons and medical and disability coverage, among others.

In May, state Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra brought a lawsuit against Uber and Lyft alleging that by misclassif­ying drivers as independen­t contractor­s, the companies deprived them of worker protection­s and benefits such as a minimum wage and unemployme­nt insurance.

Agreeing with Becerra’s argument, San Francisco Superior Court Judge Ethan Schulman this month ordered ride-hailing companies to classify their drivers as employees rather than independen­t contractor­s.

Both companies filed appeals, but Schulman refused on Aug. 13 to stay the injunction, setting the stage for Thursday’s emergency stay.

“We’re confident in the facts of our case and we look forward to continuing our fight to defend the rights of workers across the state,” Becerra’s office said in a statement.

While the court of appeal gave Uber and Lyft a bit of reprieve, the conditions it set in the order don’t give the companies much wiggle room. The court seems frustrated that Uber and Lyft are acting as if they just heard of the state law that went into effect nearly nine months ago, said Charlotte Garden, a labor law professor at Seattle University School of Law.

“My best effort at mind reading is the court was dismayed by the fact that Uber and Lyft seemed to be saying they had no plan in place to comply with AB 5, and were just going to shut down for the immediate future,” Garden said.

Labor groups including

Mobile Workers Alliance and Gig Workers Rising opposed Uber’s and Lyft’s plans to halt California operations, and organized a protest Thursday morning before the shutdown was called off. Uber and Lyft drivers lined up their cars along Will Rogers Street by Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport with posters deriding Propositio­n 22.

José Noriega, a driver who attended the protest, was worried about how he would make money if the services shut down in the state.

“We have to do something about it,” he said. “We want more protection­s and benefits. Two weeks ago, I had to spend more than $1,000 to fix my car. They don’t care about that.”

When news was handed down about the emergency stay, drivers relaxed, grateful that they wouldn’t immediatel­y lose ride-hailing as a source of income.

“I’m relieved drivers will be able to continue driving. But this is a reminder of what [Uber and Lyft] are willing to do to win, and their lack of empathy and greed,” said Jerome Gage, a Los Angeles-based driver who attended the protest.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? UBER AND LYFT drivers rallied early Thursday near Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport to criticize Propositio­n 22 and the companies’ threats to shut down.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times UBER AND LYFT drivers rallied early Thursday near Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport to criticize Propositio­n 22 and the companies’ threats to shut down.

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