Los Angeles Times

Court in U.K. sides with Uber drivers

They are deemed to be workers, not selfemploy­ed contractor­s.

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LONDON — Uber drivers in Britain should be classified as workers and not self-employed, the U.K. Supreme Court ruled Friday, a decision that threatens the company’s business model and holds broader implicatio­ns for the socalled gig economy.

The ruling entitles Uber drivers to benefits such as paid holidays and the minimum wage, handing defeat to the ride-hailing giant in the culminatio­n of a longrunnin­g legal battle.

The Supreme Court’s seven judges unanimousl­y rejected Uber’s appeal against a lower court ruling, which had found that two Uber drivers were workers under British law.

“The employment tribunal was right to find that Uber drivers are workers who therefore qualify for the rights conferred on workers by employment legislatio­n,” said judge George Leggatt as he read out a summary of the ruling on a court livestream.

Among their reasons, the judges cited Uber’s driver rating and its practice of keeping communicat­ions between drivers and passengers to a minimum, which results in the service being “very tightly defined and controlled by Uber.”

“Drivers are in a position of subordinat­ion and dependency to Uber,” with little ability to improve their economic position. The only way to increase their earnings is by “working longer hours while constantly meeting Uber’s measures of performanc­e,” the court said.

Uber, which has 65,000 active drivers in the U.K., had argued that the two drivers who brought the case were independen­t contractor­s.

The company said it respected the court’s decision, which it argued focused on a small number of drivers who used the Uber app in 2016.

“Since then we have made some significan­t changes to our business, guided by drivers every step of the way,” Jamie Heywood, Uber’s regional general manager for northern and eastern Europe, said in a statement. “These include giving even more control over how they earn and providing new protection­s like free insurance in case of sickness or injury.”

Uber’s shares fell 61 cents Friday to $58.39 in New York.

 ?? Frank Augstein Associated Press ?? UBER drivers celebrate as they hear the ruling on a tablet computer outside the high court in London.
Frank Augstein Associated Press UBER drivers celebrate as they hear the ruling on a tablet computer outside the high court in London.

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