The Columbus Dispatch

Ride-hail driver raise bill vetoed in Minn.

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Minnesota,” the Democratic governor said in a letter to legislativ­e leaders.

Uber and Lyft drivers had staged noisy but peaceful demonstrat­ions outside Walz’s office in the Capitol in recent days to demand that the governor sign the bill. They were clearly audible through closed doors earlier Thursday as he signed a bill creating a paid family and medical leave system.

Ride-hailing drivers, like other gig economy workers, are typically treated as independen­t contractor­s not entitled to minimum wages and other benefits, and have to cover their own gas and car payments. A California appeals court ruled in March that companies like Uber and Lyft could continue to treat their drivers there as independen­t contractor­s.

But most gig workers in Seattle became entitled to paid sick leave and safe time under a first-in-the-nation law enacted there in March. And the Biden administra­tion proposed new standards last year that could make it more difficult to classify millions of workers as independen­t contractor­s and deny them minimum wage and benefits. Ride-hailing and delivery driving are among the deadliest occupation­s in the country, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

While Walz vetoed the bill, he also signed an executive order commission­ing a study about the working conditions of ride-hail drivers.

His order also sets up a committee to make recommenda­tions by Jan. 1 for legislatio­n to ensure that drivers receive fair compensati­on, ensure due process before drivers are terminated, limit the impact on fairs and ensure continued operation of ride-hail services in Minnesota.

The bill was championed by state Sen. Omar Fateh, D- Minneapoli­s, the first Somali American to serve in the Minnesota Senate. Many Uber and Lift drivers come from the area’s large Somali and East African community.

The bill would have required that drivers be paid a minimum of $5 per ride, or at least $1.45 per mile and 34 cents per minute in the metropolit­an area. Fares would have been slightly less in the rest of Minnesota. It also would have made it harder for the companies to “deactivate” drivers from their platforms because drivers said they could be terminated for no reason with no recourse.

Fateh tweeted that the veto showed “the power corporatio­ns hold on our government” despite Democrats controllin­g the “trifecta” of the governor’s office and both houses of the Legislatur­e for the first time in eight years.

“The fight is not over, and I promise you I wont back down,” Fateh tweeted.

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