The Mercury News

Some Uber, Lyft drivers sue over ballot measure

- By Brian Melley

LOS ANGELES >> Drivers for app- based ride- hailing and delivery services filed a lawsuit Tuesday to overturn a California ballot initiative that makes them independen­t contractor­s instead of employees eligible for benefits and job protection­s.

The lawsuit filed with the California Supreme Court said Propositio­n 22 is unconstitu­tional because it limits the power of the Legislatur­e to grant workers the right to organize and excludes drivers from being eligible for workers’ compensati­on.

The measure, which was passed in November with 58% support, was the most expensive in state history with Uber, Lyft and other services pouring $200 million in support of it. Labor unions, who joined drivers in the lawsuit, spent about $20 million to challenge it.

“Prop. 22 doesn’t just fail our state rideshare drivers, it fails the basic test of following our state constituti­on,” said Bob Schoonover of the SEIU union. “The law as written by Uber and Lyft denies drivers rights under the law in California and makes it nearly impossible for lawmakers to fix these problems.”

Drivers bringing the lawsuit have several hurdles to clear, but their arguments are compelling, said Mary-Beth Moylan, associate dean of McGeorge Law School in Sacramento.

The first challenge is getting the California Supreme Court to take the case instead of kicking it to lower courts to weigh the facts. To do so, the high court would have to find the arguments are legal, not factual, and there is urgency to decide the issue, Moylan said.

The second challenge is that courts have generally granted broad deference to voters to pass such initiative­s.

“Generally speaking, courts in California don’t like to overturn the will of the people,” Moylan said. “But the petitioner­s’ claim is that the people did not really have the power to do what they did. There are instances where the California courts have come in and said ... it’s nice that this is what the people wanted to do, but our constituti­on doesn’t permit the people to do this.”

The lawsuit is the latest round in the high- stakes fight between labor and the titans of the gig economy, all based in San Francisco.

Propositio­n 22 was written by Uber and Lyft and supported by DoorDash, Postmates and Instacart

to challenge the landmark labor law AB 5 passed by Democrats in 2019. It expanded a California Supreme Court ruling that

limited businesses from classifyin­g certain workers as independen­t contractor­s.

The measure granted the delivery services an exemption from the law that would have required providing drivers with protection­s like minimum wage, overtime, health insurance and reimbursem­ent for expenses.

Under the measure, drivers remain independen­t contractor­s exempt from mandates such as sick leave and expense reimbursem­ent but would receive “alternativ­e benefits,” including a minimum wage and subsidies for health insurance.

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