City Council aims to make New York first U.S. city to
cap Uber, others
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[July 28, 2018]
NEW YORK (Reuters) - New York
City is moving toward becoming the first major U.S. municipality to cap
ride-sharing services, sparking a tsunami of protest on Friday from Uber
[UBER.UL] and others, which warned that those living in far-flung
neighborhoods will suffer most.
The City Council is considering five bills aimed primarily at reducing
traffic congestion and increasing driver paychecks in the wake of
explosive growth of for-hire vehicles and a rash of suicides among
financially challenged yellow taxi drivers.
"We are pausing the issuance of new licenses in an industry that has
been operating without checks,” Council Speaker Corey Johnson told
reporters on Friday.
The council's move to vote on the measures as soon as Aug. 8 is the
city's second try to restrain an industry that has grown exponentially
since Mayor Bill de Blasio's failed 2015 attempt to rein it in.
Resurrection of the effort in New York - Uber's largest U.S. market -
outraged ride-hailing businesses, including Uber, Lyft and Via.
In an email barrage to nearly 5 million New Yorkers on Friday, Uber said
riders would be hurt most by the squeeze, facing higher prices, longer
wait times and less service in the city's outer reaches by drivers more
heavily dependent on higher demand in Manhattan, only adding to, rather
than reducing, congestion.
"@NYCCouncil I'm a New Yorker, and I rely on @Uber to get around the
city, especially when public transit isn't available. Don't leave me
stranded and #DontStrandNYC," tweeted thousands of New Yorkers, some
using a link provided in the Uber email.
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A car with an Uber logo on it drives down the street in New York,
U.S., July 27, 2018. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
Since Uber and other app-based services debuted in New York City about five
years ago, the industry has grown to more than 100,000 cars, according to the
Taxi and Limousine Commission. At the same time, less demand for New York's
iconic yellow cabs has decimated that one-time route to middle-class income.
Six struggling professional drivers - including three yellow cab drivers - have
killed themselves in recent months.
The New York Taxi Workers Alliance cheered the City Council's pledge to move
ahead with the bills.
The impending New York City limits come amid a worldwide effort to crack down on
ride-hailing companies, including a move by Honolulu's city council to cap fares
charged when demand spikes.
London, in a test of Uber's new senior management, in June, issued a
probationary license to operate as long as Uber can show it has improved on
safety and other concerns.
(Reporting by Barbara Goldberg; Editing by Dan Grebler)
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