In
a decision made public on Friday, New York State Supreme Court
Justice Lyle Frank rejected Uber's argument that the city
wrongly gave its Taxi and Limousine Commission power to enforce
the cap.
Frank was also unconvinced that the cap, part of Local Law 147,
would impede state efforts to reduce traffic congestion through
"congestion pricing" on vehicles entering high-traffic areas of
Manhattan.
"It would appear that LL 147, rather than being in conflict with
the congestion pricing law, in fact appears to complement it,"
Frank wrote. His decision is dated Oct. 31.
“We’re disappointed that the TLC's cap that punishes drivers who
are forced to rent vehicles will remain in effect," Uber said in
a statement.
Nicholas Paolucci, a spokesman for the city's law department,
said in an email: "Hardworking for-hire vehicle drivers and
everyone else impacted by our congested roads should be pleased
with this court ruling."
The August 2018 law was meant to give New York City greater
oversight of ride-hailing companies such as Uber and Lyft Inc.
It included a one-year freeze on new licenses to for-hire
vehicles, which was later extended through August 2020, and also
set minimum pay standards for drivers.
The case is separate from Uber's Sept. 20 challenge to a New
York City "cruising cap" rule limiting how much time its drivers
could spend without passengers in Manhattan south of 96th
Street.
Based in San Francisco, Uber has drawn criticism from many
cities that its vehicles increase congestion, and commandeer
business from taxis.
The value of medallions, which are permits needed to operate
yellow taxis in New York City and are distinct from ride-hailing
licenses, has plunged as Uber and Lyft gained popularity.
"This cap has been life saving & is the basis for any group of
drivers - Uber or yellow cab - to come out of poverty &
instability," Bhairavi Desai, executive director of the New York
Taxi Workers Alliance, said on Twitter.
The case is ZEHN-NY LLC et al v City of New York et al, New York
State Supreme Court, New York County, No. 151730/2019.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Howard
Goller)
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