California voters to decide fate of gig economy workers
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[November 03, 2020] By
Tina Bellon and Lisa Baertlein
(Reuters) - Trend-setting California votes
on the future of the gig economy on Tuesday, deciding whether to back a
ballot proposal by Uber and its allies that would cement app-based food
delivery and ride-hail drivers' status as independent contractors, not
employees.
The measure, known as Proposition 22, marks the culmination of years of
legal and legislative wrangling over a business model that has
introduced millions of people to the convenience of ordering food or a
ride with the push of a button.
Companies describe the contest as a matter of ensuring flexibility for a
new generation of workers who want to choose when and how they work.
Opponents see an effort to exploit workers and avoid employee-related
costs that could amount to more than $392 million each for Uber
Technologies Inc, Lyft Inc, a Reuters calculation showed.
GRAPHIC: Uber's California price hikes if drivers are employees -
https://graphics.reuters.com/
UBER-CALIFORNIA/
qzjpqnlxzvx/chart.png
Uber, Lyft, Doordash, Instacart and Postmates, some of whom threaten to
shut down in California if they lose, have poured $202 million into what
has become the most expensive ballot campaign in state history.
"This debate is very emotional for me. I want to keep driving when I
want and for whom I want," said retiree Jan Krueger, 62, who drives
part-time for Lyft in Sacramento and got a "Mom Lyft" tattoo on her
shoulder.
"Everybody is super concerned about (the companies) leaving or raising
prices and not being available in remote areas," Krueger said of her
passengers and driver friends.
The proposition is the app makers' response to a new California law that
requires companies that control how workers do their jobs to classify
those workers as employees.
The app companies argue the law does not apply to them because they are
technology platforms, not hiring entities, and that their drivers
control how they work.
Companies warn they could cut 80% of drivers, double prices and even
leave California, if they are forced to pay benefits including minimum
wage, unemployment insurance, health care and workers' compensation.
(Graphic: https://tmsnrt.rs/33x9c77)
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Rideshare driver Jesus Jacobo Zepeda of Lancaster, California takes
part in a rally as part of a statewide day of action to demand that
ride-hailing companies Uber and Lyft follow California law and grant
drivers "basic employee rights'', in Los Angeles, California, U.S.,
August 20, 2020. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo
Uber, Lyft, DoorDash, Instacart and Postmates also have challenged the new law
in court, but judges so far ruled against them. Uber and Lyft recently lost an
appeal, which narrows their options if Prop 22 fails.
California represents 9%, roughly $1.63 billion, of Uber's 2019 global rides and
food delivery gross bookings, and some 16% of Lyft's total rides.
Prop 22 would leave gig workers as contractors and provide them with more modest
benefits than state law, including minimum pay while riders are in their cars,
healthcare subsidies and accident insurance.
Company-sponsored surveys have found that more than 70% of current gig workers
do not want to be employees, but labor groups have questioned those polls,
saying drivers are divided.
Los Angeles Uber driver Christine Tringali said the companies' actions were
shameful.
"How can someone fight so hard to avoid paying people a living wage and giving
them job security? We work just as hard as anyone else," Tringali said.
Californians are split on the issue. An Oct. 26 poll by UC Berkeley's Institute
of Governmental Studies of over 6,600 state residents found that 46% of voters
would vote in favor of the ballot measure and 42% against it, with the remainder
still undecided. The poll had a sampling error of 2 percentage points. (Poll:
https://escholarship.org/u
c/item/2pr670k8)
First-time voter and college student Jonah Cervantes' mail-in ballot included a
"yes" on Prop 22. He hopes to start driving for Uber or Lyft in a few months.
"It would be a lot harder for people to just hop on" as new drivers without Prop
22, said Cervantes.
(Reporting by Tina Bellon in New York and Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles;
additional reporting by Lucy Nicholson in Los Angeles; editing by Peter
Henderson and Lisa Shumaker)
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