Uber probed by US judge on driver benefits


  • TECH
  • Monday, 02 Feb 2015

DRIVER RIGHTS: Uber drivers are taking legal action against the company for expenses such as gas and vehicle maintenance.

SAN FRANCISCO: A US judge appeared skeptical about Uber's bid for a quick pretrial ruling that its drivers are contractors and not employees, a critical question facing Silicon Valley's sharing economy.

App-based ride service Uber, and smaller rival Lyft, face separate lawsuits seeking class action status in San Francisco federal court, brought on behalf of drivers who contend they are employees and entitled to reimbursement for expenses, including gas and vehicle maintenance. The drivers currently pay those costs themselves.

A ruling against either company could significantly raise their costs beyond the lawsuit's scope and force them to pay social security, workers' compensation and unemployment insurance. That could affect the valuations for other start-ups that rely on large networks of individuals to provide rides, clean houses and other services.

At a court hearing, US District Judge Edward Chen said Uber's bid for a pretrial ruling its drivers are contractors is a "tough argument" to make, given that the drivers serve Uber's business goals.

"The idea that Uber is simply a software platform, a service provider and nothing else, I don't find that a very persuasive argument," Chen said.

Ultimately, a jury might have to decide the issue, he added.

The hearing came a day after a similar one involving Lyft. In that case, US District Judge Vincent Chhabria said whether drivers are employees or contractors is "very difficult" to decide, but that California law appears to favor the drivers. Chhabria has not yet ruled.

Uber has raised more than US$4bil (RM14.5bil) from prominent venture capital firms such as Benchmark and Google Ventures, valuing the company to US$40bil (RM145bil) and making it the most valuable US start-up. Lyft has raised US$331mil (RM1.2bil) from Andreessen Horowitz, Founders Fund and other investors.

The drivers have not yet specified how much money they are seeking in damages.

Drivers argue they should be considered employees because Uber and Lyft can hire and fire them and require them to accept a certain percentage of rides, and to pass background checks.

Uber and Lyft counter that drivers control their own schedules, are not assigned a territory, and are not supplied with any equipment apart from an iPhone and a sign. — Reuters

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