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Lyft Loses Effort To Overturn NYC's Driver Wage Law (theverge.com) 179

Lyft's effort to overturn New York City's first-in-the-nation minimum wage law for drivers was blocked by a state judge Wednesday, according to Business Insider . From a report: Judge Andrea Masley ruled that Lyft's lawsuit, which was filed in January, was insufficient to overturn the law that went into effect February. Under the law that went into effect in February, ride-hail companies must pay drivers at least $17.22 an hour after expenses. The pay formula uses a so-called utilization rate, which accounts for the share of time a driver spends with passengers in their vehicles compared to time spent idle and waiting for a fare. Lyft claims that it supports the spirit of the law to raise wages for drivers, but opposes the formula used to ensure higher payouts.
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Lyft Loses Effort To Overturn NYC's Driver Wage Law

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  • by zuckie13 ( 1334005 ) on Wednesday May 01, 2019 @07:47PM (#58524588)
    Back before the Taxi & Limousine Commission was selling medallions, the streets were flooded with tons of cabs. The kept lowering prices to try to compete, resulting in drivers driving long hours for not enough money. To combat this unsafe practice, the medallions system was set up. While I can question whether they managed it too tightly, I don't question the general concept of making sure you don't have zombies driving on the cities streets. The same thing is now playing out. Uber, Lyft and others started a fare war to the bottom, causing drivers to be underpaid, and try to work too many hour to make a living wage. This is the reaction to it to return to a working balance.
    • by guruevi ( 827432 ) on Wednesday May 01, 2019 @08:16PM (#58524706)

      They could just cap the number of hours a professional driver is allowed to drive which is already in the law. So nobody is getting hurt, except the medallion racket.

      • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Wednesday May 01, 2019 @09:50PM (#58524954)

        They could just cap the number of hours a professional driver is allowed to drive which is already in the law.

        There is a cap on hours, but a single medallion can be used by multiple drivers. So for instance, 3 people could each drive for 8 hours, so the medallion is in use 24/7.

        Also, there is no way to enforce the limit on hours, so it doesn't mean much in practice.

        • by guruevi ( 827432 )

          The point is that the limit on hours is a bad excuse to have a medallion scheme, a limit on hours driven per day accomplishes all safety concern, Lyft just avoids the medallion scam.

          • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

            by Ed Tice ( 3732157 )
            The medallion scheme limits the number of cars on the road and all of the ills that go along with it (although it brings its own share of problems.) It's not that each driver was working long hours as much as it is that each driver *had* to work long hours in order to earn enough to eat and often still were not earning enough but *were* clogging the roads.
        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Limits on hours are easily enforced in the EU. Commercial vehicles are fitted with timers that record how long the driver is driving for. Each driver has a token they insert when driving. Everything is logged.

          It's possible to cheap by using someone else's card of course, but it's relatively easy to check if the card in use matches the driver and getting caught is an immediate loss of job and criminal prosecution.

      • The argument against the medallion system might very well be valid, but doesn't at all answer the question of why Uber and Lyft are abusive in markets where taxis are pretty much a free market and the medallion system doesn't exist...

    • Thank you. Taxi regs exist for a reason, no matter how bad some cities screw it up. Uber and Lyft are just venture capitalists using other people's investments and time and skimming-these people are employees, but worse off than taskrabbits for any sort of protection. We never seem to learn anything...
    • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

      The kept lowering prices to try to compete

      That is terrible.

      But it isn't just a problem in ground transportation. Grocery stores, restaurants, clothing stores, etc., all have problems with competitors lowering prices.

      The government needs to do something about this, otherwise it is just a race to the bottom.

      Maybe we could set up government panels to set prices and production quotas for each industry.

      Why has this never been tried before?

    • The important part of your history lesson is: Once the government gets involved in a market, that market is screwed. Taxi medallions raised the bar of entry for cab companies. Lyft and Uber came along and started outcompeting Taxis because they didn't have this type of regulation. Now that the government in NY is taking over the ride share industry by setting labor prices, Lyft is doomed to the same fate as Taxi companies.

      It feels good to talk about "living wages" and complain about low wages, as though ind

    • by k6mfw ( 1182893 )

      this mention about medallions, I'm too lazy to research if these are actual existing. I can understand taxi drivers having Class B licenses, be insured (besides usual personal auto insurance), and be part of a licensed business (which uber and lyft are none of the above).

      I was thinking if back in the days cabbies could make a good wage? i.e. in the movie Taxi Driver the character accumulates a lot of cash. I found it interesting when interviewing with the cab company the guy asks Travis is he willing to w

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday May 01, 2019 @08:15PM (#58524700)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Might be worth mentioning that they went public before this happened. This is something that could really hurt Uber's IPO.
    • you mean it's bad for companies that compete with taxis to have to pay like a low-end earning taxi driver? I'm so shocked. They might even have to start charging taxi-company like rates?

    • Nobody is forced to drive for Lyft.

  • Multiple services (Score:4, Insightful)

    by fafalone ( 633739 ) on Wednesday May 01, 2019 @10:53PM (#58525112)
    Since a lot of drivers frequently work with both Lyft and Uber (and other services), and take fares from both back and forth all day, does each company independently have to provide the minimum wage? If not, how do they know how much time you're driving on the other companies time instead of idling? They don't even know that you are working for more than one AFAIK.
    Is this addressed somehow or this a glaring loophole? Heck if I could make 17*companies*hour, that adds up quick...
    • It's not actually that hard since once they get a fare from one app, they turn off the other. Otherwise they would have to be turning down rides since they were already en route.
      • Well that doesn't really help to simplify things... I can still see a whole lot of room for gaming things, especially if you're not that busy to begin with. This would actually seem to incentivize not being busy... if you maintained a cancellation frequency below where you're penalized because you were only being requested infrequently anyway, pushing the odds of needing to cancel down low, you could leave both open. I'm sure we'll see tons of stories about drivers gaming this system for years to come.
  • Good for New York (Score:5, Insightful)

    by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Wednesday May 01, 2019 @11:11PM (#58525154)
    Stop the race to the bottom and the new serfdom. If you work a 40 hours you out to be able to make it.
    • But how will that enrich the oligarchy while destroying working class families??

    • by sootman ( 158191 )

      The URL in your .sig leads to a missing page.

    • What work are you doing? If it's valuable, you will be making it. If it's not valuable, find a new trade. 40 hours of labor can mean a million different things, most of which are simply not that valuable nor desirable enough to command a price commensurate with living the lifestyle that people are brainwashed into believing they are entitled to here in the US. How about: Cancel your cable and cook your meals at home. That should keep some cash in your pockets until you can learn a valuable skill. Get a libr

  • by sjames ( 1099 ) on Thursday May 02, 2019 @03:47AM (#58525740) Homepage Journal

    Lyft wants to pay it's drivers less than the law allows. That is, wages so low it's literally criminal.

    • No, Lyft went to court so the law wouldn't require them to pay as much. There's a difference. Perhaps too subtle for some, but a real difference.
  • Oh Lyft is into the "spirit" of the law, as are so many corporate monsters. This newfound spirituality, which has overcome corporate America since the Citizens United decision, is so touchy-feely new age fuzzy and warm that it makes me feel like surrendering completely to this beautiful corporate person who can see spirit in such a thing as wage protection law. I can feel a new religion being born -- the corporate person as Gaia, Panthea, Spiritus Sanctus. I'll build their website and hand out flyers so tha
  • A few years ago, the politicians in NYC decided to be magnanimous and "help the little man" and took to pushing through a $15/h minimum/living wage for folks employed in the car wash industry. Car washes in NYC employ (or used to that is) mostly low-skill, immigrant labour. Eventually, the minimum wage law was passed.

    The result of the new minimum wage? Some car washes closed down, a lot of workers were laid off and most of the remaining car washes took to automating since the ~$100k investment into automati

    • A lot of the people originally employed in the industry are now unemployed or do illegal car washes on the sidewalk and in back alleys. [Italics mine]

      Unregulated, illegal car washing? In an alley? Oh, the horror!

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