Uber makes major changes to California rides as gig-work law takes effect
On Wednesday morning, Uber emailed 150,000 California drivers and millions of California passengers to alert them to the overhauls.
The changes seek to establish that drivers are running independent businesses because AB5 offers some exemptions for business-to-business relationships.
Uber explained the changes as “due to new state laws,” in a letter to riders that included a warning that those laws could hurt them.
“These changes may take some getting used to, but our goal is to keep Uber available to as many qualified drivers as possible, without restricting the number of drivers who can work at a given time,” the company wrote. “We want your Uber experience to be excellent, and fewer drivers on the road would mean a more expensive and less reliable service for you.”
The company is battling AB5 on multiple fronts. It’s collaborating with rival Lyft as well as delivery companies DoorDash, Postmates and Instacart on a $110 million initiative campaign, asking voters to keep their drivers and couriers as independent contractors entitled to some benefits and wage guarantees. Along with Postmates, it sued California last month, claiming that AB5 is “irrational and unconstitutional.”
“This is Uber’s fallback position — giving drivers more independence so they can be viewed more as separate companies in (business-to-business) relationships with Uber,” said Michele Ballard Miller of San Francisco law firm Cozen O’Connor. “The problem is that each individual driver would have to hit all the” requirements to qualify for an exemption.
AB5 author Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez, D-San Diego, reacting to a Washington Post article that said Uber had run a secret internal task force to devise ways to shield it from the new law, characterized the company in a tweet as flip-flopping from defiance to “‘Oh, wait, we will change our business model to try to fit AB5.’”
Gonzalez introduced placeholder legislation to clarify AB5 on Monday, but she’s adamant that there will be no changes to let Uber and Lyft off the hook.
Uber drivers will receive exactly what passengers pay, minus the company’s commission, which is now capped at 25%. Their payments will flow directly into their accounts rather than going to Uber first.
Previously, if the fare estimate was too low or too high, Uber either ate or pocketed the difference. That resulted in situations where a passenger might pay $20 for a trip, for instance, but a driver received only $10, irking drivers who shared such examples on social media.
“A lot of drivers have complained about the split Uber takes on fares,” said Harry Campbell, an Uber/Lyft driver who runs the Rideshare Guy blog. “Simplifying that fare structure and coupling what passengers pay to what drivers receive is good for transparency.”
Upfront trip info: Drivers will now see a trip’s time, distance, destination and estimated fare ahead of time, and can reject ride requests without penalties. (They can still be penalized for accepting rides and then canceling them.)
“That’s exactly what drivers have been asking for for years,” Campbell said. “It gives you all the information to make an informed decision.”
For riders, there are potential downsides. Short hops might get rejected. “If you just have to get across town quickly at rush hour, will drivers say, ‘Forget it, I won’t make any money,’?” Miller said.
Drivers also could refuse to take trips going to certain neighborhoods, a form of discrimination against lower-income areas.
Uber, which cautioned in its blog post that drivers should not engage in discriminatory rejections of trips, said it will monitor trips to guard against these issues.
Favorite drivers: Riders can rate drivers as “favorites.” Drivers so designated will be offered the right of first refusal on prescheduled rides.
Discontinued rewards: Uber will no longer offer price protection for passengers on routes, making up the difference if a ride estimated at $10 actually costs $14, for instance. It will no longer allow flexible cancellations, in which cancellation fees get refunded if riders rebook within 15 minutes.
Surge: Pricing for surge, meaning times of high demand, will be calculated as a multiple of the trip fare rather than a dollar amount, something Campbell said drivers would prefer (it generally means drivers can make more money).
“One interesting thing for drivers is that they’re already reaping the benefits of AB5” through these changes, Campbell said.
Lyft declined to comment on whether it also plans to revamp some processes in the wake of AB5.
The California law lays out a three-part test, saying that workers are employees unless they (A) work free from a company’s control, (B) do work outside the company’s core business, and (C) have independent enterprises in that type of work.
Tiffanny Brosnan, a Los Angeles employment lawyer, said the changes address prongs A and C of the test.
“But prong B has been dubbed the ‘killer B’ for good reason and this is where I see Uber having its biggest challenge,” she said in an email. “For Uber’s drivers to be properly classified as independent contractors under AB5, Uber will need to prove that the drivers’ work is outside of Uber’s usual course of business. So the question becomes how do you define Uber? Is it a software platform or a ride-hailing company
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