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Transportation Government Technology

Massachusetts Governor Introduces Bill To Regulate Uber, Lyft 193

jfruh writes: The "wild west" days of ridesharing services may be coming to an end. The governor of Massachusetts has proposed a bill that would regulate Uber, Lyft, and their rivals in the state. Among the new rules: ridesharing services would have to run background checks on their drivers and keep a roster of active drivers; vehicles would need to have some external marker indicating that they're a ridesharing car; and drivers would need to hold at $1 million worth of insurance when transporting passengers.
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Massachusetts Governor Introduces Bill To Regulate Uber, Lyft

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  • Yeah.... (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday April 28, 2015 @08:26PM (#49573709)

    As if they will give a damn any your regulations... If they did, they would be a proper taxi service.

    • by Rei ( 128717 )

      As if they will give a damn any your regulations... If they did, they would be a proper taxi service.

      States have these peculiar individuals who work for them known as "police" who throw people who explicitly violate their regulations a place called "jail", and possibly another one called "prison".

      Uber will have to play by the rules or get out of state. Otherwise their drivers and Uber corporate itself will be heavily fined at the least every day of operation, and at worst, people will go to prison.

      Uber is a

  • Taxis (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday April 28, 2015 @08:28PM (#49573711)

    Or they could classify them as taxis and leave legit ride shares alone. Its not ride sharing when you pick someone up and their location and deliver them anywhere they want. You aren't going near there, you are driving people for money, so you are a taxi driver... because internet doesn't change this.

    The über price model reflects this with surge pricing to get more drivers on the road..... how can you do that with people who are just sharing rides?

  • by Irate Engineer ( 2814313 ) on Tuesday April 28, 2015 @08:35PM (#49573737)

    This is Massachusetts doing what it does best - looking to rake in some tax money. Massachusetts is particularly diligent to make sure they get a cut when cash changes hands. I'm pretty sure that the legislators here get twitchy in summer when they see kids setting up unregulated lemonade stands.

    I do see this being ignored completely, until someone gets pulled over and stupidly blurts out "Uber" in the conversation with the officer. At that point they will probably set up checkpoints on the HOV lanes where one must pull over and look deeply in a trooper's eyes and state that they are not an Uber/Lyft driver, honest!

    • by sphealey ( 2855 ) on Tuesday April 28, 2015 @09:13PM (#49573925)

      = = = Massachusetts is particularly diligent to make sure they get a cut when cash changes hands.= = =

      There's a term for that. Wait a minute, ... got it. The term is "the law".

      sPH

      • by tmosley ( 996283 )
        The Mafia does the same thing. Therefore, buy the transitive effect, the Mafia is the law, or more succinctly, the law is a Mafia.

        Did you know there was peacetime income tax in the US prior to 1913?
    • by CronoCloud ( 590650 ) <cronocloudauron.gmail@com> on Tuesday April 28, 2015 @09:14PM (#49573933)

      This is Massachusetts doing what it does best - looking to rake in some tax money.

      It's one of the reasons that if you look at the census data, Massachusetts comes out looking good. unlike say Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas, Mississippi, Alabama, etc etc

      Massachusetts isn't a net burden on the US like those states are. Massachusetts pays it's own way and more than that it's a better place to live.

      • Those southern states draw more federal dollars because of the 10s of millions of elderly who have retired down there -- in the warm sun and away from the northeast and west coast's insane taxes and traffic. Damn those burdensome old people!
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      All those taxes and we get: universal healthcare (first in the nation), top ten schools nationally and a lower per capita rate of crime than half the nation.

      • and a lower per capita rate of crime than half the nation.

        Though higher than New York. Or South Carolina. Or Mississippi....

  • by Bamfarooni ( 147312 ) on Tuesday April 28, 2015 @08:40PM (#49573759)

    A quick web search shows that similarly worded legislation is being considered in Arkansas [state.ar.us], Kansas [kslegislature.org], Utah [utah.gov], South Carolia [scstatehouse.gov], and New York [nysenate.gov].

    While I didn't do an item-by-item comparison, a quick glance suggests that most or all these were crafted by a common hand. Anyone want to guess who that might be?

    • by Bamfarooni ( 147312 ) on Tuesday April 28, 2015 @08:48PM (#49573807)

      Looks like I missed North Dakota [nd.gov], Hawaii [hawaii.gov], Arizona [azleg.gov], New Mexico [nmlegis.gov], Connecticut [ct.gov] and one from Minnesota [state.mn.us], that's just mentioned in their journal.

      • New Mexico,

        Ah yes, good to enforce driving standards in NM. Such standards would include:

        * Making sure you are in a convoy of 3 cars tailgaiting each other in the middle lane of an otherwise completely empty 3 lane road
        * Driving round on the emergency spare for at least 6 months of the year
        * Recommended (but not required) to use the temporary paper license plate until it fades completely (about a year in strong sunlight).
        * A chipped windscreen
        * One headlight

    • by ghjm ( 8918 )

      It's no great mystery.

      Uber has been working with state legislatures to try to get all the bans and regulatory uncertainty to go away. The legislation reads like a list of things Uber already does, except for the required markings, which is something Uber surely wants but can't force on its drivers - "it's not our fault, it's the law now in Massachusetts, so pick - Uber or Lyft - you can't have both."

    • Crafted by consumers which do not want to be caught in a rideshare uninsured in an accident, or want to get late at night in a rideshare with a known rapist ? The amount of the insurance is really up to discussion. The presence of all mentionned items (insurance+markers+background check) are on the other hand good for consumers.
  • Uber backs the legislation, saying the bill would promote innovation and keep Uber drivers and passengers safe, said Meghan Joyce, Uber East Coast general manager, in a statement. Massachusetts residents have shown they support ride-hailing and Lyft will work with the state to pass legislation that maintains this transportation option, according to the company.

    The main innovation of Uber and Lyft is that it bypassed taxi legislation. It introduced a supply/demand based pricing system (which presumably bypasses legislation on pricing). It does not limit the amount of drivers that can be on the road (bypassing the legislation requiring taxis to have medallions designed to limit the supply of drivers). I don't think the government would have considered these to be innovations until it worked better than the existing corrupt taxi system.

    • by plopez ( 54068 )

      Now that they own the market they will lobby to lock out other disrupters. The miracle of the "Free" market.

      • The free market isn't the problem. The problem is that legislators should not be allowed to sell their power on the free market. If a congressman wants to auction off influence on ebay, the problem isn't ebay.
  • This exclude about 8.6% from yet-another job.
  • How much coverage do cab drivers have to carry?

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