Uber Drivers Are Independent Contractors, Not Employees, Judge Rules (reuters.com) 192
Uber drivers are independent contractors, not full-time employees of the ride-hailing company, a federal judge in Philadelphia ruled in what is said to be the first classification of Uber drivers under federal law. Reuters reports: U.S. District Judge Michael Baylson on Wednesday said San Francisco-based Uber does not exert enough control over drivers for its limo service, UberBLACK, to be considered their employer under the federal Fair Labor Standards Act. The drivers work when they want to and are free to nap, run personal errands, or smoke cigarettes in between rides, Baylson said. Jeremy Abay, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, said he would appeal the ruling to the Philadelphia-based 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. The 3rd Circuit would be the first federal appeals court to consider whether Uber drivers are properly classified as independent contractors.
Public school teachers (Score:2)
Can they be switched to independent contractors too?
Instead of ride-sharing we'd have class-sharing. Teachers bid on showing up to work that day, lowest bidder gets the classroom.
Think of all the money we'd save in the short term, and a generation of shitty educated people we'd have in the long term. Shitty education makes for a reliable voter base with the right propaganda campaigns.
Re: (Score:3)
and a generation of shitty educated people we'd have in the long term
As opposed to how it is now?
Re: (Score:2)
Shouldn't that be in the gmail makeover thread?
Re: (Score:2)
Can they be switched to independent contractors too?
No.
Because the schools (via collective bargaining with AFSCME) dictate working days, working hours, breaks, holidays, benefits, etc. They are also subject to state certification and licensing, and required to teach certain topics within their discipline. The teachers have zero choice in any of this (except through collective bargaining agreements).
Re: (Score:2)
I have two words for you:
Poe's Law.
Re: (Score:2)
They are also subject to state certification and licensing, and required to teach certain topics within their discipline.
This sounds like a job for Betsy DeVos, United States Secretary of Education. All we need is for an exemption for character schools to have to deal with public servant unions, which kind of makes sense when a character school is a business and not a public services.
W.R.T. Poe's Law - I hope I'm wrong about everything.
Re: (Score:2)
Well you're certainly wrong about how to spell "charter". Unless you're referring to establishments that imbue their students with determination, fortitude and stoicism.
I'm a public school graduate (Score:2)
I'm about ready to give up on auto-correct, since I'm obviously never going to start proof reading my own work.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Public school teachers (Score:5, Insightful)
a high chance of being shot to death?
Schools are very safe. A child in America is far more likely to be shot at home. If you have been led to believe otherwise, you should reexamine your news sources.
Re: (Score:2)
Depends on the school. The high school I went to had a shooting every year (and it wasn't the most dangerous school in town). Didn't make the news, of course, as that was merely expected.
Re: (Score:3)
Gun deaths, including suicides and outside of schools is about 11 per 100,000 people.
Death from diabetes is about 21 per 100,000 people.
Perhaps we should worry more about the lunches and snack machines than the guns. (obviously fix both, but priorities matter before we get hysterical)
What Will the IRS Say? (Score:2, Insightful)
The IRS has a complex definition of who is an employee vs who is an independent contractor. There is a form SS-8 - Determination of Worker Status for Purposes of Federal Employment Taxes and Income Tax Withholding [irs.gov] with 47 detailed questions to determine precisely what the status of a worker is. This is important for tax purposes because the IRS expects the Social Security and Medicare taxes to be paid, at least in part, by the employer or else be paid by the independent contractor under the self employment
Re: (Score:2)
Then I'll be settling back with an extra large tub of tax-deductible popcorn to enjoy the show.
perspective (Score:2, Insightful)
Let's say you didn't get the head start (college education) a modestly wealthy family could've afforded you... let's say over and above the hours the wages the job you are qualified to do provides, you can taxi the more fortunate to their destination in order to make your bills more closely resemble your income.
Are you hoping for government regulation that diminishes your ability to work yourself and your family into solvency and regular groceries?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Government is always corrupt, democratic or not, and political corruption always exists, with an edge toward those who can afford to purchase influence.
A government that gives a shit about it's citizens' well being may well be a Utopian goal not practically available to many, especially those for which $45 a week extra for groceries and medicine is a life changing income difference.
Re: (Score:2)
The future of the permanent underclass "gig economy" is at stake
My first thought was that the future has already been decided. The Republicans were desperate to appoint as many federal judges as they could, and these are the sorts of rulings they love making.
It's a weird way to run a country, but it looks like you're stuck with it.
Re: (Score:2)
... an economy where people are desperate they need an Uber job to stay afloat.
In 2015, Uber drivers averaged $19 per hour. That is more than twice the minimum wage.
The median household income in America is $53k, but many household have more than one earner. The median individual earnings are about $32k, which for a 40 hour work week, is equivalent to about $16 per hour.
So driving for Uber is a pretty good job. Better pay than most, and you have no boss looking over your shoulder, no annoying coworkers, no office politics, and you can set your own hours.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
In 2015, Uber drivers averaged $19 per hour. That is more than twice the minimum wage.
$19/hour is not too awful as a wage for unskilled work, but $19 as a contracting rate is terrible. IRS mileage rates are around $0.50/mile (expected to cover fuel, maintenance and depreciation on the vehicle), so assuming 20 miles per hour (city driving, lots of stopping) that's $10 gone up front to cover the maintenance, which would not be counted as income for a salaried employee. Now you're looking at $9/hour, and that's before you start covering things like insurance (Uber requires that drivers pay th
Re: (Score:2)
... an economy where people are desperate they need an Uber job to stay afloat.
In 2015, Uber drivers averaged $19 per hour. That is more than twice the minimum wage.
Minimum wage applies to employees, not contractors. This matters because employees don't have to pay for business expenses or the employer portion of FICA. Once you account for those things, that $19/hour gross income is a lot less net.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Just don't come to New Zealand, we already have that Peter Thiel prick as a citizen no less.
corporatist bootlicking (Score:2)
You mean regulations that would see you making more money, with more benefits, with more rights against an employer that can let you go for any reason at any time?
Re: (Score:2)
Which is libertarian whackjobbery. Regulations, particularly a high minimum wage, means more jobs, not less.
Re: (Score:2)
Nope. But I'm going to hope the government keeps me from getting fucked over by Uber, which is the only job I can get.
Makes sense (Score:2)
The right wing has been stacking the courts (Score:2, Insightful)
Mark my words, everybody on this forum, you're next. They Uber rich (pun intended) are coming for your wages, your benefits, your retirement and your property. And why shouldn't they? You keep going to the polls and giving it to them.
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, because I should vote for a Left that is beyond convinced that we are greedy, racist, sexist, homophobe morons who hate science and love Hitler. All the leftist sects agree - they have found the revealed truth, and imposing it upon the benighted normals like us is so transcendently important that they are relieved of any moral limitations. They *hate* us. Look at Twitter. Look at Facebook. Twitter's CEO retweeted this article and commented "Great read". [archive.fo]
You're falling for right wing identity politics (Score:5, Insightful)
a. Medicare for all.
b. End the wars.
c. College for all.
d. New New Deal.
e. Infrastructure spending.
f. Living Wage.
The right likes to find our crazies and give them megaphones. It's easy to do because the American right wing owns the media. Ask yourself how often you hear a serious discussion of left wing economic ideas on TV. You don't. Don't be fooled by the right wing media and their cheap identity politics.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
The American right wing owns the media. [imgur.com] OK. LOL! What, like the New York Times, Washington Post [i.redd.it], CNN, NBC, ABC, CBS, MSNBC, and all the rest? Those are all right wing? [twimg.com] OK buddy, sure. I think you represent some kind of tiny splinter group that has zero traction. The Left is about sound economic policies? It's about borrow and spend to buy votes.
Right wing identity politics! OMG the Left invented identity politics and used it as a club to beat the crap out of us. It worked, too. They encouraged t
Don't confuse pointless social issues (Score:2)
And yes, right wing identity politics are a thing. They convince white men they have a "culture" instead of an economic future to defend. Antifa is a made up bit of nonsense sold to you so you'll forget abo
Re: Don't confuse pointless social issues (Score:2)
Re:You're falling for right wing identity politics (Score:4, Interesting)
They're about sound economic policy, to wit...
OH. I expected to see a Funny tag on this, was surprised to see Insightful. "Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins." Oh, it's you. I mostly disagree with you, but do occasionally agree.
/. metaphor: I want a pony. That sounds great -- so free medicare, college, and all jobs pay a minimum of $1M/second. (What? I need a Porsche to drive to work. And you want me to go to work tomorrow too, right? What do you mean in yesterday's USED car? What kind of a heathen ARE you?)
..." to the answer.) And how? Are you going to enforce an overall minimum wage? Change the W2 forms to add "hours worked", and throw the bosses in jail if the employee numbers don't work out right? If we pay (say) $20/hour for everyone for flipping burgers (or breathing) then any other job that's harder MUST pay more. How are you to find someone that wants (perhaps even go to school) to learn how to do the harder job just so they can earn the exact same amount. Why bother?
Medicare / College / Living Wage for all. And to use an old
Ehhh, I'm way tired and so will stop here with my sniping. I will ask what is a living wage? And for what jobs? All of them? So where IS the money going to come for this? (Don't just say "The Government". You have to add "and
Personally, I wish they'd raise taxes and more to the point REDUCE SPENDING. Everywhere. Not just reduce the increase, reduce the total amount. On wars. On government grants to business. On roads to nowhere. On the arts. On your sacred cow. On mine. EVERYTHING. Government is a coordinating entity for states, not a CONTROLLING entity. But that's not at all how it seem to run, for multiple decades now. (Here's a hint: the Government is a sink (load), not a source (generator.) THINK about that for a minute - all they do is redirect money-flows.) And BTW, I thought it was the LEFT-wing media. No, really.
Re: (Score:2)
Personally, I wish they'd raise taxes and more to the point REDUCE SPENDING
Not going to happen. Why? Anyone who raises taxes will get voted out of office. Anyone who cuts benefits will get voted out of office. That's why Obama signed a bill making the Bush tax cuts permanent, and the Republicans haven't been able to repeal the ACA.
The short is that we're going to keep cutting taxes and increasing benefits until the country is bankrupt. There's no real way out of it because it's what the voters want, and are willing to vote for (complaining the whole time, of course, and blaming
Re: (Score:2)
If the American left were for any of those things, they would have happened when the left controlled the house, senate, and presidency. How gullible do you have to be? Heck, the left didn't even pass a federal law legalizing abortion when the last had the reigns, because they don't actually care about the issue, and they enjoy the "get out the vote" power of the threat of a Republican appointing a Justice who overtures Roe v Wade.
The right, of course, isn't for any of the things they claim either, or they
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
The right likes to find our crazies and give them megaphones. It's easy to do because the American right wing owns the media.
You can't be serious. You can't. But you are.
Yes, Trump is is a pissing match with that known right winger, Bezos.
It's easy to "give your crazies a megaphone", because first, they have almost all the megaphones already (Hollywood, colleges, unions, bureaucracy, media), and secondly, there are so many of them and they are so very crazy.
Re: (Score:2)
b. End the wars.
Eh, the left opposes war until a Democratic president starts the war (Obama in Libya, Clinton in the Balkans. Even Bernie Sanders supported that one). The right opposes war until a Republican president starts one (Bush Bush, but again, they opposed Libya and Balkans). Hillary hugely favored using military power.
The other stuff is reasonable, but the Democratic party is still trying to find an issue (or set of issues) that will help them win the next election. I don't know what issues those will be.
Dead serious (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
You mean Democrats. Democrats are not left, they're another crazy right wing party.
Of course they are. Or haven't you not noticed that they've all jumped on the we-need-to-push-Trum
Re: (Score:2)
The paper that sat on Bush's warrantless wiretapping story through his re-election? The paper that has shilled for every war? A wingnut holding up the NYTimes to prove an argument is as disastrous to his case as a communist pointing to Chernobyl as a successful Soviet program.
They're protesting police committing murders, violence and harassment with impunity. R
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, because I should vote for a Left that is beyond convinced that we are greedy, racist, sexist, homophobe morons who hate science and love Hitler. All the leftist sects agree - they have found the revealed truth, and imposing it upon the benighted normals like us is so transcendently important that they are relieved of any moral limitations
There's something wonderfully ironic about someone describing the left in terms of right-wing straw-man ideas and simultaneously objecting to the left's straw-man depiction of the right.
Re: (Score:3)
That's the thing I don't get when I hear workers (like coders, developers, and engineers) saying that gig economy is nice.
I mean, you really don't get what's happening? Nobody is really winning on this, except for a few wealthy people. When they fire you to subcontract you as a 'gig', the economy on this won't go to other workers, but for executives and the owners of the companies in the transaction. You will receive less, have fewer securities, fewer benefits, so you can raise your nose and say that you ar
Great news for me! (Score:2)
The drivers work when they want to and are free to nap, run personal errands, or smoke cigarettes in between rides, Baylson said.
I have flex timings, I can come and go as I please, constantly go off for doctor appointment or go home to wait for the proverbial cable guy. I can smoke if I want to between jobs breaks.
That makes me a contractor! I can float a LLC that will contract with my employer. Then I can control the income stream, call it "Carried interest". I can defer the income, deduct all sorts of expenses ....
Can I, can I, can I, please please please pretty please with a bow on top?
Re: (Score:2)
Yup its called Leave Without Pay and "I am busy "
OK... (Score:3)
The drivers work when they want to and are free to nap, run personal errands, or smoke cigarettes in between rides
Sounds like some of the employees of the company I work for.
UK Ruling Would Disagree (Score:2)
Uber drivers are "contractors" and here's why... (Score:2)
Because, if Uber drivers are NOT "contractors" and are in fact employees, the effect will be devastation upon the U.S. government. Nearly ALL government agencies employ "contractors". Yet these contractors nearly always are prescribed where to work, when to work, what machines to use, what software to use, etc, etc, etc, etc.
There is essentially, a bulti-billion dollar can of worms that will be opened by legally defining Uber drivers as employees. And while a few state agencies and the like may want that d
I might have missed it... (Score:2)
All of you who thought Uber would be your ticket to riches... and are now resentful that you put extra miles on your new riceburner - in return for finding out that you're nowhere as cool, competent and charismatic as you had thought (those ratings can sure be revealing!) - stand down; this is not your mother
IF Uber = Employees THEN Economy = Recession (Score:3)
Thousands of Americans (and nearly as many H1B Visa holders) are employed as contractors at government agencies.
- They do not get to choose their work locations
- They do not get to choose when or what days they work
- They are required to use specific workstations
- They do not get to choose what tools or software they use
- They rarely have any lattitude in initiative or judgment of their work
- They often spend years, even a decade working on the same contract
- They often perform identical work as the agency employees
"You are not an independent contractor if you perform services that can be controlled by an employer (what will be done and how it will be done)."
If this is the case, nearly ALL the contractors utilized by U.S. government agencies are in fact, disqualified. And this is why, I really don't think they will crack open that can of worms with Uber. Because the spoiled jam that would be released would literally cause a recession.
Tale of two cities (Score:2)
Across the pond Uber has employees rather than independent contractors.
Perhaps it is easier to buy an American judge?
British panel rules Uber drivers are employees, not contractors [usatoday.com]
Re:Think we're going to get a legal definition soo (Score:5, Insightful)
If you want to ensure that gig economy workers have the best wages and conditions, make sure that there are a large number of gig economy service providers competing with each other.
Re: (Score:2)
Or maybe the whole "gig economy" was just a fad that was not going to be sustainable for anybody---something that could tide you over in 2009 when you were laid off and couldn't find a new job in the "recovery," but nothing you would want to do as a career.
Price fixing? (Score:5, Insightful)
I think they are clearly employees, but if they are independent contractors, they then have the right to set their own prices for work. If Uber is making all its "contractors" charge the same fee, that's called price fixing and it's illegal.
Re:Price fixing? (Score:4, Informative)
if they are independent contractors, they then have the right to set their own prices for work.
Nonsense. The IRS publishes a long list of criteria, none of which is alone sufficient or necessary for "contractor" designation.
Many contractors DO NOT have the right to set their own prices.
Some employees DO have the right to set prices. This includes many employees paid partly or fully in commissions.
Re: (Score:2)
Really, guess you haven't seen the thousands of independent contractors employed at the IRS, on H1B Visas.
Re: (Score:2)
This guy has a few phones but I have seen worse pictures.
https://imgur.com/gallery/He17... [imgur.com]
Re: (Score:2)
Because they can't set their own rates, like the parent said.
Re: (Score:2)
Because they can't set their own rates, like the parent said.
When they refuse a job because it pays too low but accept another one because the pay is sufficient, they just set their own rate.
Re: (Score:2)
Not if they're driving for Uber. Oy, the contortions Uber-fart sniffers go through to justify the company's business practices....
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I'm trying to understand your thought process, because to me they're obviously contractors and I don't understand the counterargument. You're saying that since they can't set their own prices, they're employees? But if they could set their own prices, they would be contractors? Does that mean you think that any employer that lets you negotiate your salary, and pays different employees different amounts, is actually not an employer? I'm not being snarky, I really don't get the opposing view.
Re: (Score:2)
I'm trying to understand your thought process, because to me they're obviously contractors and I don't understand the counterargument. You're saying that since they can't set their own prices, they're employees? But if they could set their own prices, they would be contractors? Does that mean you think that any employer that lets you negotiate your salary, and pays different employees different amounts, is actually not an employer? I'm not being snarky, I really don't get the opposing view.
I think the parent post you've replied to is confused between Uber's drivers being contractors of the riders vs. being contractors of Uber.
People who rent out their places via AirBnB choose the price. AirBnB takes a cut. Clearly, AirBnB landlords are completely independent in terms of pricing (and a bunch of other terms on how their property is used), and AirBnB is just providing them a service. Now, Uber claimed to be doing the same thing for (essentially) taxi drivers. However, since Uber drivers do not a
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
How are people going to pay for housing at 20-30 hours a week? $30 an hour might cover a room if they can find one. Then there is the problem that the essential stuff is getting more expensive. Sure toys are getting cheaper but if you have no money left after buying the necessaries...
Re: (Score:2)
Slums 2.0 will involve apps that help people pool together enough money to rent a building, and rather than having "personal" living-space, will optimise room availability on a minute-by-minute basis
Re: (Score:2)
Could be, there are places where families of 5 live in 40 sq ft.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: Think we're going to get a legal definition so (Score:2)
The "gig economy" is simply a process for acquiring on demand human resources to supplement automated services. That's not going anywhere. Most industries will go through a period of gig economy on their path to go fully automated.
Re: (Score:2)
Or maybe the whole "gig economy" was just a fad that was not going to be sustainable for anybody---something that could tide you over in 2009 when you were laid off and couldn't find a new job in the "recovery," but nothing you would want to do as a career.
As someone who started a gig economy website in 2009 that is still growing and profitable (unlike Uber) in 2018 I can attest that it is not a fad, at least not in my market.
Re: (Score:2)
All kinds of odd things happened...
but for most companies 29 hours was too disruptive.
https://fivethirtyeight.com/fe... [fivethirtyeight.com]
Re: (Score:2)
If you want to ensure that gig economy workers have the best wages and conditions, make sure that there are a large number of gig economy service providers competing with each other.
You do realise that conjuring up enough demand for workers has been a little bit of a problem for almost every country in the world since this thing called the 'great recession'. These are not developers earning $500 a day. They are low skill workers who are competing with robots, and the robots are getting better.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
If you want to ensure that gig economy workers have the best wages and conditions, make sure that there are a large number of gig economy service providers competing with each other.
I dont think you get how this "gig economy" is meant to work.
The workers... erm... Contractors aren't meant to get the best wages and/or conditions. The system is designed to transfer costs from the employer to the employee... erm... contractor whilst paying them a less than liveable wage in order to ensure the company can make as much money as possible (which also isn't happening).
Re: (Score:2)
If you want to ensure that gig economy workers have the best wages and conditions, make sure that there are a large number of gig economy service providers competing with each other.
I dont think you get how this "gig economy" is meant to work. The workers... erm... Contractors aren't meant to get the best wages and/or conditions. The system is designed to transfer costs from the employer to the employee... erm... contractor whilst paying them a less than liveable wage in order to ensure the company can make as much money as possible (which also isn't happening).
Exactly.
Historically, post-WWII, in the West, "gig jobs" mostly fell into two broad categories:
1) High-skilled, well-paying jobs for which there was comparatively a lot of work and a limited supply of skilled labour. This includes both plumbers and freelance programmers. People would go the contractor or "gig" route because they could make more money than working as an employee for someone else in the same field of work. Here, the line between "gig" and "small business" (where does one end, and the other be
Re:Think we're going to get a legal definition soo (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
IANAL
Obviously.
if a person is not allowed to subcontract the work, they are considered an employee...
This is nonsense. The IRS publishes a long list of criteria for determining whether a worker can be classified as a contractor. Subcontracting is one of those criteria, but no single factor is either necessary nor sufficient to make the determination.
There is no rule/law that contractors must be able to sub-contract.
There is also no rule/law that employees can't sub-contract.
Re: (Score:2)
Also, even if the IRS classifies it as an employee relationship for Tax Purposes; that does not mean it is true for FLSA purposes.
Re: (Score:2)
Perhaps, just maybe, the federal judge actually read the law? You might consider that a full-time professional who makes a living studying something might be right where your "very clearly" is wrong, especially if you've never even read the law.
Re: (Score:2)
How many times in this thread does he have to write "X is one of those criteria, but..." before you get the fucking point that they are very clearly independent contractors?
Fixed that for you. They're very clearly independent contractors. They work the hours they want on the days they want for the pay they want. Doesn't get much more independent than that.
Legal definitions (Score:5, Interesting)
The law considers the following things:
Independence in investment in and choice of equipment etc. If the worker uses their own judgement to decide which equipment they want to use, and they buy their equipment, that may be an independent contractor. If the payer chooses and buys the equipment, it's likely an employee using it. In this cass, the employee chooses and buys their own car.
Permanence. Short-term gigs are often contracts. Projects that take more than a year to complete, where the worker is expected to be there long term, are likely employees. People doing Uber while between jobs, or to get some extra holiday cash, look like contractors.
Degree of control. Does the payer specify the outcome (fix my sink) or the exact process?
Financial risk. If the company guarantees exactly $x / hour, no more or less, that's probably an employee. If the worker can make more or less depending on how they choose to run their work, that's probably a contract.
Initiative and judgement. Is the worker following a script provided by the payer, or making their own plans and judgements? Can the Uber driver decide what area to work, based on which part of town they think will make the most money?
Ability to work for others, and actually working for others. Can Uber drivers also drive for Lyft? The plumber I hire to fix my sink also does similar work for other people, so he's a contractor. I have a limited non-compete clause with my employer, so I'm an employee.
I probably forgot one.
The IRS has extensive guidelines. The department of labor has similar ones, but not as extensive. The Supreme Court has enumerated broad considerations in certain cases.
Generally, the word "Independent" in "independent contractor" is important. Does the worker control how they do the work?
With Uber it seems to me people have two viewpoints on the whole thing. Uber advertises "make extra money in your free time". Many drivers see it as a full-time, long-term job.
It seems to me that while *some* people are able figure out the best hours and locations to work in order to do well with it long-term, for most people it's probably better as something you'd do while looking for another job, or only occasionally during surge pricing periods or whatever.
Re: (Score:2)
Many drivers see it as a full-time, long-term job.
About 20% of Uber drivers work full time (at least 35 hours per week).
More than half work 15 hours or less.
Citation: Survey of Uber drivers [time.com] from 2015.
Interesting, thanks. 20% Uber drivers do it full t (Score:2)
Thanks for that.
Easy fix for Uber (Score:2)
Though they got the outcome they want in this case, if I were running Uber I'd make a change in their business model to make it absolutely clear that drivers are contractors: Let drivers set their own prices. Uber uses an algorithm based on mileage and time to calculate the price, so let drivers set the parameters, and show potential riders a list of drivers with ETAs and prices, calculated according to the driver's preference.
No reasonable person is going to conclude that a driver who uses their own equi
Interesting idea. Uncertainty could be an issue (Score:2)
That's an interesting idea. Sometimes there is only one driver nearby and as a customer the uncertainty would be a turn off. I like to be able to plan on using Uber. I would think the bidding would also be less desirable for drivers, who prefer some predictability (they already don't know how many people will be wanting rides, if they'll get much business). So I think Uber makes it better for both drivers and passengers by setting some predictable, standard pricing. I wonder if there is a way to get "the be
Re: (Score:2)
If you are frequently in places that there is only one driver nearby, then you already have uncertainty. Zero is very close to one, so you must frequently be in areas where there are no drivers nearby. I suspect this is a sort of search bias at work; your definition of "nearby" ends up being defined by where the closest driver is; you stop zooming out when you see one.
If it were necessary (and I doubt it would be), your concern could be addressed by defining price limits that kick in if there are too few
LOL "Zero is very close to one" (Score:2)
"Zero is very close to one" - that's true! Lol
Price limits could be a good idea. Maximum prices would protect riders (and Uber's reputation). Minimum prices would prevent math-challenged drivers from losing money by pricing themselves lower than the cost of gas, tires, and mileage, thereby making it impossible for drivers to make money, and again damaging Uber's reputation.
In an ideal economy, we wouldn't need to protect drivers who can't (or don't) do simple arithmetic, but in America I'm afraid we do.
PS the IRS will send executives to prison (Score:2)
Btw, I mentioned the IRS has extensive guidelines. Some people mistakenly think that if you CALL a worker an independent contractor you can reduce tax payments and hassle. This is a major item the IRS watches for. Calling someone an independent contractor when they are not in fact independent is tax evasion. Every year the IRS levies billions of dollars in civil penalties for employment tax evasion, and refers cases for criminal prosecution. Business owners and executives go to prison.
Want to save some hass
Re: (Score:2)
So long as the "contractor" loophole exists companies are going to use it ---- what we need is some FLSA rules for contractors including:
Re: Think we're going to get a legal definition so (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Bingo. The problem here is not that Uber drivers are considered self-employed contractors, it's that treating them as such removes a bunch of responsibilities from Uber. This hasn't mattered in the past, because self employment was traditionally something that only people in skilled trades or professions did. We recently hired a self-employed carpenter. He set his own price and I think he makes a pretty good living at it because his skills are in demand. The balance of power in negotiations between pay
Re: (Score:2)
You're talking about Kshama Sawant. Her husband works for Microsoft so she is a strange cat. On one hand she hates normal people and the poor because she says we're not rich because we're lazy thus we need to die. On the other hand, she says anyone that is within 100 meters of Trump but doesn't try to arrest him is subhuman and needs to die. She goes both ways. She is just an overall hater. She hates us so much.
She also said all criminals should be executed in the streets while she is a criminal. I p
Re: Wrong, this was already decided (Score:2)
Trump wants worse for my kind
He wants to sleep with you?
Re: (Score:2)
Other countries with actual worker rights have been classifying them as regular employees for a taxi service....
This is UberBLACK, which is most definitely not a taxi service, since it's a limo service.
Re: (Score:2)
Other countries with actual worker rights have been classifying them as regular employees for a taxi service....
This is UberBLACK, which is most definitely not a taxi service, since it's a limo service.
Is there any difference between a taxi service and a limo service, apart from the fact that limos are bigger and more expensive?
Re: hah, only in the US (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, they're regulated differently almost everywhere. Note that limo services mostly provide "towncars" (used to be actual Lincoln towncars, but Lincoln stopped making them, so any long wheelbase sedan these days). A limo service is not allowed to be hailed from the street, and importantly is not allowed to pick up from the airport without prior arrangements (they can't use the taxi stand). You can only get a limo by calling their dispatch, not by waving one down.
Limo services also can't use meters - in