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Transportation Government Software United States Technology

New York City May Cap the Number of Uber, Lyft Vehicles On Its Streets (engadget.com) 73

New York City may become the first major U.S. city to cap the number of Uber and other ride-sharing vehicles on the road. According to Engadget, "The City Council is looking at proposed legislation that would largely freeze the issuance of ridesharing vehicle licenses while officials work on a year-long study of the cars' effects." Wheelchair-accessible vehicles would be exempt from any cap. From the report: This wouldn't be the first time the city tried a cap -- it abandoned an attempt in 2015. There's greater pressure to consider a limit this time, though. NYC now has over 100,000 ride-hailing cars (up from 63,000 back in 2015), and a string of suicides by both ridesharing and taxi drivers has raised questions about working conditions that can include low pay, long hours and poor compensation for time off. On top of the cap, the Council is looking at raising minimum pay and otherwise regulating on-demand transportation services. NYC is concerned that the growth of ridesharing is coming at the expense of drivers' well-being (regardless of who they work for), and it's unlikely to back down until it's satisfied these workers are receiving fair treatment. Uber argues the cap would "leave New Yorkers stranded" without solving issues like congestion, taxi medallion ownership and mass transit. It claimed it would hinder passengers who live outside of Manhattan and don't have reliable alternatives to cabs or public transportation. The company even posted a commercial underscoring how difficult it was for some residents to hail taxis.
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New York City May Cap the Number of Uber, Lyft Vehicles On Its Streets

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  • Verboten! This will not end well. *defeated sigh*

  • Is it impossible to contemplate letting the free market work?

    The pay is shit and drives are suiciding? Well, people KEEP SIGNING UP TO DRIVE, don't they? If it's that bad, and it's just that they're stupid, let them fucking suffer the consequences of their choices.

    Seriously, I keep hearing people discussing about how free-market economics doesn't really work anymore...of course it doesn't. Capitalism only succeeds by failures, in the same sense evolution advances from death. Protect people and companies

    • It would be a free market if drivers paid for their own roads and their own pollution.

    • Re: (Score:1, Flamebait)

      by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      The risk was that a city had to keep going back to the consequences. Police and courts seeing the same problems again.

      Ensure the service has good working equipment.
      The way to measure the amount to pay was set and could not be tampered with.
      Police knew of staff and that staff could be trusted with all the different people who would use the service.
      That the person who was approved to drive knew the city to a good level. Was able to welcome a tourist. Provide a service for any travel distance needed.
  • by Jzanu ( 668651 ) on Friday July 27, 2018 @08:39PM (#57022138)
    The goal of this policy like others worldwide is volume restriction for pollution reduction and traffic control. Whether a car is a taxi or one of these private taxi services claimed as ride-share services, its exhaust creates air pollution. Even if it is electric, there is air pollution created at the utility. Wasting energy is a waste. Cities also have finite areas meaning traffic must be managed. Access for emergency vehicles must be ensured.
  • Wouldn't being told they are not allowed to work due to the cap be bad as well? Instead of making crap pay, make none! (though with poor pay I can see working for Uber in NYC being negative income....)
  • To discover if drivers are fairly treated the city only needs a written form from each driver every week. If hours or earnings are too low the city can fine the companies. The city is getting involved for some other reasons. After all, government is rarely concerned about the health of wealth of the working guy.
  • Same liberal/socialists who *always* think they can improve situations by limiting people's freedom to do what they want to do.

    So the streets are congested? Ok ... What else did you expect when you have a city that heavily populated in that relatively small amount of space? It's part of the package deal if you want to live in a place like that.

    There's a good chance that every Uber or Lyft driver out there helps DECREASE congestion, vs. all of those people they take around opting to drive themselves. (A lot

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