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Uber chief: law could idle operations in California
by Staff Writers
San Francisco (AFP) Aug 12, 2020

Being forced to classify drivers as employees could temporarily idle Uber operations in its home state of California, the ride-sharing firm's chief said Wednesday.

The comments from Uber's chief executive Dara Khosrowshahi to MSNBC come after a court gave Uber and rival Lyft until the middle of next week to reclassify drivers as employees instead of contract workers in compliance with a new state law.

"If the court doesn't reconsider, then in California, it's hard to believe we'll be able to switch our model to full-time employment quickly," Khosrowshahi said in the MSNBC interview.

"We'll have to essentially shut down Uber until November when the voters decide."

Uber and Lyft are backing a referendum in the state to overturn the law, while pledging to provide benefits for a social safety net that would keep gig workers independent

The order came Monday when a judge granted a restraining order in a lawsuit filed by California attorney general Xavier Becerra and three cities including San Francisco, where Lyft and Uber are based.

The suit calls on Lyft and Uber to comply with a state law that went into effect at the start of this year that requires "gig workers" such as smartphone-summoned ride service drivers to be classified as employees, eligible for unemployment, medical and other benefits.

Uber and Lyft expect to appeal the decision, which could buy them more time.

A backup plan for Uber would be to pause operations in California, eventually restarting with "a much smaller service, much higher prices" and probably focused in the center of cities or in suburbs," according to Khosrowshahi.

The rideshare rivals have maintain that most of their drivers want to remain independent even if they also are looking for benefits.

gc/rl

Uber

Lyft


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Uber earnings hit hard as pandemic stalls revenue
San Francisco (AFP) Aug 6, 2020
Uber on Thursday reported a $1.8 billion loss in the recently ended quarter as the COVID-19 pandemic caused its shared-ride business revenue to plunge. Overall revenues skidded 29 percent from a year ago to $2.2 billion, as gains from delivery failed to offset a massive 75 percent drop in its ride-hailing bookings, San Francisco-based Uber said. Uber shares dropped more than four percent in after-market trades that followed release of the earnings figures. "Our team continues to move at Uber ... read more

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