By Artie Weinberger
The NY City Council has proposed a new bill targeting Uber, Lyft and other app.-based car services, Crain’s reported.
The bill was written by the new “For-Hire Vehicle Committee” of the
City Council and will include tighter regulations and higher fees,
including a new $2000 yearly fee for each car. App.- based drivers work
independently using their own vehicles and obtain passengers via a smart
phone app.
These services are also referred to as “e-hail” since the one
requesting the car simply goes online to do so instead of hailing a cab
in the street.
The fee is designed to slow the growth of these services,
essentially pricing out some drivers. The app-based companies have come
under scrutiny as their rapid growth has contributed to record levels of
congestion in Manhattan while undermining the traditional hired-car
industries, Crain’s reported.
Taxi medallion values have also plummeted. In the past selling taxi
medallions was a giant industry in NYC, where dealers would sell
medallions for as much as a million dollars. The number of medallions is
capped at 135,000 in NYC, however with Uber there is no limit as
basically any driver with a good automobile and driving record can sign
up and jump on the app for passengers.
Many long time New Yorkers look at this effort as a “protection
scheme” designed to protect the profits the City makes from the limited
amount of Taxi medallions. Others point out the black car or TLC
industry floods the street with cars, just as the app.-based drivers do,
yet no new regulations are being proposed on the TLC industry.
The price of taxi medallions has dropped drastically in NYC;
currently the price is around $186,000.
Mayor de Blasio in his recent
budget included $1.2 billion in expected money to be obtained by
auctioning 1,650 taxi medallions from fiscal years 2019 to 2023. That’s
an average price of $728,000. Most analysts believe those numbers are
unrealistic as recent auctions only managed to pull $186,000 or so for
each medallion.
One can speculate the regulations proposed have alternative reasoning beyond “traffic congestion”.
The bill proposes also that any new license for an app-based service
base would also have to meet city environmental requirements, which
essentially mimics the standards of taxi-cabs. It must be noted that
every car in NYC driven by anyone already has pass emissions inspections
to receive a registration sticker.
One final proposal, would force app.-based drivers to be attached
to a single base. Currently, an e-hail driver working for Uber can
respond to a dispatch from any Uber base. This basically would change
the entire business model.
“I have seen how Uber is not regulated—that what is being demanded of
other members of the industry is not demanded of Uber. The point is to
make it equal and fair”, Crain’s reported Councilman Ruben Diaz Sr.,
chairman of the new committee saying.
Copyright 2018 The Jewish Voice. All rights reserved.
No comments:
Post a Comment