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About Northwest labor press. (Portland , Ore.) 1987-current | View Entire Issue (May 1, 2015)
PAGE 12 | May 1, 2015 | NORTHWEST LABOR PRESS Uber unleashed By Don McIntosh Associate Editor All that Portland cabbies asked for was “Same city, same rules.” But the new rules City Council approved April 21 create what Commissioner Nick Fish called a “separate but unequal sys- tem”—900 full-time taxi drivers, stuck with sunk investments they made under the old regula- tory framework, will now com- pete with a limitless supply of lightly-regulated casual drivers in a 120-day experiment that opens the door to Uber and other app-based ride services. All signs suggest the experiment will become permanent when that period ends. That spells worry for compa- nies like Union Cab, where owner-drivers are members of Communications Workers of America (CWA) Local 7901; and for driver-owned Radio Cab and investor-owned Broadway Cab, which employ members of Teamsters Local 305 in dispatch, fueling and office support. “Instead of adding better reg- ulation, you are destroying exist- ing regulation, just to meet the clock of Uber,” Union Cab pres- ident Kedir Wako told the City Council at an April 14 work ses- sion. The new rules are the product of a strange four-month process that culminated in nine hours of tense City Council hearings and final-hour fireworks between members of a divided City Council. The fast-track re-write of city taxi rules was announced in December, after Uber launched its smart-phone-based ride service in defiance of Port- land regulations, and over- whelmed the capacity of the City’s bungling enforcers to stop it. The scofflaw company agreed to halt its operation in exchange for a promise by Mayor Charlie Hales and Commissioner Steve Novick to rewrite the rules and make Uber legal by mid-April. To work through the details, Hales and Novick appointed a new “innovation task force” that lacked any taxi industry repre- sentation—or even familiarity with the industry. The 12-mem- ber task force got a crash course in taxi rules, and strained to rec- ommend a regulatory overhaul by the arbitrary deadline. In its April 9 report to City Council, the task force proposed that the city get rid of its cap on the number of taxis, and let Transportation Network Compa- nies (TNCs) like Uber and Lyft operate—charging whatever fare they want—under a separate set of looser regulations than the ones taxis face. For example, taxi companies would still have to make 20 percent of their fleets wheelchair accessible, but TNCs could refer disabled passengers to taxi companies or elsewhere. Tucked in at the end of the re- port was a dissenting view from task force member Kayse Jama, a union ally and immigrant rights activist with the Center for Intercultural Organizing. Jama argued that the city should keep its cap on fares, and should re- quire TNC companies to accept dispatch by phone, and require TNC drivers to accept cash—in order to make service available to seniors and the poor who lack credit cards or smart phones. But those recommendations weren’t heeded in the City Council ordi- nance proposed by Novick. In- stead, Novick’s ordinance ended the fare limit for taxis, too. Steve Novick, deregulator Steve Novick ran to the left of Jeff Merkley in a 2008 campaign for U.S. Senate, and campaigned Union Cab president Kedir Wako addresses City Commissioner Steve Novick and other members of City Council at a final hearing April 21 over new for- hire transportation rules that will give companies like Uber advantages over traditional taxis. as a progressive in his 2012 race for City Council. But it’s been a long strange trip since Hales put him in charge of the Portland Bureau of Transportation in mid- 2013. Last year Novick pro- posed a regressive tax to fund street repairs, then abandoned it in the face of public backlash. Now he’s the front man for taxi deregulation — a proposal that for many years was advocated by the Cascade Policy Institute, Oregon’s right wing “free-mar- ket” think tank. “What we are proposing to do is to let the normal free market rules apply,” Novick told mem- bers of the innovation task force at its first meeting Jan. 14. In trucking and aviation, deregulation ushered in an era of bankruptcies, mass layoffs, and drastic wage cuts. Previous at- tempts at municipal taxi deregu- lation didn’t work out well ei- ther, according to a comprehen- sive 1996 University of Denver study—contributing to rising prices, traffic congestion (and falling service standards and driver earnings). Cities cap taxi rates to protect the public, and they cap the number the number of taxis to ensure drivers can make a living. But Novick re- peatedly questioned why those limits should remain, when there aren’t similar limits on restau- rants or big box retailers. That’s an ironic position given Novick’s sponsorship of a City ordinance to divest Walmart bonds. Uber is the Walmart of transportation services, City Commissioner Amanda Fritz wrote in an April 20 op-ed in The Oregonian. At the final April 21 hearing Novick said he hates Uber. Yet the ordinance he sponsored legalizes its operation in Portland. “He’s not the guy I used to know,” said CWA Local 7901 legislative chair Mark Sturbois, who observed the task force meetings and city council hear- ings as the changes were dis- cussed. “The fact is, a taxi is part of a public transportation sys- tem. That’s why they’re regu- lated. They have to protect con- sumers with safety and pricing.” In an interview with the Labor Press last November, Novick spoke of ensuring protections for workers while ending limits on market entry. But nothing in the final ordinance protects workers. At hearings leading up to the final vote, Novick’s proposed resolution drew objections from the taxi industry and from Fritz, Fish, and Dan Saltzman. Fritz wanted to know what it means that taxis could change prices every hour, just like Uber: “How is somebody approaching a taxi cab supposed to know what the fare is? Ask every cab in line?” [In fact, taxi companies say they’ll stick to their previous rates of $2.50 a mile—listed on Turn to Page 9