Lyft and Uber said they will cease operations in Minneapolis after the city’s council voted Thursday to override a mayoral veto and require that ride-hailing services increase driver wages to the equivalent of the local minimum wage of $15.57 an hour.

Lyft called the ordinance “deeply flawed,” saying in a statement that it supports a minimum earning standard for drivers but not the one passed by the council.

  • @[email protected]
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    973 months ago

    If a business cannot operate while paying a livable wage, it does not need to exist. That doesn’t mean minimum wage, that means a liveable wage.

    Any business that’s not even willing to do the minimum… Fuck 'em.

    • @[email protected]
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      313 months ago

      Well the living wage in the twin cities is roughly $23/hr while living alone with no kids, so it’s still a ways off. However, I actually hope they leave. Then metro transit has good reason to greatly expand the lightrail lines

        • @[email protected]
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          3 months ago

          Yep, I know the CWAer that helped form the coop in Denver! Driver co-ops will become very popular as people realize they’re getting screwed by these companies

    • @[email protected]
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      3 months ago

      And if the public still needs the service that a business can’t fill, it should be publicly funded and pay its employees a living wage.

    • @[email protected]
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      63 months ago

      It seems to me to be equally plain that no business which depends for existence on paying less than living wages to its workers has any right to continue in this country. By “business” I mean the whole of commerce as well as the whole of industry; by workers I mean all workers, the white collar class as well as the men in overalls; and by living wages I mean more than a bare subsistence level-I mean the wages of decent living.

      -FDR

      http://docs.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/odnirast.html

  • @[email protected]
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    763 months ago

    Democratic Gov Tim Walz, who vetoed a bill last year that would have boosted pay for Uber and Lyft drivers, told The Associated Press on Wednesday that he was concerned because so many depend on those services, including disabled people.

    I get the sentiment, but relying on private for-profit companies to provide basic transportation services in a city is stupid. That’s how Minneapolis got in this situation.

    • @[email protected]
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      63 months ago

      relying on private for-profit companies to provide basic transportation services in a city is stupid

      While true, it hurts fewer people to build up the alternative before cutting off the current system. I don’t know (and doubt) if Minneapolis is doing that specifically, but Minnesota has been on a progressive tear and I hope they keep going.

  • e_t_
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    383 months ago

    Don’t let the door hit you on the way out

    • @[email protected]
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      3 months ago

      That’s great but now all the Uber and Lyft drivers in Minneapolis will have to find a different gig.

      • @[email protected]
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        193 months ago

        Sure, I will believe Uber and Lyft are going to leave when they actually do.

        See the thing is, as titanic as these “rideshare” companies are they don’t fucking do anything but maintain a shitty app and provide some kind of legal stability.

        All it takes is for one functional socialist worker cooperative to get a basic ass rideshare app off the ground and if it starts to build serious momentum even in an American city or two all of a sudden the billions and billions of dollars that rideshare companies claim they are worth starts to turn invisible like one of those parts to a time travel movie where a character has begun to turn transparent and disappear because they have been erased from the timeline.

        The vast majority of the time these companies aren’t going to want to take that risk, or if they do they are idiots for doing so.

        We don’t need software companies like this the way we need electronics companies, grocery stores, power companies and other modern conveniences that take massive, physical organizations of material.

        Sure software isn’t trivial to do, having that amount of servers isn’t trivial to do but how much do you REALLY need a year to fund development, hosting and maintenance of a rideshare app owned by a worker collective or open sourced? 5 million a year? That barely buys the CEO of Ubers office furnishings I bet.

      • @MajorHavoc
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        173 months ago

        It’ll be tough finding someone who can build a phone app that consumes both the Square API and the Google Maps API. /s

        Minneapolis may have to settle for only 11 separate college students filling the gap out of their dorm rooms.

  • NutWrench
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    223 months ago

    The minimum wage should have been $15 an hour 10 years ago.

  • @[email protected]
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    173 months ago

    Oh good. Maybe a regional competitor can get a hold then. It’s not exactly a small market.

    It’s also for this reason I don’t think Lyft and Uber would actually leave.

    • TheMurphy
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      33 months ago

      They will leave.

      They have left countries all together because of this.

  • @[email protected]
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    153 months ago

    This is so weird. Why would they not just pay their drivers more. Add it directly to the cost of doing business. What’s the issue?

    It’s like making a minimum wage for all fast food employees. All fast food establishments now have higher wage costs. So what? The cost of a hamburger goes up $0.50. All your competitors now have the same costs. How does this change anything for you? Versus going out of business?

    Think about if only Uber left. That’s a lot of extra business for Lyft. What’s the big deal? Hm… maybe they have to cover the salary even if the driver doesn’t accept any rides? Maybe that’s the real issue. How do you guarantee drivers are busy and not just signing in and doing nothing and canceling offered rides? That still doesn’t seem that hard to fix.

      • I don’t know if taxi companies have upped their online game, but Uber and Lyft’s huge advantage used to be that the customer could see what the ride would cost them, when their ride would arrive, and pay online. Those of us old enough can remember days when you’d worry about whether a taxi driver was going to take the scenic route, whether you’d have enough cash, whether they’d accept a credit card, whether they’d add some surcharge to credit card transactions, and then having to trust your credit card to yet another random stranger. Having to use taxis used to be a reliable source of stress when traveling; Uber utterly removed that (if you were male; I know women have additional sources of angst when getting into cars with strangers).

        If Taxi companies have gotten their online shit together, where I can see the entire transaction - times and costs - in advance, then yeah, I’ll agree with you. But originally, Uber and Lyft were huge game changers for customers.

        • @[email protected]
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          23 months ago

          Taxis have upped their app game. And a lot of people prefer taxis and drivers who actually know where they are going. Uber and Lyft started by discounting rides and paying for them with VC money. After they took enough taxi market share they had to switch to making a profit so they took it from driver pay. Their only path for making a profit is their ability to skirt labor laws. That’s why they want to pull out of markets that force them to pay drivers better.

          • You’ve convinced me. I’ll never take Uber or Lyft again.

            Tell me one thing: if I’m visit some city, whether in the US or elsewhere, is there a reliable taxi app that works pretty much everywhere, or do I have to search for a local one?

    • @[email protected]
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      23 months ago

      They’re afraid more cities will do this and as they increase prices they won’t be able to take more of the pie.

  • @[email protected]
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    143 months ago

    Like, in Seattle, I’m taking Lyfts and Ubers for ~$35 for a 20 minute drive. They could pay their driver $16 to cover the minimum wage for the full hour and then they still have OVER 50% of what I pay. Like, it’s such simple business economics. Why can’t these big corporations figure it out? I hope they get taken over by local services that actually pay their workers.

    • @[email protected]
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      53 months ago

      I don’t know the economics, truly, but there are a LOT more expenses involved in running a large business like Uber on top of driver wages, such as technology service and hardware costs, programmers and central admin/customer service, rent or cost of buildings including utilities, insurance, taxes, fees, consulting and auditing, cybersecurity, legal, and probably quite a bit more I can’t think of. Running a business is friggin expensive.

      Definitely not defending paying workers less, just trying to explain why they still might not be in the black even in your scenario.

      • @[email protected]
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        23 months ago

        They shouldn’t even exist in the space since they skirted regulators when setting up. It’s like if the pirate bay set themselves up as a legitimate business.

    • @[email protected]
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      03 months ago

      They would only need to pay the driver 1/3 of the hourly wage for your 20 min ride so 5.3 dollars. Uber/Lyft would make 29-30 dollars.

      • @[email protected]
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        23 months ago

        That’s assuming the cars always have a fare on board - one truth of running a taxi is that there’s a lot of downtime when you don’t have a customer.

        • @[email protected]
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          13 months ago

          The extrapolated head math people like to do based on their narrow interactions to determine how large companies should run is rarely right or useful.

  • @[email protected]
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    123 months ago

    I find it concerning that they both decide to leave due to price increases. Seems like if lyft stayed when Uber left they could easily make more being the only player. How does stuff like this not scream collusion.

    • @[email protected]
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      43 months ago

      It’s more that all of these rideshare companies rely solely on undercutting every other cab company in the area - by not paying a living wage and forcing drivers to use their own vehicles (thus paying for their own gas and maintenance), they avoid a lot of operating expenses. They manage to do this by billing themselves as tech companies instead of any sort of transport company, and cities have been forced to go along with it purely out of convenience and mass adoption.