California regulator sets rules for ridesharing companies

Lyft car

The California Public Utilities Commission approved ridesharing companies early this year, but it offered only a few temporary guidelines while it worked on a formal rule set. Today, the regulator has published those definitive rules. Companies like Lyft, SideCar and Uber now have to get a CPUC license to operate under a new Transportation Network Company category. To maintain that license, they’ll have to run background checks, train drivers, hold a minimum level of insurance, inspect cars and drop employees who abuse alcohol or drugs. The requirements won’t necessarily eliminate tension with Los Angeles and other cities that believe they have jurisdiction over taxi-like services. However, the CPUC’s move gives California ridesharing companies a degree of comfort — they can keep operating in many cities without fear of being shut down.

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Via: TechCrunch

Source: California Public Utilities Commission (PDF)

UberX in LA: It’s Illegal. It’s Great. It Needs to Stop.

UberX in LA: It's Illegal. It's Great. It Needs to Stop.

Despite the fact that it’s currently banned in Los Angeles, UberX is defiantly still up and running. I used it for the first time this weekend. This so-called ride-sharing service from San Francisco-based Uber Technologies is supposedly the future of cabs. Much like similar services Lyft and Sidecar, UberX seeks to "disrupt" the taxi industry by using average people with a car (and without a taxi license) to shuttle others around. But it’s pretty clear that they shouldn’t be allowed to.

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Los Angeles puts ridesharing companies on notice, demands local permits

Los Angeles puts ridesharing companies on notice until they get licenses

Someone didn’t get the memo, apparently. Despite California’s Public Utilities Commission giving ridesharing services the all clear on a statewide level, Los Angeles’ Department of Transportation has sent cease-and-desist warnings to Lyft, Sidecar and Uber, claiming that all three are breaking local laws by operating without city permits. Drivers could face arrests and lose their cars if they keep serving customers, according to the notices. Not surprisingly, the ridesharing firms have a very different opinion. Uber tells Engadget that it’s operating a limousine-like service which only needs PUC permission to operate, and Lyft says it’s talking with the Mayor’s office to resolve what it believes is a “state issue.” For now, we’re at an impasse — let’s just hope that Los Angeles follows in New York’s footsteps and tries to reach a happy medium.

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Via: AllThingsD

Source: SCPR

Sorry Uber, Los Angeles Has Been Banning Ride-Shares For a Century

Sorry Uber, Los Angeles Has Been Banning Ride-Shares For a Century

This week the city of Los Angeles sent a cease-and-desist letter to ride-sharing app companies Uber, Lyft and Sidecar. The city and Los Angeles Yellow Cab claim that these services are "rogue taxis" that are "bypassing all safety regulations created to protect riders and drivers." But this isn’t the first time that this town has gone after the unregulated four-wheeled menace. This crackdown on unlicensed taxis in the City of Angels is nearly identical to a battle that raged a century ago — without all the iPhones and whatnot, of course.

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Taxi service apps could be hit by a proposed ban on GPS metering

Taxi service apps could be hit by a proposed ban on GPS meteringTaxi and car-sharing apps which quote for journeys based on GPS data could find themselves outlawed by regulators. Transport authorities across fifteen US and Canadian cities are looking at a set of rules that would prohibit anything except physical metering to calculate the cost of a trip. The proposals would also put the kibosh on demand pricing, whereby quotes automatically rise when more people are making bookings, and also on the use of drivers who don’t have proper taxi licenses. Some of these practices are already banned in a number of states, and in fact three online transport services — Zimride, SideCar and our old friend Uber — were fined in California this week precisely for allowing unqualified hands to take the wheel. If the current proposals are adopted, the role of smartphones would likely be restricted to hailing regular taxis or putting electric money into traditional cabbies’ pockets.

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Taxi service apps could be hit by a proposed ban on GPS metering originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 16 Nov 2012 11:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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