Transportation

The New General Corporate Counsel (The Outside General Counsel Solution)

In order pressure for corporations to properly react to increased pressure to be as effective and cost-efficient as possible, CEO’s are not just bringing legal work in-house, but are retaining a lawyer who acts as general counsel to the company without the company having to pay a salary and benefits associated with a full-time employee. The days of relying 100% on outside counsel are over. It is just not efficient or cost effective to do so anymore. Companies are taking the alternate route of retaining a lawyer with not only specific legal talents, but also specialized knowledge of the industry the company works in. This is the trend because a company is not just getting a lawyer, but also getting someone who knows your business intimately. CEO’s are starting to recognize that when you retain a lawyer to act as in-house counsel (outside general counsel), they start to understand the business more. To be most effective, outside general counsel should not only have a full understanding of the organization’s business and office culture, but short and long term goals as well.

In the American business environment, every company will need a lawyer at one point or another, but just how to find and retain that legal counsel can be source of debate.We all know that one person, or perhaps you are that person, who started a company from nothing and grew it into a successful business. Start-up companies often need assistance with basic contract review or understanding compliance procedures. As the company grows from a start-up into a profitable corporation, many executives take the next step of either retaining outside counsel in the form of a law firm or the company may instead pick the in-house counsel route. Both options can be very expensive. The alternative is to retain a lawyer who is not an employee of the company, but a retained lawyer who acts as outside general counsel. A sort of in-house counsel that is an independent contractor, but devotes a large portion of their time to the company and its needs.

For many companies, consideration of this outside general counsel arrangement is a worthwhile step. Not only may there be potential legal cost savings, but bringing someone onboard and inside the executive team may also help ensure the company’s vision is maintained. When searching for such counsel, a company will also be wise to select a candidate who actively maintains social connections and ties to local legal counsel and law firms. This is important because, as many companies fail to anticipate, hiring outside general counsel does not necessarily eliminate the need to retain outside counsel for specific projects or actions. Thus, the ideal outside general counsel will be able to easily access and coordinate with appropriate outside counsel.

When a legal matter is sent outside the company, the outside general counsel serves not only to select the best outside firms for specific case types, but serves as a watchdog on those cases, ensuring that the company is not being over-billed and that matters are being handled properly. A company needs to understand that rather than being a hired gun brought in to consult on individual problems after the fact, an outside general counsel is, or should be, part of the team before, during and after company projects. The outside general counsel should be able to understand the company’s long-term objectives in order to tailor advice to the best interests of the company. A good outside general counsel working in a proactive manner instead of reactive will help a company anticipate and prevent legal problems before they arise, while maintaining company values.To foster this working environment, a company should encourage its executives to keep outside general counsel in the loop by discussing and brainstorming plans and strategies with them regularly. This has the potential to reduce future legal expenses, which most companies should cite as a goal.

The right outside general counsel does not just bring experience to the table. Once they are part of your staff, they bring peace of mind. Having immediate access to a licensed attorney who is focused on your business is truly unbeatable. It can also be the difference between success and failure on not just a given deal, but the difference between success and failure of the business itself.

 

An Ounce of Prevention is Surely Worth a Pound of Cure

One of the main jobs of outside corporate counsel is to manage risk along with handling the business of managing the entire spectrum of employer-employee relationship issues. From employee hiring, through to employee exit, being entrusted to manage the clients' most sensitive and complex issues. Good corporate counsel will also provide exceptional support by combining real-world human resource guidance, all informed by relevant employment law provisions.

The Shanker Law Firm, P.C. acts as outside corporate counsel and advises clients on the full spectrum of complex human resources and employment law issues. We provide strategic, operational and legally privileged advice to help our clients deliver effective business solutions to manage their employees. Clients turn to us to help them manage employee risks and provide strategic, board level advice on crucial employment-related issues, as well as counsel on day-to-day operational support.

Our unique business model allows The Shanker Law Firm, P.C. to provide clients with practical responses to new employment legislation, case law, and regulatory changes, and an ability to strategically advise on a wide range of contentious and sometimes non-contentious human resources and employment law matters, including:

  • Drafting and Negotiating Employment and Employee Documentation

  • Employment Disputes and Dismissals

  • Human Resources Policies and Procedures

  • Redundancies and Restructurings

  • Outplacement Services

  • Remuneration and Benefits

In the world of big business today, most corporate owners and CEO’s are just not as versed as they should be in the sensitive nature of employer-employee relationship and employment law matters. I always believe in the old saying that an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. The only question is whether you, as a business owner or CEO, wants to pay now to protect your business later…or to pay later and hope that the problem, that could likely have been prevented, will be able to be ameliorated in the face of either costly litigation or the threat thereof.  

Time for Companies to Utilize the Outside General Counsel.

The concept behind “general counsel outsourcing” is that a business organization may not need to hire a full time in-house lawyer to perform the services and functions performed by a general counsel. Some business organizations may be able to contract outside the organization, resulting in improved efficiencies and profit.

The concept of outsourcing certain business and services functions is not new. It has been used for years. For example, most companies do not maintain their own payroll function, they outsource it – there are specialists outside contractors who can manage the function more cost-effectively. For the same reason, many companies outsource most non-strategic functions – the annual report preparation; staff recruitment; insurance; public relations; advertising; internal audit; staff training; and information services.

Outsourcing of legal counsel has become a major response to the profit pressures on many businesses. In the past, companies have outsourced mostly functions considered non-strategic to the company, such as some of those listed above. However, due to increased pressures on profits and accountability issues with respect to corporate governance, regulatory compliance and risk management, there is a trend towards outsourcing “strategic” functions of business organizations, such as the general counsel.

The concept goes beyond the legal realm and also into the operational realm of a business as well. It involves the belief that services and functions typically performed by someone in upper level management should be performed by a general counsel and such functions includes legal analysis of business decisions, planning and other input that needs to go into the strategic planning process. Legal counsel along with the operational planning and review process can be outsourced to a lawyer who understands the company’s business and culture who, in essence, becomes a part-time extension of the company’s senior management team.

Most companies recognize that they need legal resources at a senior level to perform this strategic legal function to ensure that the company’s major assets and rights are suitably protected and its major exposures and obligations are suitably managed. In practical terms, this involves an on-going legal risk and opportunities audit, and an ongoing legal compliance program. Small to middle market companies must make tough decisions when addressing such strategic legal resources. Such companies are constantly seeking ways to obtain the strategic legal resources that their business requires while at the same time trying to save money and increase efficiency. Many such companies find that traditional methods of retaining counsel are not cost effective because traditional law firm overhead costs, for office space and support staff, limit a firm’s flexibility in fee-setting. When outside counsel fees climb, emerging companies consider hiring an inside counsel as an employee. With all the benefits that employee status entails, hiring someone to be an inside counsel can also be costly; such companies simply may not have the justification or the resources to hire a full-time in-house general counsel.

Outsourced general counsel services offer an attractive option to many companies. For a specified and agreed upon monthly fee, the company contracts with an experienced and well qualified attorney to provide strategic in-house counsel legal services. The outsourced general counsel is an independent contractor, not an employee. He or she may periodically work at the company’s site in order to provide the same high quality, high level of service of law firms or employee counsel. The outsourced general counsel becomes an extension of the company’s senior management team.

In no event, should any company buy the idea that the outsourcing of general counsel legal services decision is an all or nothing choice. Certainly, some legal services are best delivered externally, from law firms that offer specialized legal services. However, other legal services such as certain employment law and labor issues, legal day-to-day corporate governance issues and strategic functions, can be performed effectively by the company with the help of an outsourced general counsel who understands the company’s business.

As in most things, it is a matter of balance and the result of informed and objective analyses. The key issue of determining whether outsourced general counsel services are proper for a company is a question of balancing the delivery of the company’s needs for such services to ensure an ultimate advantage for the company against the cost of an outsourced general counsel. 

Most companies who I represent have addressed this question would agree with many of the following:

  • the ability to operate at a senior level in the company’s organization;
  • a close understanding of the company’s policies, strategies and objectives;
  • a close understanding of the company’s operating methods, processes, products, suppliers and customers;
  • the ability to manage legal risk, to analyze the company’s strategies and in order to identify legal issues, and to develop plans and programs to manage and, if possible, to avoid legal problems that arise;
  • the timely delivery of work of high technical quality that also provides practical solutions which meet the company’s business goals;
  • the ability to work closely and co-operatively with company personnel, suppliers and customers as may be required;
  • the ability to add value to the company whether this is by saving money, avoiding losses, solving problems, achieving their business objectives, by using knowledge and skills to improve the way the company manages its legal risks and pursues its legal rights and opportunities; and
  • the ability to manage external legal services for extraordinary legal issues that arise (e.g., litigation; public/private securities offerings; bankruptcy) in a cost-effective way that achieves optimum benefits for the company

Almost by definition, these qualities can only be performed by someone inside the company, who has absorbed the company’s culture and become part of the way the company does business. An outsourced general counsel can provide this level of service and resources for the company.

We have done this many times in the past and fortunately with great success for the companies we have and continue to represent. It is an alternative to hourly billing. It is an alternative to the lawyer as the enemy. It gives you a reason to call your lawyer without fear of being charged for every 6 minutes of time. Most of all, it give the business and its owners peace of mind that the company is in good hands.

One day, Hopefully soon...Uber Will Have Its Day of Reckoning

What does an Uber ride actually cost? That simple question is often lost among the many controversies facing Uber, but it is surely one of the most important question of all when it comes to determining the value of Uber which has built its business on massive subsidies to both riders and drivers, producing huge losses in the process, and has yet to show that it can maintain growth without them.

Although a private company dos not need to release its financial data, Uber has started releasing limited financial data, and in May reported a loss of $708 million for the first quarter, down from $991 million in the fourth quarter. While their upcoming financial report may show further improvement on margins, Uber continues to spend heavily on subsidized rides.

The question vexing everyone is what the company is worth. Truthfully, I really don't care. Not just because I am anti-Uber but because their entire business model is based upon explanation of persons and creating the myth of providing jobs when their true intent is to totally divest itself, in due course, of all drivers. How drivers do not see this and continue to driver for them is beyond me. Maybe I am wrong in my forecast or perhaps I just simply do not like illegal monopolies.

Uber’s losses stem from its drive to win global market share at almost any cost. That strategy was built on the assumption that Uber could achieve a dominant position in many big cities quickly and eventually raise prices. Kalanick himself said low fares were temporary. But eight years in, the strategy is now in doubt as competition in many markets continues to intensify. Uber must solve the problem of how to eliminate subsidies without losing customers and thereby undercutting its valuation.

At some point in time, Uber will have its day of reckoning as they will eventually have to raise prices and get rid of driver subsidies. And we all know what happens when you raise prices - demand goes down. And when you give up driver subsidies - supply of drivers goes down.

Regardless of their Valuation, in my humble opinion, Uber has become an illegal monopoly. I have conducted my fair share of research on the Sherman Act and its progeny since the late 1800's when certain monopolies were declared illegal. Monopolies are bad for the public, bad for the economy and bad for competition. Uber will eventually raise its prices and do away with driver subsidies...and then the riding public will see Uber for what it truly is. Not an aid to the Salvation Army, but a money hungry technological monopoly that is built on a house of cards. When one of the cards start to fall, the others shall follow. Then I hope to see Kalanick himself driving around in his own vehicle with the stupid "U" in the front window.

Time for the Public to see Uber for What they Really Are.....and to go elsewhere

Uber’s global pattern of driver mistreatment, corporate bullying and legal transgressions should be tolerated no more.  For years, Uber managed to conceal its bad behavior with expensive P.R. campaigns and by claiming they are a technology company and not a transportation provider. Their games may have worked for a while, but their grand plan is quickly unraveling.

Uber is convenient and fast in New York City. The combination of cashless transactions and location technology make for a great service. But no amount of convenience can cover up the toxic culture that has taken hold at Uber. This hold true now not only in the treatment of its huge driver workforce, but at the company’s headquarters as well. Uber’s CEO has finally been forced to resign, but this is simply not enough.

We all know by now that Uber’s wrongdoing does not end at the door of its corporate headquarters. Just as evil is Uber’s model of “employment”. In my opinion, under New York law, Uber is an employer, but offers no employee benefits to its drivers and does not pay the taxing and regulatory costs associated with employing persons. In the vast majority of cases, Uber drivers are offered low pay, no sick pay, no vacations, no 401K. In return, they are promised “flexibility”, or the freedom to work whatever hours suit them. In practice, many Uber drivers are working long, long shifts for extremely poor pay in order to try to make ends meet. On the other hand, Uber continues to operate outside of the law with impunity.

Politicians are yet to condemn Uber. Perhaps their political contributions are just too large to refuse. I am at the point where I refuse to believe politicians will intervene and Uber is surely not going to change its business model on its own volition. But not using the app will surely send them a clear message. The consuming public needs to use its power as customers to force Uber to change their behavior. The workforce of drivers need to stand up to Uber and say “no more”, by disaffiliating with them and refusing to accept their dispatches.

 While Uber is convenient and fast in New York City due to their combination of cashless transactions and location technology, there are plenty of other car services in New York City that do the same exact thing. The only difference is that Uber operates outside of the law, while the car services that provide the same type of service in New York City have been in business for decades and know who to operate a transportation business. The consuming public and the drivers affiliated with Uber should use their collective power and go elsewhere. Uber is not going to change on its own, but you do have the power to “vote” by not using their service. Uber is no longer the sexy newcomer with a cool service. It is a lawless entity that uses drivers like slaves and laughs at the consuming public along the way. Why should anyone put up with this type of service. The time has come for the public to consider that Uber did force many of the incumbents in the industry in New York City to revolutionize and create their own technology to meet the demands of the public. It is now time to go back to these companies and use their service. You deserve better

The Gig Economy Is Here to Stay

Lets face it. The gig economy is here to stay. If it was not a good idea, then the entire market of new companies that have been created would not be flourishing…and they are not all flourishing because they are taking advantage of loopholes in the law. When something does not go the way they expect it, the layperson calls it a “loophole in the law”. When someone or some company escapes legal liability on a “technicality” the public calls it unfair. It is almost always an afterthought reaction when a group of persons file a class action lawsuit against a company alleging that the company misclassified them as independent contractors. Of course, they don’t seek “justice” by making the market reform to the existing laws and they don’t petition their elected leaders to change the law, but they seek the usual object of a lawsuit….MONEY (compensation for missed lunch breaks, minimum wage compensation, reimbursement for business expenses, and overtime, in addition to other penalties). While a lawsuit and the payment of money may have the unintended result of making a company reform its business practices, the current wave of class action lawsuits will not change an entire industry that has been created in the past 5-6 years.

Lawsuits against companies utilizing the “gig economy” are like a threatening cloud in a brewing storm. People who provide services surely deserve respect, fair treatment, and open communication, but that does not mean that all persons who provide services are employees, as opposed to independent contractors. Yes, there surely are many companies that misclassify their workers as independent contractors as opposed to employees in order to avoid the legal and financial liabilities associated with hiring an employee. But there are also many who follow the law and do utilize independent contractors, but still have to navigate the legal maze of bottom feeding lawyers that seek out these class action lawsuits, not to reform an industry or a market, but to get money.      

This rising legal retribution is a huge threat to the gig economy. Not being responsible for employees’ taxes and benefits allows companies to operate with 20% to 30% less in labor costs than the incumbent competition. If they lose this workforce structure either via class-action lawsuits or intervention by regulators, or through the collective action of disgruntled workers, and you will surely lose the gig economy.

The lawmakers may need to alter the very definition of “employee” in order to meet the demands of the in a tech-enabled, service-driven economy in the 21st century American Gig economy. Many companies do not own cars, hotels, or even their workers’ cleaning supplies. What they own is a marketplace with two sides. On one side are people who need a job done–a ride to the airport, a clean house, a lunchtime delivery. On the other are people who are willing to do that job. In the middle is a broker. This is the one that puts the two parties together and takes a “piece of the action”. Little or no direction and control over the means by which a person provides their service is the legal equivalent of an independent contractor. If you don’t like being an independent contractor, then go out and get a job as an employee, which involves more supervision, more direction and less autonomy. There is nothing wrong with that, but just don’t complain later on that you were cheated after you speak to a scum sucking ambulance chaser.

Some say a new deal has to be worked out and one that squares the legal rules governing work with new products and new services. Some believe the gig economy created a marketplace where people who provide services do not fit neatly into the traditional definition of employee or independent contractor. Right now, one who provides services is not sure what benefits to expect from a quasi-employer. For those who want to know, all you have to do is ask. If you don’t like the answer, then don’t accept the job or don’t provide the service. I believe one can be both independent and tethered to an app-based company. The social contract between gig economy workers and employers may be outdated, but it is far from broken. Who will fix it, and how, will determine the fate of many thousands of workers and billions of dollars.

Thanks to these new on-demand startups, though, whether you’re a stay-at-home mom with a few odd hours to spare or a recently unemployed fast-food worker who needs to make ends meet while looking for a job, you can work whenever you want, doing whatever you want. Many like the flexibility and feel like it gives them a better work and life balance. In the gig economy, you’re better than an employee; you’re a little business. We now live in a world where people can be entrepreneurs or micro-entrepreneurs, Just like the government didn’t begin to regulate the Internet before it became a behemoth, regulating this new economy before it’s fully created could halt innovation. Perhaps I just don’t have much faith in regulators whose job is not to ensure a properly working system, but to regulate for the sake of regulation by implementing more and more rules of operation to the point of choking a business to death. Just like the New York City Taxi and Limousine Commission did to the for-hire vehicle industry in New York City.

 

I believe the gig economy has been improperly interpreted as a loophole for avoiding labor laws. There is little economic security or predictability in being an independent contractor, but then again, there is the promise of starting off with your own small entity and creating something new and ever bigger and better than before. If you want security and predictability, then go get a job teaching 4th grade in an elementary school. If you want to take a risk and be your own boss and possibly fulfill your dreams, then start your own business and make it rain…and don’t come complaining later when your own ideas and inventions don’t work out because it is not the fault anyone other than you and your own choices. Some don’t like the gig economy because there is no power among workers to get a fair share of the profits. For those who believe this, take a step back and realize that you don’t get the profits of a private company by being an employee or a person that provides services.  Many people try and fail to make money with gig economy jobs, and then complain that their legal rights were violated. Why did they not think of this when they signed on to be an independent contractor in the first place

It’s safe to say that there are advantages to being an employee (security, safety laws, minimum wage, benefits) and that there are also advantages to being an independent contractor (freedom, independence, opportunity for more profit). Similarly, there are advantages to hiring employees (quality control, dependable workers) and hiring contract workers (cheaper, don’t need to guarantee work). Where platforms and new markets get into legally dubious territory is when they try to claim the advantages of both systems at the same time. But just remember that simply because you utilize the platform of another company does not mean that you don’t have control over the work you did. If the company that provided the platform or means to access the marketplace, then you would not have the option to be an independent contractor.

The laws that determine independent contractor and employee status vary from state to state and from situation to situation, but many of them focus on the question of how much control workers have over their work. If their employer is mainly focused on the outcome of that work, there’s a very good chance they’re fairly being classified as an independent contractor. When their employer begins to control not only what work they do, but how they do it, that classification gets murky. Giving persons suggestions for how to do their work should not made the company more vulnerable to a lawsuit. Similarly, though traditional taxi drivers are often independent workers rather than employees, a platform like Uber takes a certain amount of control when it fires them for low ratings or changes their fare prices. Some don’t like the idea of going into work one day and your “boss” telling you that you’re going to have to do the exact same job you did last week but make less money”. But ”firing” someone for low ratings does not necessarily make them an employee, it may just means that the company no longer desires to utilize their services.

Right now, our legal system only has two buckets for workers who aren’t volunteers or interns. You are an employee. Or you are an independent contractor. The risk of being sued has led many in the gig economy to place workers into the employee bucket. This also drives costs to the consumer up because the cost structure for these companies increases by about 30% by paying for taxes and benefits that they may not have to, but they just want to be cautious. Other companies in the gig economy place workers into the independent contractor bucket, which entails the risk of worker misclassification claims for disgruntled persons who formerly provided services and/or tax hungry governmental entities that have every intention of finding an employer-employee relationship so they can increase revenue for the city, state and/or federal government. The legal risk, the risk of being asked to pay back-taxes by the IRS or Department of Labor is a battle that everyone knows is coming and each entity that utilizes independent contractors should make budgetary preparations, emotional preparations and legal preparations to fight and defend.

The pressure in the marketplace right now is to push workers into one bucket or another (employees or independent contractors). This creates an inherent fear of the governmental fines if you are wrong and the fear of the cost of defending a class-action lawsuit where a group of former disgruntled persons allege that a company misclassified its workers. But on the other hand, classifying a person as an employee will raise the cost to consumers in many situations when the worker is not an employee and thus, the increased cost to the consumer for no good reason.

But some wonder if there is some room for compromise in this system. The question is whether there is some sort of a new middle ground that works for everybody. Forcing all companies to use these old constructs (employees or independent contractors) may not quite be the right thing for the worker and for the growth of the economy. After all, the answer to decreasing employment is not to get more people deemed as misclassified.

One answer, of course, is that the gig economy should be destroyed if it can’t follow existing labor laws. These legal protections have been put in place for the protection of workers and have evolved over a century and surely were not accidental. Others call for change where parts of the sharing economy could self-regulate, with oversight from the government. Others have supported creating a third category of worker that falls between an independent contractor and employee, which would allow companies to give their independent workers some benefits without fear of being sued for treating them as employees.

Lawsuits are a big, visible threat to the gig economy, but even if none are successful, there’s another, slower-burning problem that will corrode the gig economy if left unresolved. It’s a problem that gets worse every time a worker completes hundreds of jobs via a platform with nearly unanimous perfect reviews of his work, is let go and then the person becomes disgruntled and there is nothing that the company could ever do to win him back as a dedicated service provider.

In my humble opinion, the most important thing a corporation can do is to have an experienced lawyer perform a full exam of your corporation to see if it is properly classifying its workers/service providers. Do not wait until you are sued or the government performs an audit. By that time, it is too late to do anything other than damage control. The most important thing a person can do before they take a job, is to determine whether they will be classified as an employee or an independent contractor. Go into the job with your eyes wide open, knowing what your benefits and rights are based upon who you are being classified. Speak up and ask questions and make a fully informed decision before taking the job. Don’t cry the blues later on because you were fired and failed to do your homework before taking the job. Finally, the most important thing is what the government can and should do. This means to stop the audits and put aside the money grab for the moment. Take the time to involve leaders and stakeholders in each major industry that straddles the line between hiring employees and utilizing independent contractors. Figure out a way to make the line clearer for businesses and help them understand their potential legal liabilities all while another last option is pursued. That option is to bring the same leaders and stakeholders in each major industry together with the government regulators to figure out a way to find a middle ground that works for everybody. Utilizing old constructs of what it means to be an employee or an independent contractor will not work when analyzing the new gig economy. We have to come up with new constructs and figure out a way for the companies of the nation to know its legal rights and responsibilities all while giving the independent contractor some benefits that they ordinarily would not be entitled to under the current system.

There is middle ground and finding that middle ground will be a better solution for the worker, the business and the economy in general. To do otherwise is to be trapped by dogma, which is living life with the results of other people’s thinking. 

TNC’s ARE DRIVING THE TAXIS INTO EXTINCTION

Transportation Network Companies (TNC) are companies that use online-enabled platforms to connect passengers with drivers. While connecting passengers with drivers is nothing new in the for-hire vehicle (“FHV”) industry, the use of high tech software to do so is a more recent phenomenon. The TNCs initially sparked controversy with the FHV industry because TNCs came into the marketplace, especially in New York City (“NYC”), and operated illegally for such a long period of time. During this period of time, when the TNCs operated without license and without being subject to regulation, gave them an unfair advantage. Regulations, especially in NYC, are costly and very burdensome. Some regulations are good because they protect the public, but others are nothing more than bureaucratic red tape that is created and used to justify the existence of certain people who are employed by the governmental regulatory agency. In NYC, the Taxi and Limousine commission (“TLC”) has become an albatross crating regulation upon regulation, much without any need or justification. These regulations place the traditional FHV’s (car services, luxury limousines, clack cars, etc.) in a world in where they are not permitted to operate outside of. When Uber first hit the scent in NYC, they claimed to be a technology company and not a transportation company. Time has proven that Uber and other TNC’s are surely transportation entities, albeit very sophisticated ones. But the TLC regulators in NYC bought into the Uber Kool aid and let them operate for so long and without any restrictions to the point that once they came under the regulatory umbrella of the TLC, they already created a massive network of users that is virtually impossible to duplicate. Putting aside, for the moment, that the TNCs have billions of dollars to literally buy drivers, subsidize rides for passengers and pay of politicians (oh…sorry…I mean donate to their political reelection campaigns). The lack of regulation of the TNCs and the unconscionable delay of the TLC in regulating the TNC’s created an unfair competitive advantage that, at this point in time, has caused the demise of the taxi industry in NYC. The taxi industry deserves some fault in their demise because they refused to innovate by embracing new technology and/or because they refused to see that technology would one day be used to provide a similar but better service that would eventually lead them down the path of the dinosaur (i.e. extinction). I focus this piece on the effects of the TNCs upon the taxi industry and not the rest of the FHV industry in NYC. I do this because while the TLC does regulate all FHV’s, the NYC government has a massive financial interest in the taxis and since the advent of the automobile, the taxi medallion was sold to investors with the virtual guarantee that money would be made. Today, the City of New York and its elected leaders have turned their backs on the taxi owners and the banks and credit unions that lent money to the medallion buyers. They are all failing and the City of New York takes the hands-off approach, not because they want the free market the rein and work out the kinks, but because the elected leaders have a financial interest in seeing the TNCs prevail. Remember, TNCs bring in a massive amount of money via sales tax. While TNC’s provide transportation in areas of New York state where less than desirable and plentiful transportation was previously available, the focus of this piece is on the NYC market because taxi medallions in NYC are like no other taxi in the world.

No one can deny at this point in time that TNCs generally have shorter wait times, cheaper prices, and increased convenience, aspects that appeal to consumer preferences. But keep in mind that the cheaper prices are mainly due to subsidies from each TNC that artificially lowers the cost of the trip. Once the taxis and other FHV’s are driven out of the market, what do you think the TNC’s will do with their prices. If you think they will keep prices the same, you are sorely mistaken. Also, increased convenience is due to the fact that TNCs can afford to pay driver subsidies. These subsidies put more money directly in the pockets of the FHV drivers. Once the taxis and other FHV’s are driven out of the market, what do you think the TNC’s will do with their driver subsidies. If you think they will keep paying subsidies to drivers after the marketplace for competition has significantly decreased, you are sorely mistaken. Once the driver subsidies are gone, the drivers may seek alternate jobs b3cause as it is now, some drivers are actually making a bit more than minimum wage. The benefits of driving for a TNC are illusory……..but the public simply ca not yet see the forest from the trees. TNCs have billions of dollars to burn and will keep burning them until the competition is driven from the marketplace. When competition is significantly lessened or extinct, then a monopoly is created. Remember, the U.S. Supreme Court broke up Standard Oil over 100 years ago because monopolies are a bad thing.

Since the emergence of the TNCs, the taxi industry fought to increase TNC regulation, but has done little to create innovative technology and had done nothing to modify its service to appeal more to consumers. Why stand in the street like an idiot and wait to hail a cab when you can use your smartphone, which you were already probably using, to virtually hail a cab, but instead of hailing a yellow cab, the public is virtually hailing an Uber.

In NYC, the night takes on a different meaning. Dinner turns into drinks, drinks turn into the club, and the club turns into wherever the night ends. Instead of spending an arm and a leg on metered city parking or waiting to hail an overpriced taxi, partygoers now catch a ride with Uber and/or Lyft. The TNCs appeal not only to partygoers, but also a wide range of other groups including families, businessmen, and travelers. An innovative blend of technology, transportation, and low-cost convenience, Transportation Network Companies (TNC) appeal to the interests of all people with a smartphone, which is virtually everyone. TNCs utilize three major technologies: GPS navigation, smartphones, and social networks, each serving a distinct purpose. GPS navigation systems provide ride efficiency in both distance and time, smartphones allow for convenience and accessibility, and social networks build trust and accountability for both the drivers and the riders. These companies operate similar to a taxi service, however they differentiate in that TNCs use online-enabled platforms to connect riders to. Providing a service called “ridehailing”, the user-friendly apps operate with only one click, locating not only the location of the potential rider, but also the density of drivers nearby and the wait time for the closest driver. They also provide driver information and a method of contact in order to arrange the one-time ride. The payment system is simple—price is calculated with respect to speed and distance, and customers are billed directly, with receipts sent via email. Convenient and fast, these apps remove stress from both the driver and the rider, providing a very strong incentives for riders to switch from taxis to TNCs.

However, accompanying all their success, TNCs confront controversy and outrage from the taxi industry. Even though TNCs promote their service as a way to fill up empty seats in passenger cars, they function similarly to a taxi service, and as such, they are a massive threat to traditional taxicab drivers competing for the same consumer base. The biggest complaint the taxi industry has is that TNCs operate without proper regulations, avoiding the licensing costs, driver insurance, standard employee training, and routine background checks that taxi drivers are subjected to. Taxi drivers argue that since TNCs and taxis serve an almost identical purpose, they should have the same restrictions and costs. This argument surely makes a great deal of sense. But the law does not always keep up with the times and the law will always be behind advances in technology. As such, legal action against TNC’s and the government relators have failed. In the end, TNCs have acted as a price and quality substitutes for taxicab service and thus have lead us all down the path of elimination of the taxi industry.

Similar in method of transportation, TNC services follow a point-to-point route of travel; therefore these services are often perceived as entrants in the taxi market. However, there are contesting opinions on the debate between taxicabs and TNC services. Supporters of the latter service claim that TNCs such as Uber and Lyft fulfill a previously unmet demand of quick and convenient mobility, as TNC services require as little effort as the tap of a button. This opinion suggests the consumer base of TNCs is not identical to that of traditional taxicabs. Instead, people entered this transportation market specifically due to the unique and convenience of app-based mobility. In opposition, critics claim that TNCs serve identical roles as taxi drivers, but without proper regulations that are used to counteract negative externalities such as “job misconduct” in taxi services. While some may believe TNCs and taxicab companies operate differently, I believe in equality and that TNCs should be regulated the same as other FHVs. To do otherwise may not be illegal, but it is surely a distinction without a difference. My prediction is that in the long term, TNCs will be fatal to the taxi industry, acting as a substitute and not a complement.

Regulations are used to be favorable for taxi drivers. Generally speaking, government regulation is implemented because it is demanded by the regulated industry and provides favorable gains for the industry. Economic regulations in taxicab markets exist because of the presence of negative externalities such as air quality, traffic congestion, and asymmetric information. With an unlimited amount of taxis, quality is bound to decrease which is bad for the consumer and incentivizes taxi companies to cut corners when it comes to costs such as vehicle maintenance. Favorable to cab companies, government regulation theoretically allows for higher fares than those that would exist in the free marketplace. Regulation of Taxis and other FHV’s is fine, but when all other FHVs are heavily regulated and TNCs are not regulated or regulated with minor disruption, then there will be an oversupply of drivers and the devaluation of taxi licenses. This is exactly what happened in NYC.

While it still claims to be simply an app-based technology rather than a transportation company, Uber is essentially a modernized version of the traditional taxi. Operating free of regulations, Uber and similar companies compete against the taxi industry at a lower cost, making each ride cheaper for the consumer and more profitable for the business. The increase in supply makes each taxi medallion license lower in value and each taxi driver less profitable.

By nature, TNC apps have an advantage due to accessibility. With the exception of upfront costs such as the purchase of a smartphone device, these transportation apps are free to download and easy to use. In order to reach a driver, a rider simply opens his app and taps “set pickup location.” The app uses GPS services to locate the exact location of a smartphone, send the location and contact information to the nearest driver, and notify riders of the remaining time before a car arrives. Fast, reliable, and efficient, TNCs take the guesswork out of transportation. One of the top reasons people use a TNC service is the ease of payment. TNC’s provide an added convenience by allowing consumers to pay directly from their phones. At the end of a trip, the rider is billed directly to a preset card in the app, and both parties are ensured that payment has been received. For some, this method of payment is definitely preferable, however it is less attractive to others. The perception of these services is likely to be linked to the use of technology, and younger populations associate technology with efficiency. Older generations who have not grown up in a technological world are often less trusting of online payment methods, generally find it more convenient to pay manually at the end of a trip, with the option to use alternative forms of payment. But the baby boomers are getting older and older and the millennials are soon going to be running the major corporations of the world.

At the very least, TNCs have provided consumers with the freedom of choice. These companies expanded quickly and have made an impact within a matter of years, however this impact is not solely positive. Although TNCs have the potential to improve welfare for some individuals, it is likely to be at the expense of others. To gain a thorough understanding, it is important to weigh the costs and benefits associated with the eventual demise of the traditional taxicab and the taxi driver.

While my opinions on the impact of TNCs on the taxi industry is not conclusive, it does lean towards one particular outcome. The combination of minimal regulation, low prices, short wait time, and certain preferences gives TNCs an enormous advantage over taxis. And although TNCs have come under fire recently, the barriers to entry have been and remain relatively low. Additionally, the new age of technology refuses growth to taxicab companies, who have made few technological changes throughout the years. Despite their success, TNC’s continue to find new ways to innovate. Recently, Uber introduced UberPool, a carpooling services that allow riders to share rides and split costs with others traveling a similar direction. Uber has also introduced Uber for Business and UberRush, each with features that appeal to different demographics. Assuming that TNCs continue to function under current circumstances, I predict they will drive out the taxi industry.

The taxicab industry is heading towards extinction; but I believe that certain modifications could change its direction. First, regulation for TNC must be the same as other FHVs. Without the same level of regulation, taxicabs and TNCs are competing for a similar consumer base on uneven playing fields. Next, taxis must improve their technology and communication methods—an update that is long overdue. By evolving with the general population’s interests, the taxi industry is more likely to be successful. It would be beneficial to create an app similar to those created by TNCs. Lastly, the taxi industry must seek innovative ways to re-recruit riders. Taxis have the advantage of time and experience, and unlike TNCs, they have been around for over a century, surviving through the darkest economic times. In order to stay competitive with a company like Uber, taxi companies must be innovative and strategic in their methods.

Since their inception six years ago, TNCs have already made a significant impact on the taxi industry. These companies entered the market without the restrictions and regulations that serve as barriers of entry for traditional taxicab drivers. As a result, this advantage allows TNCs to operate with lower costs, and therefore provide better prices to consumers. Like all other service-oriented industries, the transportation industry is reliant upon consumer demand. Riders will always choose the service that provides them with a higher utility based on individual preferences. For transportation, the top three preferences are variations on speed, convenience, and low pricing. Weighing the evidence, I predict that TNCs will eventually cause the taxi industry to go the way of the dinosaur. Despite the odds, traditional taxicabs do have the power to stay competitive as long as changes are made. Unfortunately, the odds of such change being made is minimal, if at all. The elected leaders in NYC and New York State are heavily in favor of TNC’s and governor Cuomo’s budget bill that legitimized Uber all across New York State will cause the demise of taxis throughout the state. Time will tell, but one thing I believe for sure is that while the needs and desires of the marketplace created an opportunity for TNC’s, the elected leaders of NYC and New York State have turned their backs on traditional FHV operators. And remember, these FHC operators in NYC who are now facing foreclosure and extinction are the ones who provided transportation in NYC at a time and place in history when it was not so pleasant to do so. (i.e. remember the crack epidemic of the 1980’s and the scene on 42nd Street before Rudy Giuliani came to town). Also, many traditional FHV operators are immigrants who came to this country to live out the American dream. For decades, immigrants lived out the American dream and used their taxi medallions to pay for their kids to go to college. Now, these same immigrants are facing foreclosure of their taxi medallions and financial ruin, all because the NYC regulators failed to do what they were supposed to do in the first place, which is to regulate for-hire vehicles, including Uber. The regulators failed in their jobs and the effects of such failure, whether good or bad, will not be fully known for decades to come.

When will the Elected Leaders of the State and City of New York Learn from Its Past Mistakes?

During the 1920s and 1930s, easy entry into the taxi cab industry led to an oversupply of taxis, resulting in traffic congestion, fare-cutting wars, low driver wages and other unsafe and sometimes illegal activities. The Great Depression created an influx of unemployed workers which worsened these problems, with the number of cabs spiraling to 21,000 in 1931.

To address problems of oversupply, in 1937 the City of New York enacted the “Haas Act” (sponsored by City Alderman Lew Haas) in order to freeze the number of taxi medallions. In 1996, 2004 and 2006, the City auctioned off a total of 1450 medallions. Thus, by 2012 the total cap was set at 13,237. While being a passenger in a taxi was not always the most pleasant of experiences, it was just another option for the millions of New York City residents and the multi millions of City visitors to obtain transportation for-hire on demand. Of course, demand always exceeded the supply of available taxis. That is why the value of the yellow medallion soared from $10 in 1937 to approximately $1,000,000 (one million dollars) in 2012. The purchase of the yellow medallion was one the best, if not the best investment in the world. It also provided many immigrants with the ability to realize the “American Dream”.

While the yellow taxis have traditionally served those persons who live and seek transportation in Manhattan, the non-medallioned “livery” industry has always served the residents of the 4 outer boroughs of New York City. The residents of Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx and Staten Island always had a reliable car service to call to obtain transportation by pre-arrangement. By 2012, the livery industry has some 38,000 licensed drivers in 23,000 vehicles that were affiliated with approximately 450 bases.

As far back as January 2011, Mayor Bloomberg first proposed allowing non-medallioned livery vehicles to accept street hails (i.e., a person standing on the street waving to vacant taxicabs to be picked up, as opposed to a trip pre-arranged by telephone or other means) outside of Manhattan. With the help of the Mayor Bloomberg and then TLC Commissioner Yassky, the State legislature created a law, later known as the “Street Hail Law” that allowed the Mayor to issue up to 2,000 new taxicab medallions and allowed the TLC to issue 18,000 “HAIL licenses,” valid for street hails outside the Manhattan Central Business District. Thus, the creation of the green taxicab. These granny apple green cabs were supposed to provide the residents of the 4 outer boroughs of New York City with more transportation options.

Those who had been heavily involved in the for-hire transportation industry and knew much more than the elected leaders in Albany about what was good and what was bad for the transportation industry in New York City were essentially ignored. The leaders of the taxi and livery industry knew that the Mayor’s proposal and the state’s new law was a bad idea and vigorously fought it all the way to the New York Court of Appeals, New York State’s highest court. The Court of Appeals upheld the law as it is required to give great deference to enactments of the State Legislature when it comes to matters of health, safety and welfare of its citizens. Of course, transportation always involves the health, safety and welfare of the citizens of New York State and New York City.

On the implicit promise from the City of New York that these green cabs would be money makers, similar to the yellow medallions, and because the City was offering incentives for green cabs retrofitted to accommodate passengers in wheelchairs, many small time investors bought into this bad bill of goods. A new generation of immigrants who were looking for the same “American Dream” that their predecessors did via the yellow medallion, bought into the green cabs. All the while, there was this little know company named Uber that was lurking in the background.

The leaders of the taxi and livery industry knew at the time that Uber was operating illegally. They surely complained to the City Council, the TLC, the New York State Attorney General and even the Federal Trade Commission. All elected leaders and those in power ignored the pleas of the leaders of the taxi and livery industry to stop Uber from operating illegally. It was not a matter of Uber taking away business from the yellow taxis and the livery bases, but a matter of fairness. Two entities that provide the same service were being treated differently. The taxi and livery industry have always been heavily regulated, but Uber was not being regulated. This created an unfair playing field that is the antithesis of our American way of life that has thrived on fair play and substantial justice. This was the seed of the downfall of the industry. The City’s failure to regulate Uber created a vacuum that allowed it to expand in ways that Uber surely planned, but the City’s leaders refused to acknowledge.

The elected leaders of the City and the TLC took no action to regulate Uber. They all bought into Uber’s claim that they were not a transportation company, but a technology company. While I believe that Uber’s technology was surely excellent, I also believe in the old saying of don’t pee in my ear and tell me it is raining. By the time the City and the TLC got around to regulating Uber, it had become a behemoth with money, political power and influence. In no time at all, Uber’s fleet of vehicles eclipsed the number of yellow taxis….and then some.

I and many of my friends and colleagues in the for-hire vehicle industry pled to the City Council Transportation Committee and the Mayor to place a temporary cap on the growth of Uber until all interested parties could get a handle on what the effects of Uber were likely to be. The City’s leaders took no action and the City’s transportation regulators even took affirmative action to let Uber thrive. Before Uber’s explosive and unchecked growth, the yellow taxi industry was still doing well and the livery industry too. Then the TLC allowed a driver of a for-hire vehicle to accept dispatches form more than one base. This old requirement that a livery or black car vehicle be affiliated with only one base and its driver only be allowed to accept dispatches from that base was created for the safety of the public. All of a sudden, without any real reason or justifiable explanation, the TLC allowed drivers to accept dispatches from bases in which there was no affiliation. This was the equivalent of the ability to mint 18 carat gold bars for Uber because it allowed them to send dispatches to virtually anyone it wanted and thus expand its fleet in ways that few, except Uber, ever imagined.

Today, Uber and other companies such as Lyft, have an army of nearly 50,000 licensed vehicles that transport hundreds of thousands of people across the city every day. Uber and Lyft are rapidly transforming transportation in New York. They not only threaten the existence of the taxi industry, but they siphon passengers away from subways and buses, all while raising concerns over worsening street congestion. According to city data, the proliferation of Uber and Lyft appear to be contributing to increasingly gridlocked streets. Average travel speeds in the heart of Manhattan dropped to about 8.1 miles per hour last year, down about 12 percent from 2010. Uber and Lyft are also succeeding at the expense of others. The Metropolitan Transportation Authority has taken a hit to its budget because it receives financing from a 50-cent surcharge on taxi trips. Officials at the MTA say the shift from taxis to Uber has cost the MTA about $28 million since 2014.

So back to the taxis industry. Many of those who invested in yellow or green cabs have seen their investments wiped out. For-hire vehicle drivers are flocking to Uber with their false promise of making large sums of money all while being your own boss. Since 2013, approximately 5,000 taxi drivers have thrown in the towel. Those who own yellow medallions are either barely paying their loans back or are in foreclosure. Last month Queens-based Melrose Credit Union, one of the largest lenders of money to those who purchased taxi medallions, was seized by state after delinquent taxicab loans soared tenfold in just 18 months. The stock price of another one of the City's taxi lenders, Medallion financial Corp., has fallen so far that one share of its stock now costs less than a ride on a NYC subway. And lets not forget that the City itself has a financial interest in the sale of medallions as it takes a 5% transfer tax on each sale/transfer. This is much less money to go to the City coffers.

Moreover, the drivers that have flocked to Uber and Lyft are not looking at the big picture. Uber has made its plans to develop a self-driving vehicle very clear. In other words, the day will come very soon, when Uber will no longer need drivers. Then the for-hire vehicle drivers will have no work. The taxi industry will be on life support or dead and the out of work drivers will then cause the unemployment lines to swell.  Worst of all, the public just does not see the ills inherent in Uber and Lyft. Their explosive growth was made possible by luring riders away from taxis and the traditional modes of for-hire vehicle transportation (livery/community car services) with artificially low prices because they are being subsidized by a massive influx of cash by large pocketed investors. Uber has engaged in anti-competitive conduct since its inception. Competition has always been good for the consumer as it keeps prices low and the incentive to innovate high. This is why the law prohibits monopolies. So all while Uber and Lyft take all measures necessary to kill off the competition, they continue lure the public to their apps.

The public and the elected leaders of the City and State need to wake up and realize that at some point in the near future, the combination of significantly reduced competition with the eventual need for Uber to turn a profit, will lead Uber to drastically increase prices. When Uber has little or no competition, what options will the public have? Taxis may very well be gone, community car services will slowly be wiped out and the MTA is always in disarray, financial and otherwise. Uber will then be in the position to raise prices to whatever it wants and will be able to fleece the pockets of anyone with a smartphone. If we stay on this path, the public will have two options. One is to walk to their destination or be financially raped by Uber. Neither sounds like a very good option to me. And what will the elected leaders do then? Will they seek to regulate the prices of Uber trips? Will they create further regulations to stagnate the vitality of for-hire transportation in the City? Will they do nothing and just let the public deal with the problems? At this point in time, all I know is that the City and State have not learned the lessons from their past errors and mistakes. Someone needs to force the elected leaders of the City and State to open their eyes…or perhaps the public should just vote those with blinders on out of office.  

So at this point in time, what can the public do, short of voicing their opinion through the power of the ballots? The public can support their tried and true local car service. Don’t turn your backs on the liveries that provided transportation to the City during a past time in recent history, such as the late 80‘s and early 90s, when it was unsafe and unpopular to so, especially in the outer boroughs. Car services such as Carmel Car and Limousine Service and Dial 7 Car and Limousine Service have been in business since the late 1970's/early 1980’s and have apps that are just as good as the one created by Uber and Lyft. Carmel and Dial 7 have been there for the public in its time of need and now the public should return its loyalty to Carmel and Dial 7, and other livery bases, by refusing to utilize Uber and Lyft. Support your local car service is akin to only buying American made goods. Sometimes it may be hard to do so, but in the end, who will be the loser by continuing to use Uber which will allowing Uber to kill off the competition. The public will suffer. I speak my peace not because I have the magic 8 ball that allows me to see into the future, but because I care. I take the time to think about the future of our City, the needs of the public and the path to destruction that the transportation industry is now on. I hope that some elected leaders take a good long look at history, think about what I am saying/preaching in this article and give my opinions its due consideration and not let campaign donations and the desire to stay in office cloud their judgment. I also hope that members of the public think about what I am saying and use your good sense to realize that Uber is not the solution, but is the problem. 

The Reign of the Yellow Cabs is Surely OVER...but What Will the Riding Public Do When Uber is the Only Game in town?

The reign of the yellow cab in NYC is surely over. While the yellow cab itself may be a symbol of the city itself, the actual number of yellow taxis on the road is dwindling. The yellow cab may be as synonymous with New York as pizza, Broadway and the Empire State Building, but for more and more people, it is no longer the ride of choice. The yellow cab was once the main alternative to subways and buses, hailed by rich and poor alike. Cabdrivers were a kind of ambassadors of the streets. But the Yellow cab owners did not see what havoc that was going to be caused a few years back by a new form of technology. Now, fleets of cars are summoned by an army of "ride-hailing apps" like Uber and Lyft.

The yellow cab numbers are comparatively bleak: today, there are 13,587 yellow cabs on New York City streets. The total number of black cars: 60,000, more than 46,000 of which are connected with Uber, though they may be hooked up to other car services as well. Back in the pre-Uber days (the good ole days) around 2010, yellow cabs made 463,701 daily trips and brought in $5.17 million in fares during the month of November alone. Six years later, the numbers have not just dropped, but yellow cabs are on a fast downward trajector.

Uber and Lyft have flooded neighborhoods where taxis once flourished. And they appeal to a new generation of tech-skilled riders who live on their phones, ordering everything from groceries to books and movies. Uber and Lyft  (the so called “Ride-hailing apps) have gained a huge market share in a short period of time. They have expanded the market tremendously, but have also stolen market share from taxicabs and all other for-hire vehicle services alike. Yes, I said stole because they entered the market and operated illegally for so long that by the time the NYC Taxi and Limousine Commission got around to regulating them, it was too late to do anything. The means by which the public can obtain for-hire transportation has changed along with the expectations of the riding public. The new generation of tech-skilled riders want pretty much what everyone else wants, transportation on demand. 

Black cars have long served Wall Street banks and law firms, but they were not for casual or last-minute users because they had to be prearranged. Traditional livery services primarily provide transportation to those in the people who live in the outer boroughs of NYC. Both the liveries and the black cars have been hit hard  by the rise of Uber. Many of the long standing car services, like Carmel Car and Limousine Service, have been able to overcome the "Uber challenge" and adapt by having an app of its own that provides pre-arranged transportation and what also amounts to transportation on demand.  

While the yellow taxis have ben hit hard, the livery and the black car bases have been harmed as well and such harm to the car services has caused harm to the public in ways that most people are not aware. Since traditional livery services primarily provide transportation to those in the people who live in the outer boroughs of NYC, the rise of Uber has caused many drivers to deflect from the traditional car services in order to drive for Uber. This has caused those people who live in Queens, Brooklyn and the Bronx to have less means available for transportation. Unlike in Manhattan, not everyone who lives in Queens, Brooklyn and the Bronx (and Staten Island too) have quick access to the subway or other public transportation. These residents have always relied upon livery bases to provide reliable transportation. Contrary to popular opinion, Uber is not so readily available in Queens, Brooklyn and the Bronx. So what are those residents supposed to do to get to work, to the doctor and to the food store. 

Fortunately, some car services, like Carmel, have been able to adapt to the changing needs of the public and continue to provide the arrangement of safe and reliable transportation for the riding public. But this is not true of all livery bases. Many have either died or are dying a slow death. They don't have the money or technology to compete with Uber. Just like the taxi's, some car services have been rendered irrelevant. 

While most people will take a hands off approach and say that if Uber is winning the transportation game by having a better product and service, then so be it. But the problem is that it is not that Uber's service is better than anyone else, but that Uber has gotten to where it is by competing on a unfair playing field. Uber has engaged in many underhanded tactics in order to lure drivers away from other car services and to get people to use their service rather than the service of the long standing car services. The Federal anti-trust laws were set in place in the late 1800's in order to prevent illegal monopolies and unfair competition. The problem is that the NYC government and the NYC Taxi and Limousine Commission let Uber operate in an unregulated manner for so long, that it expanded in ways that those who are properly regulated, were not permitted to do so. This is tantamount to improper favoritism by a municipal entity. This is not competition on the merits, but an un level playing field that the City of New York was instrumental in causing.  

 In the old days, taxis were the only ones allowed to pick up people on the street. But now, with smartphone apps that can dispatch cars in minutes, there is little practical distinction between taxis and Uber. This is the whole point....while there is little practical difference between the means by which Uber and other for-hire vehicles operate, the New York State government, and particularly the governor, is trying to push legislation forward that will allow Uber to essentially operate throughout the state with very little if any regulations. It is important to keep in mind that compliance with regulations is a large cost of doing business for the for-hire transportation industry. If Uber does not have to be regulated or regulated in the same manner as other for-hire transportation providers, then the State Government is also seeking to become complicit in creating an unloved playing field between Uber and all other for-hire transportation providers. 

In the end, this un level playing field is going to be detrimental to the riding public. Most people do not see it just yet, but consider this: what will the riding public do when Uber is the only game in town? and what will the riding public do when Uber decides to no longer subsidize the cost of trips for the public. When Uber becomes a true monopoly and there is no other service available, do you think Uber will still charge competitive prices. Of course not. They will squeeze every last nickel from the riding public and there will be nothing anyone can do about it. Then the public will have no choice but to pay the high prices Uber will demand. This is true because the public has become so heavily reliant on obtaining transportation on demand that they will pay the high costs, but what about those who previously relied on the car services in the outer boroughs for transportation. Livery services that used to be the low cost means by which those in the outer boroughs relied upon, will not get transportation because the car services they used will be gone and this sector of the public will not be able to afford to use Uber. 

So service expands in Manhattan but severely contracts in the outer boroughs. Isn't this what happened with the yellow cabs? They became a government backed monopoly that provided service primarily only in Manhattan and had no incentive to innovate and provide better service. So what will Uber do when it is the only game in town. They will not only charge high prices for transportation, but will have less incentive to make their app more user friendly to the public....and once again the cycle continues.... with the public having little choice in service providers and being forced to pay high prices. The difference here is that the City and State Government have taken away the government backed monopoly of the yellow cabs and made Uber a defacto government backed monopoly.  

Lets face it, the yellow cab industry is in sharp decline and long standing car services being forced from the market because Uber pays politicians to write laws that are favorable to them....and the politicians are all too happy to take campaign contributions from Uber. That’s it. End of the game. Politicians who make the laws are favoring one company over another and are seeking to change the laws to allow Uber to operate essentially how Uber sees fit. The best thing that the riding public can do is to contact their local City Council member and the elected officials in the Assembly and Senate in order to express frustration and outrage over what the state is proposing. Write a letter to your elected official, make a call or do anything to bring awareness to the public of the ills that Uber is causing. 

Remember, it is you, the riding public, that elects the officials that are allowing Uber to wreak havoc on the for-hire transportation industry. You have the right to call them up and tell them your opinions. You have the right to vote for someone else who does not so obviously favor Uber. You can do many thing, but the option to do nothing is not a good option because doing nothing now will only cause problems later on. Remember the old saying...you can ignore your problems, but ignoring them will not cause your problems to go away. 

Take a look into the future and think for a moment what will happen when Uber is the only game in town. In the 1800's, Standard Oil was essentially the only game in town and look how they caused harm to the public. This is why the US Supreme Court ordered Standard Oil to be broken up into many smaller entities. Because consolidation of power in the hands of one is a danger to the public that is anathema in our democratic society. 

How risky is your Uber ride? Much More than you think

An Uber ride is different from hopping into a taxi or a traditional car or limousine service. When you download Uber's app and get into a car summoned with the mobile reservation system, you agree to a host of terms and conditions by default. Uber claims it puts potential drivers through a background check so that they can become an impromptu taxi driver using their own car and Uber's tech platform. The incidents, injuries, assaults and accidents involving Uber drivers and the riding public are too numerous to detail. But the real issue is that the public should understand Uber's responsibility to passengers (or lack thereof).

What exactly do passengers agree to when they use Uber? That depends on whom you ask. Most people don't know what they're getting into when they get into one of these Uber cars and they surely don't know what they're getting into when they download the app. The public is essentially giving Uber a free pass -- up to and including possible death.

Uber's terms and conditions are a way for the company to absolve itself of any liability in cases of injury or accident and to avoid responsibility for a driver's actions. It is a way for Uber to attempt to cover their ass and claim they are not responsible for anything that happens to you. Uber's public statements on safety contradict its terms and conditions. It is akin to an outright deception on people. They surely do not in any way seek to warrant that their product/service is safe.

The fine print of Uber's  terms and conditions clearly says that passengers accept a risk by using the service. "You understand, therefore, that by using the application and the service, you may be exposed to transportation that is potentially dangerous, offensive, harmful to minors, unsafe or otherwise objectionable," Uber's terms and conditions read, "and that you use the application and the service at your own risk." Lyft essentially operates the same way as Uber.

In essence, Uber and Lyft are basically trying to show through their terms of use that they are ride-matching services, rather than transportation companies. No one is really buying that they are merely tech platforms, but people continue to use these services without knowing the true potential dangers

While there are some Uber and Lyft drivers that are safe, courteous and competent, several incidents have occurred during the past few years that have called into question the safety of the services. The most severe incident was the death of 6-year-old Sophia Liu, who was  struck and killed by an Uber driver on New Year's Eve in San Francisco. There have also been more than a dozen allegations of sexual assault and gropingkidnapping; and physical assault, according to several media stories.

Uber claims its drivers are independent contractors rather than employees, which if true, it protect Uber from liability. But the company's terms and conditions can be trumped in court if it's shown that Uber exercises a certain amount of direction and control over its drivers and they more are akin to employees. Such factors of control include the ability to hire and fire drivers, decide where their services are performed, or provide them with specialized equipment, along with other considerations -- many of which, some would argue, including myself, Uber has.

Soon enough, the time will come when the issue of whether Uber's drivers are independent contractors or employees will hit the appellate courts and if it goes bad for Uber, then their entire business model may be placed in grave danger...the same type of grave danger that Uber often places its customers.....the danger of death.