Close X
Thursday, November 7, 2024
ADVT 
International

Seattle Becomes First US City To Give Uber, Lyft Drivers The Right To Unionize

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Dec, 2015 12:22 PM
    SEATTLE — The latest on the Seattle City Council's decision on whether to allow drivers of ride-hailing companies to unionize (all times local):
     
    3:30 p.m.
     
    Seattle has become the first city in the nation to allow drivers of ride-hailing companies such as Uber and Lyft to unionize over pay and working conditions.
     
    The legislation the City Council approved Monday is seen as a test case for the changing 21st century workforce. The companies strongly oppose it and are expected to challenge it in court.
     
    The council passed the measure on an 8-0 vote. It requires companies that hire or contract with drivers of taxis, for-hire transportation companies and app-based ride-hailing services to bargain with its drivers, if a majority show they want to be represented.
     
    San Francisco-based Uber and others argued federal labour law prevents cities from regulating collective bargaining for independent contractors, and the ordinance would violate federal antitrust laws.
     
    ___
     
    1:45 p.m.
     
    Seattle could soon become the first city in the nation to let drivers of ride-hailing companies such as Uber and Lyft form a union over pay and working conditions.
     
    The City Council is expected to vote Monday on whether to extend collective bargaining rights for drivers of taxis, for-hire transportation companies and app-based ride-hailing services that are part of the growing on-demand economy.
     
    Supporters say many drivers are immigrants who depend on full-time work, but some make less than minimum wage and lack basic worker rights.
     
    San Francisco-based Uber and others say federal labour law prevents cities from regulating collective bargaining for independent contractors. They say the ordinance would violate federal antitrust laws by allowing independent transportation providers to conspire to artificially drive up transportation costs.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    How 'No English,' 'Indian,' 'Walking,' Grandfather Was Assaulted

    How 'No English,' 'Indian,' 'Walking,' Grandfather Was Assaulted
    The lawyer of an Indian grandfather who was assaulted by an Alabama police officer leaving him partially paralysed has in an amended lawsuit detailed how his repeated attempts to explain went in vain.

    How 'No English,' 'Indian,' 'Walking,' Grandfather Was Assaulted

    America's Desi Power Players: Obama Taps Indian Americans To Fix Things At Home And Abroad

    America's Desi Power Players: Obama Taps Indian Americans To Fix Things At Home And Abroad
    President Barack Obama, with the largest number of Indian Americans in his administration, keeps dipping into the expanding talent pool of the three million-strong Indian American community, to take care of issues ranging from combating terrorist propaganda abroad to nation's health at home.

    America's Desi Power Players: Obama Taps Indian Americans To Fix Things At Home And Abroad

    Gandhi Statue To Be Unveiled In Britain's Parliament Square

    Gandhi Statue To Be Unveiled In Britain's Parliament Square
    A statue of Mahatma Gandhi will be unveiled in Britain's prestigeous Parliament Square in London next month, a media report said Monday.

    Gandhi Statue To Be Unveiled In Britain's Parliament Square

    Why Does Obama Avoid Mentioning 'Islamic' Terrorism? Ask Bush's Speechwriter

    Why Does Obama Avoid Mentioning 'Islamic' Terrorism? Ask Bush's Speechwriter
    WASHINGTON - Why is President Barack Obama so hesitant to talk about Islamic extremism — the question is being raised repeatedly these days by many of his Republican opponents who accuse him of chronic political correctness or, worse, of softness on terrorism.

    Why Does Obama Avoid Mentioning 'Islamic' Terrorism? Ask Bush's Speechwriter

    Indian-American Professor Gets Top Us Chemistry Award

    Indian-American Professor Gets Top Us Chemistry Award
    Purnendu Dasgupta, a Jenkins Garrett professor of chemistry at The University of Texas at Arlington, has been awarded the 2015 American Chemical Society Division of Analytical Chemistry J. Calvin Giddings Award for Excellence in Education.

    Indian-American Professor Gets Top Us Chemistry Award

    Exploited Indian Workers Win $14 Million In U.S. Labour Trafficking Case

    Exploited Indian Workers Win $14 Million In U.S. Labour Trafficking Case
    After seven long years, five Indian 'guest' or temporary workers who were allegedly defrauded and exploited in a labour trafficking scheme have won $14 million in compensatory and punitive damages by a US court.

    Exploited Indian Workers Win $14 Million In U.S. Labour Trafficking Case