Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Amid Mixed Messages, Uber Has No Plans To Give Up On Canada

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Apr, 2015 12:57 PM
    TORONTO — The strong-arm tactics that some Canadian cities have been using against virtual ride-hailing company Uber have prompted the organization to try to mend fences with local officials even as it maintains hope for further expansion.
     
    Municipal governments across the country have launched everything from political salvos to court injunctions against the San Francisco-based tech giant in a bid to keep its fleet of both licensed and unlicensed vehicles off city streets.
     
    While Toronto Mayor John Tory has publicly defended Uber, saying companies like it are here to stay, a recent blitz by a lone city cop saw 11 charges laid against UberX drivers in a single weekend.
     
    Uber's opponents have occasionally succeeded. While the company maintains a presence in Edmonton, Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal, Quebec City and Halifax, it was forced to shut up shop after brief sojourns in Vancouver and Calgary.
     
    Uber says there's an effort afoot to cool tensions with the cities it serves before it pursues new locations.
     
    "Uber wants to be everywhere and we are constantly evaluating new opportunities," said Jeff Weshler, Uber Canada's General Manager for Regional Expansion.
     
    Uber has met with varying levels of resistance in nearly every Canadian city it has operated in even as it has won plaudits for its innovative business model.
     
    Municipal officials from Vancouver to Halifax have accused the company of operating illegally at best and endangering the lives of passengers at worst. They assert that Uber provides the services of a taxi company without complying with the licenses and regulations that govern that industry.
     
    Critics have been particularly vocal about the company's UberX service, which allows unlicensed drivers to offer rides in their own vehicles. Such trips are not eligible under the insurance plans that cover licensed taxi rides, and opponents describe this as only one among many safety risks associated with the practice.
     
    Uber, in turn, argues that developing a mobile app that lets customers hail nearby cars makes it a technology company rather than a transportation firm.
     
    This argument has fallen on deaf ears in several European cities, which have banned Uber's services outright, even as it's been embraced by several American jurisdictions.
     
    The reaction has been similarly mixed in Canada.
     
    Chris MacDonald, professor of Business Ethics at Ryerson University, said there's no doubt the model has caught on in the 300 cities worldwide where Uber currently operates.
     
    Uber has set itself apart from its many competitors as a leader in this field, he said, adding the company is clearly filling a genuine need in the market.
     
    Its approach has also proven highly lucrative for the moment. Wall Street investors recently valued the company at a staggering US$40 billion.
     
    But antagonizing governments by flouting regulations does not mean the company is blazing a trail to future prosperity, he said.
     
    "They're going to need, in the long run, to keep a pretty broad range of stakeholders happy," he said. "They've had such a wide range of stumbles.. . . Money will only get you so far through so many of those. Eventually they've got to kind of make peace."
     
    In the face of the bans and criticisms that have dogged the company Weshler says Uber has no plans to shy away from its opponents.
     
    Uber has managed to win over some high-profile supporters.
     
    Former Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird publicly tweeted praise for Uber after using it to put an end to a 75-minute wait for a traditional cab in Ottawa.
     
    And the country's Competition Bureau supported the company last November when it cautioned cities to think about whether banning their "innovative business models" was really necessary.
     
    Weshler said he hopes Uber's relationships with Canadian cities take a more collaborative turn, saying that negotiation is the best way to achieve mutual goals.
     
    "Ultimately we're all committed to the same vision of a safe and reliable way for people to get around."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Municipality's Software Violates Employees' Privacy Rights: B.C. Commissioner

    Municipality's Software Violates Employees' Privacy Rights: B.C. Commissioner
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's privacy commissioner says a municipality violated privacy rights by secretly installing computer spyware the mayor says was used to bug his computer.

    Municipality's Software Violates Employees' Privacy Rights: B.C. Commissioner

    Future Shop Closure Illustrates Challenges Facing Canadian Retailers

    Future Shop Closure Illustrates Challenges Facing Canadian Retailers
    TORONTO — The sudden closure of Future Shop electronics stores demonstrates the evolution taking place in the Canadian retail space amid increased competition from online shopping, analysts say.

    Future Shop Closure Illustrates Challenges Facing Canadian Retailers

    Federal Anti-terrorism Bill Changes Not Enough To Satisfy Concerns

    Federal Anti-terrorism Bill Changes Not Enough To Satisfy Concerns
    OTTAWA — A Conservative plan to amend the federal anti-terrorism bill hasn't squelched opposition to the sweeping security legislation.

    Federal Anti-terrorism Bill Changes Not Enough To Satisfy Concerns

    Landing An Aircraft In Bad Weather Depends On Many Variables, But Ultimately Up To Pilot

    Landing An Aircraft In Bad Weather Depends On Many Variables, But Ultimately Up To Pilot
    HALIFAX — Pilots make the final call on whether it's safe to land a plane in bad weather, such as the conditions that prevailed early Sunday when an Air Canada passenger jet crashed at Halifax airport, aviation industry experts say.

    Landing An Aircraft In Bad Weather Depends On Many Variables, But Ultimately Up To Pilot

    Lawyer For Man Accused Of Child Pornography Says Films Of Naked Boys Weren't Sexual

    Lawyer For Man Accused Of Child Pornography Says Films Of Naked Boys Weren't Sexual
    TORONTO — The lawyer for a man accused in a sweeping child pornography investigation says the movies his client distributed online weren't sexual in nature but simply showed "naked boys doing silly things."

    Lawyer For Man Accused Of Child Pornography Says Films Of Naked Boys Weren't Sexual

    Sentencing Hearing Resumes In Deadly Sunrise Propane Explosion Case

    Sentencing Hearing Resumes In Deadly Sunrise Propane Explosion Case
    TORONTO — A sentencing hearing for Sunrise Propane, the Ontario company convicted in a deadly explosion at a Toronto propane plant, has resumed today after a 10-month adjournment.

    Sentencing Hearing Resumes In Deadly Sunrise Propane Explosion Case