Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C.-Based Coalition Launches Campaign To Bring Ride-Hailing To The Province

Darpan News Desk IANS, 07 Feb, 2018 11:46 AM
    VANCOUVER — Eight organizations in British Columbia are joining forces to advocate for ride-hailing services in the province as soon as possible.
     
     
    The Ridesharing Now BC coalition has been formed by groups including the Vancouver Board of Trade, BC Business Council, Canadian National Institute for the Blind and San Francisco-based on-demand transportation company Lyft.
     
     
    A news release from the coalition says it has launched a letter-writing campaign to B.C. politicians calling for a competitive ride-hailing industry "that can deliver much-needed choice to B.C. passengers."
     
     
    Supporters are directed to the www.ridesharingnow.com website, where they can sign and email a letter to their representative in the legislature calling for speedy introduction of ride-hailing services.
     
     
    Coalition spokesman Ian Tostenson says politics, rather than public opinion, is driving decision making in Victoria.
     
     
     
    He says the government sets the conditions that will attract ride-hailing services to B.C., and warns it should not be taken for granted that companies such as Lyft and Uber will inevitably operate in the province.
     
     
    "The B.C. government appears to be moving toward a model that would simply replace the taxi monopoly with a one-app monopoly that favours taxis," Tostenson says in the release.
     
     
    Other anchor members of the coalition include the Vancouver Economic Commission, BC Chamber of Commerce, Finger Food Studios, the BC Restaurant and Foodservices Association and the Urban Development Institute.
     
     
    Anne McMullin, president and chief executive officer of the institute's Pacific region says balanced, well-planned communities depend on convenient, reliable and affordable transportation options.
     
     
     
    "The Urban Development Institute is strongly encouraging the B.C. government to follow the lead of over 40 other Canadian jurisdictions that already benefit from ride-sharing, and take immediate action to introduce a framework to enable a competitive market for ride-sharing that increases choice for passengers," McMullin says.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Weather Blamed For Fraser Valley Blackouts Affecting About 9,000 Customers

    Weather Blamed For Fraser Valley Blackouts Affecting About 9,000 Customers
    ABBOTSFORD, B.C. — BC Hydro says freezing rain and winter conditions caused outages late Thursday affecting about 9,000 homes and businesses in Abbotsford and Mission.

    Weather Blamed For Fraser Valley Blackouts Affecting About 9,000 Customers

    Gov. Gen. Julie Payette, On Skates, Encourages Canadians To 'Get Active' In New Years Message

    Gov. Gen. Julie Payette, On Skates, Encourages Canadians To 'Get Active' In New Years Message
    OTTAWA — Julie Payette has issued a decidedly informal request to Canadians in her first New Years message as governor general — "stay active."

    Gov. Gen. Julie Payette, On Skates, Encourages Canadians To 'Get Active' In New Years Message

    Investigation Underway After CTV Reporter Heather Butts Heckled With Sexist Taunt

    Investigation Underway After CTV Reporter Heather Butts Heckled With Sexist Taunt
    Police say they are investigating after a TV journalist was heckled with a misogynistic taunt while reporting live from a Halifax bar.

    Investigation Underway After CTV Reporter Heather Butts Heckled With Sexist Taunt

    WATCH: Calgary Photographer Produces Viral Ice Bubble Video During Cold Snap

    WATCH: Calgary Photographer Produces Viral Ice Bubble Video During Cold Snap
    Calgary photographer Chris Ratzlaff spent part of Boxing Day outside, freezing and photographing bubbles.

    WATCH: Calgary Photographer Produces Viral Ice Bubble Video During Cold Snap

    Five Hospitalized After Carbon Monoxide Leak Forces Evacuation Of N.B. Building

    Five Hospitalized After Carbon Monoxide Leak Forces Evacuation Of N.B. Building
    SAINT JOHN, N.B. — A fire official says five people have been hospitalized after a carbon monoxide leak at a public housing unit forced the evacuation of around 30 residents in New Brunswick.

    Five Hospitalized After Carbon Monoxide Leak Forces Evacuation Of N.B. Building

    Tens Of Thousands Still Without Power After British Columbia Ice Storms

    Tens Of Thousands Still Without Power After British Columbia Ice Storms
    Freezing Rain Knocked Out Power To More Than 5,000 Customers, Most In Abbotsford And Mission

    Tens Of Thousands Still Without Power After British Columbia Ice Storms